JANATA'S FOREIGN POLICY GOALS
By
M.L. Sondhi
The Tribune, September 15, 1977
Those who look to the immediate development of
"bipartisanship" in foreign policy between the Janata and
the Congress Parties are thinking exclusively of the limits
set by India's geo-strategic requirements and the continuity
of economic and development policies. Nevertheless, it is
important to remember that bipartisanship can be a realistic
programme only when an enlightened public opinion creates an
organic relationship cutting across party lines in defence
of national interest. It cannot be artificially contrived by
tying the hands of a new External Affairs Minister, and
making him subordinate to the consensus created by a
corporate elite of the Foreign Service bureaucracy.
Moreover, during the Emergency there were taboos preventing
democratic discussion of both domestic and foreign policies.
Democracy was eroded not only by the caucus in domestic
affairs but also by the handful of men in the South Block
who manipulated information and debate on foreign policy.
The Janata Party in no uncertain terms is committed to open
a political dialogue and this will inevitably colour its
approach to foreign policy.
There is a fundamental and direct connection between a
widening of democratic participation in foreign
policy-making and standards of objectivity in assessing the
international environment. A leader who is enamoured of his
or her own infallibility can hardly be expected to take into
account all manner of contending views. Censorship works
havoc with mass media and also increases the Government's
own susceptibility to its self-generated propaganda.
After the restoration of democracy India undoubtedly has a
psychological opportunity to develop a new negotiating role
on behalf of the impoverished countries on global issues. It
is not only a question of India's enhanced prestige as a
developing country which can successfully organize its
electoral choice of government. The Janata Party's
principles for domestic economy can be extended to suggest
the use of India's economic potentialities for reducing
dependence of the Third World on the advanced industrial
nations. The focus on rural development can also be
translated in terms of the intentions of the new Government
to adopt the decisive criterion of the welfare of the
peasant masses of the world in the North-South dialogue.
In an address to Indian diplomats Mr. Charan Singh, speaking
as an economic ideologue of the party, stressed the need to
secure well-researched information on social and economic
developments, particularly with reference to the rural
sector. This suggestion merely highlights the importance of
the overall trend in foreign relations where economic and
resource possibilities are interwoven with political and
military decisions.
With its programme of bringing the fruits of progress to the
common man, the Janata Party should have a vested interest
in maintaining peaceful relations with other countries.
Although there is reason to be skeptical about controlling
the arms race in the developing countries, the Rs. 56 crore
reduction in the provision for defence in the first Janata
Budget will merit closer scrutiny if it is followed up by
action to combat the spiraling expenditure on armaments in
the region.
The impact of the new Indian leadership on world affairs
will ultimately be related to its contribution to the
revamping of the global economic structure. Early attention
by Mr. Vajpayee to the implications of a new framework for
the Law of the Sea would help to mobilize initiatives of the
littoral States of the Indian Ocean. Similarly an enhanced
awareness of the need to restructure the international
commodity trade and emphasis on the greater role in sharing
of technologies should replace the piecemeal approach to the
claims of developing countries. The Third World countries
expect India - if it is to be an active agent of influence -
to stand up to pressures on the question of nuclear energy.
It would be counter-productive to erode India's diplomatic
leverage by bringing in the highly discriminatory
Non-Proliferation Treaty through the backdoor. Mr. Vajpayee
does not have to go back on everything he said as an
Opposition spokesman to stress his adjustment to the system
and process of government. By opposing the imposition of
rigorous controls on Indian nuclear development India will
hold out more hope for future transformation of super-power
policies which at present aim at maintaining the existing
nuclear arsenals.
In the sphere of regional policies the general effectiveness
of Indian foreign policy can be enhanced by a clearer
perception of China as a regional power. In contrast to the
past history of Sino-Indian relations, changes in post-Mao
Chinese attitudes and policies can be reinforced by a
realistic appraisal of the situation by India which balances
both political and security considerations. The decisive
break of the Janata Government with the past would lie not
in appeasement of China but in making Sino-India relations
an integral part of a more general trend in India's regional
policy of social and economic development.
In this context the development of closer economic relations
between India and China should have the highest priority.
Rapid expansion of commerce, both over land and across the
high seas between India and China will be a political asset
and will extend the present narrow limits of intra-regional
interaction. Similarly India should move more deliberately
to respond to Japan's political dynamics. The prospects of
new foreign policy postures in Japan, as it seeks more
flexibility in response to economic and resource pressures,
should help to build up a higher level of political,
economic and technological relations between India and
Japan.
Again, projects of cooperation in trade and development with
countries such as Vietnam can play a significant role in
controlling centrifugal forces in the region. The Janata
Government must also encourage the development of every
aspect of cooperation between India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Burma and Sri Lanka. The External Affairs Minister will do
well to study the long-term political factors in this area
and ask his Ministry to work on criteria for both
inter-societal and inter-State roles.
