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Subject: [India Thinkers Net]Sunday updates - March06, 2006




[1]

From: rkurian@bgl.vsnl.net.in
Date: Sun Mar 5, 2006
Subject: New Pitch, Front Foot Forward..Shekhar Gupta



Saturday, March 04, 2006

Columns

National Interest

New pitch, front foot forward

India's lower middle order slot in the global batting order has changed. Now
is the time to settle with Pakistan, China

Shekhar Gupta

 The direct gains from the India-US nuclear agreement, legitimisation of
India's nuclear weapons, the end of the high-tech apartheid and rapid growth
of nuclear power capacity are considerable. But the real significance lies
much beyond the N-word. And please, please, do not get confused by that
utter nonsense on how the US will help India become a super power.

This is not merely an India-US agreement and the fallout of this is not
merely nuclear. If India plays it right, it could be the beginning of a
process of breakout from the 'lower middle class' status in the community of
nations to which it had been consigned for half a century, some of it a
conspiracy of circumstances, and some of it self-inflicted.

In the name of non-alignment we tilted too far the other way, as our voting
record on the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan shows. Our politicians tried to
exploit this sloganeering foreign policy through domestic politics,
embracing Castro one day, and naming a major avenue in New Delhi after Tito,
on another. Incidentally, do a google search for how many cities in the
world, even in former Yugoslavia, still have a street named after that
dictator our school history textbooks taught us to admire! You can mail me
the results and your views on this, as well as on the argument of this
column, and we will publish a selection of responses.

We shifted a bit as the ground shifted under our feet after the end of the
cold war, but we never abandoned the notion of the non-aligned movement, or
our having a permanent abode in that comity of the "lower middle classes" in
the international power game, led by some of the world's most dictatorial
regimes and despots. In cricketing terms, we wanted to bat on the pitch, but
with our backfoot planted firmly behind the crease, and we suffered the fate
of a leaden-footed batsman. We scored little and, in the international
pecking order, continued to be an also-ran.

I WAS among those who had grave doubts over the NDA's Pokharan II (although
I did not think it was as disastrous an idea as many in the Left, and in the
intellectual community now opposing the deal, thought). In hindsight, it was
a bold gamble that worked. It could have led to sanctions in perpetuity. But
if it did not, it is partly because of the shrewd follow-up work done by
Jaswant Singh and Brajesh Mishra (Strobe Talbott's Engaging India -
Diplomacy, Democracy and the Bomb is a must-read for anybody wishing to
understand this phase). The change 9/11 brought about in terms of how the
world looked at terrorism under any guise was a fortuitous development. But
then three years of eight per cent growth was something that the people and
the governments of India worked hard at achieving, in spite of unstable
politics, confused coalitions, warlike years ('01-'O3, Operation Parakram)
and almost annual natural calamities (the Gujarat quake '02, tsunami '04,
floods in the south-we
st and the Kashmir earthquake '05). The so-called nuclear deal, and India's
new place in the world, is a consequence of all this. It is not pure luck
and coincidence. We lambast our political leaders and foreign policy
establishments all the time. But we must also give them credit where it is
due.

If you forget the words 'nuclear' and 'Bush' for a moment, the picture looks
less fuzzy. Over the past half-decade, the level of India's engagement with
the world has risen several notches, whether it is Europe, China, Japan, the
Asean, or even the Arab world. The significance of the first-ever India
visit by a king of Saudi Arabia is never to be overlooked. Manmohan Singh
understood this fully and so he broke protocol to greet him at Palam on
arrival - mercifully nobody accused him of undermining India's sovereignty
by breaking protocol then. With China, India now has frequent summit-level
dialogue, and chances are we will see Hu Jintao in New Delhi this summer. We
are a long way from being a big power yet. But our place in the world is a
lot better than it ever was in the so-called, Soviet-included non-aligned
movement. And how terrific was that non-aligned "solidarity"? Please check
out the way most members of that "movement" voted at international forums on
issues of Ind
ia's vital security interest, not just Kashmir but also on both series of
Pokharan tests. On each occasion, '74 and '98, they were firmly "aligned"
with the big powers, against us. India, who so stupidly arrogated to itself
the leadership of that motley group, continued naming its streets after
international thugs and despots.

IN one way the Left is right. With the nuclear deal India is signalling the
willingness to bat on the front-foot, to reach out for the ball. That
opportunity, that confidence, has come about because a combination of our
own secular politics, economic growth and stability has given us a uniquely
new moral stature in the world. We must not delude ourselves into believing
we are in the same league now as China and Russia (listed in that order
deliberately). But if we continue to act with sense and maturity, we can
form the third point of a new triangle of stability in a vast Asian region,
stretching from Korea to Israel, Kazakhstan to Sri Lanka. Or, if you don't
like triangles, you can look at it as an opportunity for India to join -
along with China, Russia and Japan - a new arc of strategic calm. That is
the new slot that the world wants India to occupy in its new batting order.
The beauty of it all is, you can do it while being perfectly non-aligned,
and running a foreign po
licy enormously more independent than it ever was when we were exposed as a
totally client state so stunningly once every decade: the invasion of
Hungary in the '50s, Czechoslovakia in the '60, Cambodia in the '70s and
Afghanistan in the '80s. Then, if the Soviets got upset with you, they would
refuse to veto the Security Council resolutions on Kashmir and we would be
isolated, with the entire - I repeat the entire - world against us, except
Bhutan (check out the Security Council proceedings during the 1971 war).
Today, if for your own reasons, you decide not to vote against Iran at IAEA,
and the Americans really get furious, what will they do? Drop the nuclear
deal? Big deal!

In any case, that deal is done. Its real significance would now lie in the
way India is able to build on it. For decades, India has been hobbled by
three foreign policy issues. Its nuclear status was one. It is not settled
yet, but things are moving in that direction. The border disputes with China
and the blood feud with Pakistan are the other two. The time to deal with
both, decisively, is now because you can only settle chronic issues like
these, that require give and take, from a position of strength, and when the
global balance of power, the combination of circumstances are both aligned
favourably. So the time to move with Musharraf is now. The Chinese, the way
they are, would probably set their own pace, but we have to be open-minded.
Such a propitious combination of factors to settle eternal problems comes
rarely more than once in a generation. For India, these issues have cursed
two generations. We owe it to the third to leave them a cleaner slate.

Write to sg@expressindia.com

URL: http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=88925

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[2]

From: "C.K. Vishwanath" <ck_vishwanath2000@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun Mar 5, 2006
Subject: Re: [indiathinkersnet] CHITHRALEKHA IS IN DELHI -NEXT WEEK  

dear rajan,
thanks.now,she is going to delhi.
i will inform you later
in solidarity,
vishwanath

--- rajan robert <rajan_robert@yahoo.co.in> wrote:

>        Dear C K viswanth,
> The action council formed on Chithralekha issue
> may please arrange to raise fund for buying another
> auto rikshaw to Smt. Chithralekha.
>    Kerala Democratic Party,a Trivandrum based
> Organisation,informs that they are ready to give all
> protection and assistance to Chithralekha.if she and
> her family prepared to come to Trivandrum.you may
> contact them on "democrats@sify.com"

-----------

[3]

From: yogi sikand <ysikand@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun Mar 5, 2006
Subject: Petition: Scholars for 9/11 Truth  


Scholars for 9/11 Truth
Petition

http://www.scholarsfor911truth.org/petition/

Click here for a version of this Petition to fax
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND OF
THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES  

The full text is available at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Mahajanapada













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