HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow.asp?art_id=16194810

The Times of India
July 17, 2002

New Imperialism: Future lies in the past 
SHASTRI RAMACHANDARAN


 
For those wondering why a Colin Powell or a Jack
Straw, followed and preceded by lesser eminences from
Washington and London, have emerged as �frequent
fliers� to India and Pakistan, the simple answer is:
New Imperialism. The war against terror � and the
exertions of the �international community� to ensure
restraint on the part of Islamabad and New Delhi � are
but preparatory drills towards a new form of
colonialism.


So what if George Bush did not know that Atal Behari
Vajpayee was India�s prime minister and that Pervez
Musharraf was Pakistan�s military dictator. Such
details would be of little relevance when Washington�s
new doctrine of �justifiable intervention� makes
nonsense of sovereignty in the process of �colonising
wayward nations�. When Tony Blair�s foreign policy
advisor, Robert Cooper, called for a �new imperialism�
that allows �well-governed� western nations to impose
order and stability on the world, it was seen as a
prescription to re-order the post-9/11 world, although
the essay had been written earlier.


Stating the �need for colonisation�, Mr Cooper argues
that active intervention is sometimes necessary.
�Among ourselves we operate on the basis of laws� but
when dealing �with more old-fashioned kinds of states
outside the post-modern continent of Europe, we need
to revert to the rougher methods of an earlier era �
force, pre-emptive attack, deception, whatever is
necessary to deal with those who still live in the
19th-century world...�. Although a Labour MP�s
reaction that the �Tsarina of Russia was better
advised by Rasputin than the prime minister by this
man�, suggests outrage, the fact is that new
imperialism is not really so new. 


In the making for a long time, new imperialism is
already operational in Bosnia, Kosovo and East Timor;
and Afghanistan, if and when the war ends in favour of
the �global alliance against terror�, is certain to
meet a similar fate. These �protectorates� have
voluntarily opted for a reduction in their sovereignty
in what appears to be a self-invited imposition. 


However, the development conceals the fact that this
political equivalent of economic globalisation leaves
�ungovernable� territories very little choice in the
matter. 


Afghanistan, for instance, can hardly be allowed to
decide its own political future.


There is also a view that the new imperialism became a
�Blair necessity� for re-imaging Britain when its boys
had to go in to Afghanistan to fight the dirty parts
of a US-initiated war. Confronted with opposition at
home to Britain being dragged into avoidable military
adventures overseas, Mr Blair was seen to be waving
the flag of new imperialism to justify his aggressive
stance on Iraq. While this might have had the
temporary benefit of boosting the morale of British
troops, the theory was not invented for that purpose.


Such a view ignores the righteous moral fervour that
Mr Blair brings to George Bush�s aggressive pursuit of
Washington�s right to military intervention anywhere
in the world. Besides, it looks at the standard-bearer
of an ideology without paying heed to the coercive
apparatus that can give form to the objective of
redefining sovereignty. 


Colin Powell�s director of policy planning, Richard
Haas, articulated a Cooper-like proposition in an
interview about US policy against global terrorism. 


�Sovereignty entails obligations�, said Mr Haas. �One
is not to massacre your own people. Another is not to
support terrorism in any way. If a government fails to
meet these obligations, then it forfeits some of the
normal advantages of sovereignty, including the right
to be left alone inside your own territory�. This is
fraught with startling implications for national
sovereignty of countries like India and Pakistan,
especially with the US as our new neighbour. 


Some in India might welcome new imperialism if only
because the West would not like to lose control of
Pakistan and it would, for that reason, go to any
extent to justify this �failed state� being stripped
of its sovereignty. More insightful observers may
point to the fact that the US is already an imperial
presence dictating military and diplomatic policy to
both New Delhi and Islamabad, be it making the two
pull back from the brink recently or in mediating an
end to the Kargil conflict. 


But every threat, even if it is to national
sovereignty, is also an opportunity. This may provide
the opening India needs to rid itself of the burden of
maintaining its massive military machine and nuclear
arsenal. Being a �natural ally� of the US and assured
of its protective armour, this may well be the chance
to divert those stupendous resources from defence and
nuclear deterrence to food, shelter, health, education
and infrastructure for survival in a competitive
world.


In perverse contrast to the economic advantages the
new imperialism offers is the �new strategic thinking�
that India can afford to keep its forces mobilised on
the borders for the next 40 years. This was what NATO
did to the Soviet Bloc during the four decades of the
Cold War, India could opt for a similar, intimidatory
course to bleed Pakistan white. While this is based on
the logic that the losses inflicted on Pakistan would
be heavier than on India, the fact is that neither
economy can afford such extravagance. 


__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes
http://autos.yahoo.com

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to