http://www.expressbuzz.com/edition/story.aspx?Title=Ambedkar%E2%80%99s+views+on+foreign+policy&artid=NJtaEGMmF3A=&SectionID=XVSZ2Fy6Gzo=&MainSectionID=XVSZ2Fy6Gzo=&SEO=B+R+AMBEDKAR;+Indian+foreign+policy&SectionName=m3GntEw72ik=

Ambedkar’s views on foreign policy

Harish Parvathaneni

First Published : 16 Apr 2009 03:54:00 AM IST

Last Updated : 16 Apr 2009 09:41:41 AM IST

B R AMBEDKAR remains a towering personality of modern India who was
instrumental in igniting the minds of generations of citizens. While
his views on various social, economic and political aspects have been
analysed, his approaches to Indian foreign policy have remained a rain
shadow area.


Ambedkar’s interest in more direct aspects of foreign policy had
emerged in his resignation letter from the Union Cabinet on 10th
October, 1951. Five issues that he brings out on foreign policy
deserve close attention.

First, he notes that in 1946 he was consumed with great anxiety and
had prepared a report on the condition of the Scheduled Castes for
submission to the United Nations but did not do so because he felt
that “it would be better to wait until the Constituent Assembly and
the future Parliament was given a chance to deal with the matter”.

Second, he wrote that the foreign policy of the country has given him
“cause, not merely for dissatisfaction but for actual anxiety and even
worry”; “On 15th of August 1947 when we began our life as an
independent country the world was our friend. Today, after four years,
all our friends have deserted us.... How dangerous it has been to us
this policy of doing the impossible and of being too good”.

Third, he expressed deep dissatisfaction with “our quarrel with
Pakistan” that he termed “a part of our foreign policy”. He wrote:
“There are two grounds which have disturbed our relations with
Pakistan — one is Kashmir and the other is the condition of our people
in East Bengal. I felt that we should be more deeply concerned with
East Bengal…. than with Kashmir. My view has always been that the
right solution is to partition Kashmir…. Or if you like, divide it
into three parts; the ceasefire zone, the Valley and the Jammu- Ladhak
region and have a plebiscite only in the Valley.” Fourth, Ambedkar
bemoaned the fact that he was neither a member of defence committee
nor foreign committee of the Cabinet and that “it is an impossible
position” of him “having joint responsibility without any opportunity
of taking part in the shaping of policy”.

Fifth, he regretted that he “had hardly any time to attend to our
foreign affairs” because he had been busy with the framing of the
constitution, and thereafter, with the Peoples’ Representation Bill
and the delimitation orders.

Ambedkar’s criticism of Nehru’s foreign policy was highlighted by both
the national and international media. The Time issue dated October 22,
1951, noted: “Ambedkar is the first important Indian official who has
openly attacked Nehru for being too friendly to China and not friendly
enough to the US”.

Separately, speaking at a gathering of students of Lucknow University
on November 8, 1951, Ambedkar said: “The government’s foreign policy
failed to make India stronger. Why should not India get a permanent
seat in the UN Security Council? Why has the prime minister not tried
for it? India must choose between parliamentary democracy and the
Communist way of dictatorship and come to a final conclusion”.

On China he disagreed with the Tibet policy and the enunciation of
Panchsheel. He said: “If Mao had any faith in the Panchsheel, he
certainly would treat the Buddhist in his own country in a very
different way. There is no room for Panchsheel in politics”.

Ambedkar repeatedly expressed the desirability of a league of
democracies in Asia and beyond. He said: “Do you want parliamentary
government? ... If you want it, then you must be friendly with those
who have parliamentary government….

If you do not want it, let us join Russia and China tomorrow”. He
recognised the ideological and political convulsions in the Asian
continent and called on the government to align with the free nations
who believe in freedom.

Ambedkar also believed in realpolitik and concrete action linked to
national interest. He criticised Nehru’s foreign policy noting: “The
key note of our foreign policy is to solve the problems of other
countries and not to solve the problems of our own country”. He called
for a more robust approach to the Goa question, listing out
annexation, purchase or lease as possible policy options.

He felt that a small police action by the government would enable
obtaining possession of Goa and criticised Nehru for only shouting
against the Portuguese and doing nothing.

What clearly emerges is that Ambedkar was a realist and had a
pragmatic approach. He preferred to achieve the possible rather than
wait to realise the ideal. His fundamental approach was premised on
fashioning foreign policy for solving the country’s problems in
various areas rather than focusing on global and regional problems
involving other nations and powers. He felt that foreign policy must
enhance the country’s strategic and developmental options and make
India stronger.

He envisioned a league of democracies and believed that the
democracies of the world had to reach out to each other in view of the
spread of communism towards which he held a deep ideological
antipathy. He recognised the impact of the emergence of Asia after
long years of colonialism and imperialism and wanted India to align
itself with the ‘free nations’.

Ambedkar’s views on Kashmir and East Bengal were significantly
different from the mainstream approaches on the subject. His solutions
to the question of Pakistan were based on either reaching an agreement
or resorting to arbitration. While the arbitration route between India
and Pakistan was not tried in his lifetime, the Indus-water treaty
incorporated mediation and arbitration as dispute resolution
mechanisms.

Ambedkar felt that close Indo-US relations premised on a natural
affinity of democracies would lead to foreign assistance to India in
various fields, thus alleviating the national burden. He challenged
the government to move away from non-alignment and come to a final
decision of either aligning with democratic governments such as US or
making friends with communist governments and joining Russia and
China.

This was a dramatically opposite view on foreign policy as compared to
Nehruvian non-alignment. He envisioned a strong India that took its
place in the global order based on developing its economic strength
and leveraging its political alliances with other democracies.

His belief in the balance of power is evident when he castigates the
government for not trying to obtain a permanent seat in the Security
Council.

The India of the ’40s is unparalleled in the modern history of our
country. We had been blessed with many leaders such as Ambedkar,
Nehru, Gandhi, and Patel. They took on their assigned tasks in the
run-up to Independence and thereafter, and made possible the emergence
of India as it stands today. Ambedkar’s efforts were totally consumed
in the crafting of our constitution and with the initial legislation
of a newly independent country. If his energies had been directed
towards crafting the foreign policy of the new Republic, who knows
what the results might have been?

(The writer is a serving IFS officer and the article is an extract
from an address delivered at the 13th Foundation Day of Babasaheb
Bhimrao Ambedkar University, Lucknow. The views expressed are
personal.)


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