http://original.antiwar.com/bidwai/2002/06/22/missile-man-as-indias-president/

‘Missile Man’ as India’s President
by Praful Bidwai, June 23, 2002

By choosing to nominate APJ Abdul Kalam as its candidate for
Presidential elections next month, the Vajpayee government has sent
out an unambiguous message: It has no compunctions in making an appeal
to crass militarism to advance its narrow parochial interests. And by
going along with the nomination or co-sponsoring it, the bulk of
India’s Opposition parties – the Left alone stands out as the
exception – have shown they lack the stomach to question jingoistic
nationalism.

Mr Kalam is India’s "Missile Man", lionised and glorified as such. He
was awarded the highest honour the Indian state gives – the "Bharat
Ratna", or the Jewel of India – many years before Amartya Sen, known
for his liberal and anti-militaristic views, received it, after
winning the economics Nobel Prize. In principle, elevating Mr Kalam to
India’s Presidency is no different from making Dr A.Q. Khan, the
"Father of the Pakistani Bomb", that country’s president.

Mr Kalam has only two public faces: devotion to militarism, and his
image as a Muslim, which fits the stereotype constructed by the
Hindu-chauvinist core of India’s present ruling coalition, represented
by the Bharatiya Janata Party. Unlike most Indians, and the vast
majority of Indian Muslims, Mr Kalam is a vegetarian. He believes more
in Hindu scriptures than the Koran. He takes pride in knowing Sanskrit
but no Urdu. He plays the rudra verna and reads the Bhagwad-Gita.

His first face is the more important of the two. But the second is not
unrelated to it. The Hindu-sectarian BJP is totally militaristic in
its outlook, and wants Muslims to "Indianise" themselves, i.e. adopt
"Hindu" (read Brahmanical upper-caste) ways. Its anti-Islam,
anti-Pakistan ideology is closely connected with its obsession with
nuclear weapons and missiles.

The BJP decided to nominate Mr Kalam for utterly cynical reasons. The
"Missile Man" was not its first choice. Its original favourite until
June 8 was Vice-President Krishna Kant. Then, it suddenly switched to
Maharashtra governor P.C. Alexander. The reasons were connected with
the BJP’s bid to topple a Congress-led government in Maharashtra, and
Home Minister Advani’s attempt to score a point against Mr Vajpayee.

At this point, the BJP’s internal power dynamics took over. Mr
Vajpayee proposed Mr Kalam’s name basically to outmanoeuvre his own
party colleagues. He succeeded.

Mr Kalam lacks experience in public life, government or Parliament. In
India’s Constitutional scheme, the President’s is a non-executive but
political office. He/she is called upon to counsel the Cabinet and
exercise discriminating judgment on sensitive matters.

The President need not have a party background. But s/he cannot be
uncoached in politics. Most Indian Presidents have been academics,
typically with high qualifications from world-class universities. But
they have also been experienced diplomats, administrators or
legislators with an understanding of the Constitution and politics.

Mr Kalam lacks such experience or orientation. He is an engineer who
became a manager of cloistered defence-related programmes, with little
exposure to the broader process of governance. He is wrongly thought
to hold a PhD in science or engineering. His doctorate is purely
honorary, like Margaret Thatcher’s.

Kalam has an overly-simple, untutored and at times unpardonably naïve
understanding of political issues. Even a casual reading of his books,
Wings of Fire and India 2020, will confirm this. Naivety marred his
first two post-nomination press conferences, at which he evaded
inconvenient questions. He also attributed the recent avoidance of war
with Pakistan to nuclear deterrence, which is at odds with the
official view.

Strangely, Mr Kalam believes India is a "developed nation". "We are
among the top five … in terms of GDP… Our poverty levels are falling,
our achievements are being globally recognised today. Yet we lack the
self-confidence to see ourselves as a developed nation."
Underdevelopment is not just a function of GDP. Even in nominal GDP
terms, India is lower than Holland (pop. 15 million).

The per capita income-differential between India and the developed
world is roughly 1:40, higher than 50 years ago. India’s poverty
ratios are not falling. At any rate, what should shame Indians is not
just poverty, but also staggering income inequalities. Mr Kalam has no
understanding of these, or of the structural constraints, including
hierarchy, caste and illiteracy, which keep India backward.

Mr Kalam shows little comprehension of the complex, double-edged
character of technology, especially its destructive aspect: nuclear
missiles, biological weapons and mind-control technologies. He
ardently advocates investing in the Military-Industrial Complex as the
key to "development". The ethical questions posed by mass-destruction
technologies do not bother him.