There is a legitimate question whether the goals of the
Janata Government's foreign policy imply concessions in our
ideal of non-alignment. It is vital to understand that no
one is suggesting a change from non-alignment to alignment.
What is underlined in the creative discussion in the Janata
Party is an end to external manipulation. According to
progressive opinion in the party, a truly Janata foreign
policy would be that which controls its own development
without political manipulation from outside.
The key concept that would underlie a foreign policy of
long-term planning enhance the choice between alternative
options in favour of peace and respond creatively to
resource constraints could be termed "non-appeasement". The
hierarchical lines of authority from the two super powers do
not provide the real answers to the backwardness and
stagnation in the Third World. They have only created
islands of separateness which undermine the basis of
reconciliation between nations. A policy of non-appeasement
will translate effectively the enhanced political
participation of the Indian people in the field of
international relations. The task in hand is enormously
difficult because external powers can wield instruments of
political, economic and military coercion against even a
moderately ambitious Indian foreign policy.
Nonetheless, the concept of non-appeasement can serve as the
basis of effective action in four areas if its intrinsic
logic is translated with consistency: (a) establishment of
enduring relations with Third World countries on the basis
of long-term solutions for global socio-economic problems
(b) allaying Soviet doubts, misunderstandings and prejudices
about a successor government with mixed political
components, (c) reducing acrimony with China in the regional
framework (d) increasing the efficacy of Indian bargaining
with the USA and avoiding unfavourable outcomes as in the
past in 1965 and 1971.
To reach a modest but perceptible level in relation to the
foreign policy goals in its election manifesto, the Janata
Government will have to manifest its political will in a
responsible way in a five-pronged manner:
Resistance to the demonstration-effect of the two super
powers: The global policies of the USA and the Soviet Union
seek to coopt countries like India into their preconceived
schemes of world order but in a more subtle manner work upon
the dominant perceptions of policy-makers in Third World
countries. India's interests and constraints vis-à-vis her
neighbouring countries need not be interpreted on the basis
of a hegemonic model and Mr. Vajpayee has already committed
himself explicitly to significant strengthening of regional
interests. The new diplomacy will have to consciously avoid
the metaphors of imperial policies which survive in both US
and Russian world views.
Formulation of long-term objectives: The prime concerns of
the Third World countries are related to the long-term
improvement of the material and spiritual welfare of the
majority of the population of the world. The super powers,
on the other hand, are compulsively relating the
decision-making processes of the developing countries to
short-term problems which arise out of the interaction of
their competitive military commercial and ideological
interests. One way to understand the range of concerns of a
dynamic diplomacy will be for the External Affairs Minister
to ask: What initiative should India take in bilateral and
multilateral relations in matters of high policy which would
have implications for the last quarter of the 20th Century?
Optimising treaty relationships: There is a time-lag between
the rapidly changing political and economic systems and the
legal structure of bilateral and multilateral treaties. This
time-lag works to the disadvantage of Third World countries.
There must be readjustments to new circumstances if
policymaking is to reflect changes in the socio-economic
environment. The task of Indian foreign policymakers,
therefore, includes the formulation of proposals for
revision of multilateral treaties like the UN Charter and of
bilateral treaties to promote the overall goal of equality
and social justice in international relations. As for the
Indo-Soviet Treaty, it is not so much a question of
scrapping it as of amending it, where necessary, for good
practical reasons.
Channels of influence and balanced relationships: There is
no difficulty in demonstrating that Third World and
non-aligned countries have been subjected to one-sided
demands by the super powers in cultural and scientific-
technological relations. There is a world of difference
between a balanced relationship and a "cultural invasion".
Mr. Vajpayee would like to put the question more precisely
to both Moscow and Washington: What effect can massive
inequality in mutual relations have except to mobilise
disaffection among the Indian people against the Big Two?
Protection against manufactured crises: The super power
détente has not been extended to the Third World where a
political climate in favour of interventionism is still
being fostered. The big powers have been fishing in troubled
waters in this part of the world. It is only if a degree of
coherence is reached in mutual relations that Third World
unity can modify attitudes and behaviours which are
perpetuating militarism and economic backwardness in Asia,
Africa and Latin America. This is a question which calls for
a deeper analysis of the foreign policy of a developing
country than has been attempted so far.
Conventional analyses of Indian non-alignment will not be of
much help in tackling fundamental problems of redistribution
of global political and economic power. Non-alignment is a
means to an end: the creation of a new international order
in which the overwhelming majority of the people of the
world can win both political and economic emancipation. It
only leads to confusion to talk of one rigid typology of
non-alignment. Instead of a sterile theoretical debate on
the criteria of non-alignment, it is the general
effectiveness of Indian foreign policy in rebuilding the
international power structure (in both economic and
political terms) that will be of crucial importance. |