http://www.fpif.org/outside/commentary/2003/0304india.html

India's "Middle Path" Through War in Iraq: A Devious Route to the U.S. Camp

By Ninan Koshy | April 14, 2003

Editor: John Gershman, Interhemispheric Resource Center (IRC)

Foreign Policy In Focus
www.fpif.org

India's political leaders' responses to the U.S.-led war in Iraq are 
notable for what they say about the country's willingness to 
sacrifice traditional concerns regarding nonalignment and 
international law for the opportunity to raise its profile and power 
on the world stage. They have, in all but words, chosen to side with 
empire.

A Middle Path

Neither supporting the United States nor openly criticizing it for 
its aggression against Iraq, India's government has taken what it 
calls the "middle path," an indirect route to the U.S. post-war camp. 
But the policy is based on a misguided perception of strategic and 
economic interests, which is shaped by Indian authorities' obsession 
with what they view as "Pakistan-sponsored terrorism."

For its part, the United States would have liked to have received 
India's support in the war against Iraq, but it recognizes that the 
middle path in effect endorses the U.S position. On the eve of the 
war, U.S. Ambassador to India Robert Blackwell claimed in a statement 
that the U.S. and Indian positions were the same.

Even after the United States defied the UN, international laws, and 
the international community with its massive military campaign 
against Iraq, the Indian government stuck to the middle path. The 
government of Prime Minister Shri Atal Bijari Vajpayee rejected 
opposition demands for a parliamentary resolution on the crisis. The 
prime minister scrupulously avoided mentioning the name of the United 
States in any of the war-related statements made inside or outside 
the Parliament. Advocates of the middle path claimed that through it 
the Indian government was gaining space to defend its long-term 
interests in Iraq and the Persian Gulf.

India did not even support the position the 114-member-nation 
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) adopted at its recent summit in Kuala 
Lumpur, Malaysia, in which Vajpayee had participated. The NAM, 
endorsing the concerns expressed by "millions in our countries as 
well as in other parts of the world," affirmed that it "rejected war" 
and declared "the war against Iraq would be a destabilizing factor 
for the whole world with far-reaching political and economic 
consequences." Meanwhile, the prime minister took advantage of the 
summit to lecture Iraqi President Saddam Hussein on the need to 
disarm and spoke not a word of criticism against those who--in 
violation of the UN Charter--were resorting to the threat of force to 
carry out their will.

During a visit with Ali Akbar Veliyati, the special envoy of Iranian 
President Mohammed Khatami on March 23, three days after the war had 
started, members of the Indian government made it clear that India 
was not willing to take any initiative on Iraq, through NAM or 
otherwise, that could jeopardize its ties with the United States. By 
making the fear of U.S. displeasure the operative factor in dealing 
with the most critical international issue of our times, India has 
totally abandoned principles. The threat posed by the war on Iraq to 
the integrity of the international legal order established at the end 
of World War II is apparently of no concern to the rulers in New 
Delhi.

The Centrality of Kashmir

It appears that the Indian foreign policy establishment looks at the 
world solely through a prism of Kashmir terrorism made in Pakistan. 
"India seems to be drawing a link between American support for its 
position on Pakistan and Kashmir with its statements on the ongoing 
military invasion of Iraq," wrote Amit Baruah in the national daily 
The Hindu on March 28. "India seems to be drawing connections between 
what the U.S. says on India-Pakistan-Kashmir issues and India's 
formulation on the Iraqi issue. The message coming from official 
circles is that India's concerns in the immediate neighborhood are 
far more important than simply sticking to principles as far as the 
war on Iraq is concerned."

In fact, Vajpayee had given this message unambiguously to the 
All-Party Meeting on March 22. "We should be careful that neither our 
internal debate nor our external actions deflect our attention, or 
those of the world, away from the real source of terrorism in our 
neighborhood," he said.

India is Washington's closet strategic ally in the region. It is not 
known what assistance India has given to the United States in the 
war. There are reports that permission has been granted to use Indian 
airspace for the flights of U.S. military aircraft from Diego Garcia 
Navy Support Facility in the Indian Ocean to the Gulf region. It is 
also likely that several U.S. naval vessels engaged in joint patrols 
with the Indian navy in the Indian Ocean have gone to join the fleet 
in the Gulf region. One of Washington's most senior Army officers 
visited New Delhi in the beginning of February and had discussions 
with the chiefs of the Indian army and navy. Indian officials did not 
provide any details about the visit by U.S. Army Chief of Staff 
General Eric Shinseki, though they hinted that the issue of Kashmir 
had topped the agenda. The timing of the meeting, six weeks prior to 
a war anticipated by the United States, raises questions.

A Rising India

It was not without significance that on March 26, the very day the UN 
Security Council was discussing the U.S. attack on Iraq, Christina 
Rocca, U.S. assistant secretary of State for South Asia, in her 
testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hailed India 
as a "rising global power" and said the United States was expanding 
security cooperation with New Delhi through military exercises. The 
middle path, it was evident, was within the framework of the role 
assigned to India.

The Indian leadership hopes that in the new world order being 
fashioned by the military might of the United States, which will 
transform institutions such as the UN and NATO as well as strategic 
and nuclear orders, it will have a more prominent place than at 
present, and for that it is important to be on the winning side. 
There is no apology in New Delhi for the replacement of principles 
with pragmatism.

But is there a middle path between war and peace, between occupation 
and freedom, between foreign military-established rule and 
sovereignty of a nation? The misguided policymakers in New Delhi want 
us to believe there is. The people of Iraq know better: There is 
none. It is therefore not surprising that in trying to explain such 
an untenable and unethical policy, the Indian prime minister utters 
inanities bordering on nonsense only to be parroted by spokespersons 
and emissaries.

The middle path is a euphemism for a Washington-approved policy that 
India has adopted with the clear intent of attaining a prominent 
position in the new imperial world order made in the name of the War 
on Terror. The United States knows full well that India is with the 
empire, not against it.

(Dr. Ninan Koshy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is a political commentator based 
in Trivandrum, Kerala, India, author of The War on Terror: Reordering 
the World (DAGA Press, 2002), and a regular analyst for Foreign 
Policy in Focus (online at www.fpif.org).)

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