Mr Kalam’s thinking is replete with poorly constructed, half-baked or
undigested ideas. For instance, he advocates "bio-implants" for
"deficient" brains (reminiscent of eugenics?), using nuclear fission
(why?) to power short-haul airplanes, and combining the occult with
modern science. He believes India is eminently capable of making
anti-ballistic missile defence shields, when even the US has so far
proved unable to master that technology which involves, among other
things, reliably detecting launches in distant continents, and then
accurately attacking incoming missiles – akin to hitting a bullet with
another travelling at the same velocity!

As Princeton-based physicist M.V. Ramana says, Mr Kalam tends to
"dress up even mediocre work with the Tricolour to pass it off as a
great achievement. In his autobiography, he says he reverse-engineered
a Russian rocket-assisted take-off system, simply borrowing the
crucial motors. Publicly, however, it was passed off as an ‘indigenous
development’".

Although he is routinely called a "scientist" by the media and by
political leaders, Mr Kalam is not that. He is an engineer who has
manipulated aspects of the physical reality – essentially to military
ends.

Mr Kalam is not a great engineer either. The performance of the two
government institutions closest to him, Indian Space Research
Organisation and Defence Research and Development Organisation, has
been deeply unsatisfactory. Besides the rather primitive, short-range
Prithvi (range, 150-250 km), their most important achievement has been
the Space Launch Vehicle rocket in the 1970s. But this used an
imported, not Indian, guidance system.

The SLV-3 was the base (actually, the first of two stages) for the
original Agni (range, 1,500-2,500 km). But that Agni model went
through three tests – one success, one failure, and one "limited
success" (i.e. partial failure) – before being declared a "technology
demonstrator", rather than a prototype that would fly.

Since then, there has been a longer-range Agni-II (2,500 to 3,000 km),
and a renamed, wholly new, Agni-I (range 700-900 km) unrelated to the
original missile, which uses a solid, not liquid, fuel in its second
stage. Both were developed largely after Mr Kalam quit the DRDO.

India’s Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme (launched
1983) is not a success story. Of the five different missile-classes it
was meant to develop, only the Prithvi and Agni have become
(quasi-)operational. The Trishul, Nag and Akash are nowhere near that
status, despite long delays and massive cost overruns.

No Indian Navy or Air Force ship or plane carries a DRDO-made missile.
The army’s main anti-tank missile, the Milan ATM, is French in origin.
All three forces’ anti-aircraft weapons are of Russian origin.

It is only fair to judge Mr Kalam by the performance of the DRDO. He
headed it for long years. This record is embarrassingly poor. The DRDO
has never completed a major project on time. Its weapons are often of
indifferent quality. Some of its big-ticket projects, like the AWACS
Advanced Airborne Warning Systems or the aircraft carrier, are big
disasters. Its sole experimental AWACS crashed in January 1999.

Three of DRDO’s most expensive projects, the Main Battle Tank, Light
Combat Aircraft, and Advanced Technology Vessel (nuclear submarine)
have each soaked up $500 million-plus, without delivering results. The
Arjun MBT is so heavy that the army prefers Russian T-90 tanks. The
LCA doesn’t even have an Indian engine. And the ATV’s design isn’t
ready – after 20 years of "work".

The cumulative spending on these projects so far exceeds India’s
entire annual budget on tertiary education!

The DRDO can burn almost $1 billion of public money annually without
producing decent results – at least partly because it is shielded from
public scrutiny, including the Comptroller and Auditor General’s. Such
"power without responsibility" has given the military-industrial
complex a bad name everywhere. In India, jingoism and militarist
nationalism have made the MIC a holy cow.

In this respect, Mr Kalam represents the seamy, undemocratic side of
the Complex. His elevation as President will put the terrible stamp of
militarisation on India’s highest office.

Mr Kalam will also serve to whitewash the BJP after the Pogrom of
Muslims in Gujarat, carried out by the party and its associates with
state collusion. He has repeatedly refused to condemn those culpable
for the Gujarat massacre; he only says the events were "very sad". His
"Hindutva-friendly" image will marginalise all those Muslims who don’t
follow the BJP stereotype, but who are no less Indian for that.

India’s non-executive President is meant to reflect and defend a
pluralist culture. Mr Kalam does not. His election, which is a mere
formality, is a blow to the cause of Indian secularism and peace.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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