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After Bombay: Urgent Need for an India-Israel Summit
By
M.L. Sondhi
1993
India’s political landscape is unlikely to remain the same
after the March 12 bomb blasts in Bombay, since it is no
more possible to send ambiguous signals on the question of
terrorist acts in the name of a realist political dialogue
with Palestinians, Iranians, Libyans and Iraqis. It is
ironic too that just as Prime Minister Rao was seen in a
much published photograph making a friendly gesture to the
Pakistan High Commissioner, Islamabad’s notorious ISI
impinged on the imagination of most Indians. For too long
has political discussion in New Delhi been held hostage to
India’s Third World friends in West Asia and there is today
unmistakeably mounting disenchantment with the one-sided
pro-Arab foreign policy. Most Indians now believe that the
price that has been paid for distancing Israel from India
has been too high. The visit of the Israeli Foreign
Minister Mr. Shimon Peres to New Delhi would have provided a
major opportunity for a coordinated interpretation of
current events. The stresses and strains of “Ayodhya” on
Indian foreign policy should have led to an astute
assessment of the parameters of security cooperation between
Jerusalem and New Delhi; instead South Block made the
Peres-Rao summit an object of its projected fears and its
depiction of the post-Ayodhya situation did not see any
political payoffs in adhering to the original programme of
the Israeli foreign minister’s journey. A thorough
conceptual reassessment of the first face-to-face encounter
between Indians and Israelis in New Delhi should now be
under way if India is to withstand the offensive of
international terrorism in the months ahead.
The inertia of political interests has
slowed down the process of upgrading political and economic
relations between the two countries. It is not enough to
convey at the bureaucratic level that both sides recognise
the future potentialities of the new relationship. The
structural perception of the threats facing the two
countries should lead to new political thinking at the
highest levels of government. If a narrow view prevails we
can only witness development of bilateral relations in
social and economic spheres without encompassing crucial
changes in the policy process at the global and regional
level in a systemic perspective. It would be
counterproductive for Indian diplomats to see the new phase
of relations with Israel as only requiring a temporary
change in tactics at the bilateral level in order to achieve
public relations success with the American Jewish lobby.
There is no alternative to a change of paradigm in India’s
relations with political and social forces in West Asia if
New Delhi wishes to profit from a substantial dialogue with
Israel and control its security risks. The tendency to take
a one-sided view of the peace process by a blanket
endorsement of Palestinian self-government must yield place
to an objective analysis of the positions of both the
parties and Indian policy makers should look at the ground
realities rather than at the out-of-date images developed in
the period of chilly diplomatic relations with Israel.
India should refrain from introducing frustration and
bitterness into the debate by endorsing extreme demands.
Instead of a sweeping transformation of Israeli-Palestinian
relations, India should use its diplomatic skills in putting
incremental measures on the public policy agenda. India’s
strength lies not in rhetorical practices in favour of
states and groups which are antagonistic to Israel, but in
providing a political vision which can help the West Asian
region to tackle its many political, strategic and economic
problems. New Delhi’s grasp of terrorism and fundamentalism
in West Asia remain woefully inadequate and new thinking has
hardly made any impact on the Indian foreign policy debate
which is still centred on the integrationist thrust of
pan-Arabism.
New Delhi does not appear to have much
difficulty in the vigorous pursuit of trade links with
Israel and in raising the level of cooperation in the sphere
of science and technology. There are, however, very few
signs of breaking out of the entrenched state of inertia in
New Delhi in relation to conflict management among
adversaries in West Asia. Bombay’s catastrophic encounter
with international terrorism in March 1993 raises crucial
questions which cannot be answered by the kind of romanticization which advocates of Third World unity have
been articulating in the national media. A coherent and
efficient policy against international terrorism is now an
absolute necessity for India and New Delhi has to recognise
that Israel is in a unique position to share its
intellectual and institutional strength for dealing with
this scourge. Prime Minister Rao has said that the
Government of India will unravel the hand and brain behind
the blasts in Bombay and the manhunt will not stop on Indian
shores. The days are gone when it was sufficient to call in
Yasser Arafat or Colonel Gaddafi to help New Delhi cope with
the burden of responsibility on West Asian issues. The
inbred ideas of Third Worldism and Arab triumphalism cannot
help India to live up to its national and international
responsibility to meet the new dangers and challenges. Mr.
Narasimha Rao should no longer shy away from recognising the
reliance of India and Israel on each other for the world
wide struggle against the chaos and instability which both
countries have to pursue as “front-line” states. Contacts
and cooperation with Israel on a low key will not provide a
proper methodology of action. The postponement of the
Rao-Peres summit only signalled uncertainty and suggested an
ostrich-like attitude. The holding of the India-Israel
summit will send a strong signal that New Delhi does not
shirk its international task in combating terrorism, and
will be the starting point for a serious Indian effort to
contain the aggressive forces unleashed by anti-democratic
regimes and groups.
The India-Israel summit may of course
catalyse changes in doctrines of national security on both
sides, but it can also clear the way for a more constructive
participation in the peace process. India can start a
process which brings up new ideas and priorities for
tackling international terrorism and also strengthening its
bargaining position vis-à-vis the Arabs by articulating the
interdependencies between itself and all the participants in
the West Asian peace process. During his recent visit to
India, Mr. Yossi Gal a senior Israeli Foreign Ministry
official presented proposals and suggestions which would
help New Delhi and Jerusalem to produce mutual trust and
lasting peace. He made a good case for a substantial
dialogue to further the momentum for a peaceful and
negotiated settlement of the Arab-Israeli question. The
Indian diplomatic response reflected a greater sensitivity
to the problems mentioned by Mr. Gal. Unfortunately India’s
conceptual framework remains contradictory and South Block
is content with improvised measures and ad hoc techniques of
diplomatic management and there is no serious attempt to
produce operational policy forecasts. This position is at
sharp variance with China’s which has used its Israel
connection to make a conceptual reassessment of its West
Asia policy. It is hardly surprising that a radical
overhaul of concepts has given the policy makers in Beijing
increased salience in West Asia.
structural impediments which hinder the development of an
adequate security policy in which the threats inherent in
terrorism of West Asian origin have to be effectively
contained. He must bring India’s national interests to the
forefront and go ahead with his rendezvous with Mr. Shimon
Peres, and become an active participant and a constructive
factor in securing peace and general security in West Asia.
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