TIBET: The Real Challenge to Indian foreign Policy
By
Vishnugupta
Shakti, December 1965
The emphasis on caution in the Foreign Minister’s
reply to the debate on Foreign Affairs in the Indian
Parliament is hardly the result of a preoccupation with a
careful study of the aims and methods of preserving our
national security which is being gravely threatened by China
and Pakistan. Indeed Prime Minister Shastri’s
pronouncements have led the public to expect a fundamental
rethinking on the requirements of an adequate strategy which
it was further hoped would lead to a central role for the
concept of Deterrence. The personal popularity of the Prime
Minister expressed in the rousing receptions he has received
in all the states of India he has visited is not due to any
belated discovery that India could inflict a military defeat
on Pakistan. The confidence of the Indian public in Mr.
Shastri is related to the feeling that as the chief
decision-maker he is capable of flexible and independent
initiatives on behalf of Asia’s largest democracy which has
to compete with states which have autocratic decision-making
systems. His predecessor Mr. Nehru came under increasing
public criticism for his handling of foreign affairs with a
rigid and dogmatic international outlook. The Ministry of
External Affairs, with the exception of a few competent
individual officers, has a tarnished public image chiefly
because it has persistently advocated a static view of world
affairs when even those with no more than a nodding
acquaintance with the profiles of personalities and policies
of world powers could see that new power centres were
emerging. The Foreign office failed to take account of the
far reaching change in the global situation following the
emergence of the nuclear stalemate. Then again the break-up
of the monolithic unity of International Communism was not
analysed in a scientifically rigorous manner and no definite
policy conclusions emerged. The naivette of the foreign
office policy makers was particularly evident in the
cliché-ridden Indian policy towards the Middle-east where on
no occasion did India correctly estimate the unity and
contradiction in the Arab world and no efforts were made to
explore the possibilities of a mutually beneficial dialogue
with Israel. There is, however, rarely so foolish a policy
produced by a foreign office as that which led India to
recognise Chinese rule over Tibet. It is only criminal
negligence of India’s security interest which can explain
the failure to examine the role which Tibet could play in
future Chinese nuclear strategy. It was known that
Communist China was developing an indigenous nuclear
capacity and it did not require imagination to consider that
China would also one day develop ballistic missiles for
which Tibet would be an ideal base. The foreign office does
not deem to have identified any motives in Chinese policy
for the establishment of Chinese hegemony in Asia and it was
not till 1962 that it saw it fit to establish specialised
Research on China. All these facts are well known and even
within the Ministry of External Affairs the more sober and
intelligent officers have been pressing for radical
reforms. Many of the senior officials were personally
involved in construction of policies which had led to the
sacrifice of India’s national interests, and they had
naturally grave fears that if any radical reforms were
undertaken unpleasant facts might come to light which would
imperil their careers. This theme explains the status-quo
mindedness of the Ministry of the External Affairs.
Prime Minister Shastri’s new pragmatism has
not won the allegiance of the Ministry of External Affairs.
And recently it would seem as if the dogmatic approach to
foreign affairs has staged a come-back with renewed vigour.
The Foreign Minister is in no mood to cut the dead wood so
that new ideas may sprout and help Mr. Shastri to build the
morale of the nation on the firm basis of National
Security. When faced with grave crisis outstanding foreign
Ministers are able to respond with new initiatives which can
exploit the weaknesses of the countries enemies. But it
almost spells failure when a Foreign Minister starts harping
on sticking to hallowed policies. Mr. Swaran Singh’s recent
behaviour is strongly reminiscent of the attitude of the
late John Foster Dulles in the United States of America.
The inanities of the Dullesian diplomacy were best expressed
by the cliché: Better dead than red. It required
the courage of a Kennedy backed by an able adviser like Dean
Rusk to breathe optimism into the body politic of American
Foreign Relations by the prescription: We shall be neither
dead nor red. Indeed Mr. Shastri has himself shown a way
out of the despair and diffidence of the earlier regime. In
dealing with the aggression from Pakistan, Mr. Shastri
rejected the foreign office outlook and returned to the
traditional Gandhian decision-making. He revealed his
independent powers of decision and the public endorsed his
argument that India must decide freely where and in what
form it should hit back against an aggressor. The domestic
response of national unity and voluntary mobilisation of
resources was directly the result of a widely shared
conviction that Mr. Shastri would after the bitter
experience of the Kutch affair (equivalent to Kennedy’s Bay
of Pigs) improve the strategic posture of India by refusing
piecemeal concessions. The public in India still associates
Non-Appeasement as the essence of the Shastri outlook,
although naturally enough the Prime Minister has to frame
his arrangements in a language which emphasises continuity
rather than change in Indian Foreign Policy.
The foreign Minister’s refusal to modify
India’s existing stand on the political aspects of the Tibet
issue is a clear example of his failure to understand the
mood of the country in the Shastri era. It also reflects
his failure to keep himself informed of the changing
perspective of China’s involvement in Tibet. Even those
die-hards among the China specialists – notably the British
Singologists – who thought that Tibet has vanished from the
world arena once for all are now beginning to have second
thoughts. To quote G.F. Hudson, Director of the Centre of
Far Eastern Studies t St. Anthony’s College Oxford:
“Tibet has been so far the thorniest problem
of all (for Communist China) for the reconquest in 1950 was
not an end of the matter. Chinese settlement in Kham
produced a revolt which finally spread to central Tibet and
led to the flight of the Dalai Lama into India in 1959.
Since the episode coincided with the beginnings of the
dispute between India and China over their common frontier,
the Tibetan question became to some extent an international
issue – which Indian policy had prevented it from becoming
in 1950. The political asylum granted to the Dalai Lama and
his followers greatly angered the Chinese; on the other
hand, India refrained, even after the aggravation of the
border conflict from actively aiding the Tibetan rebels by
the supplies of arms, doubtless because it was feared in
Delhi that China, if provoked too far, would retaliate
against one or more of India’s more vulnerable fronts –
Kashmir, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan or Nagaland. It remains a
possibility, however, that in the event of a renewal of
Sino-Indian hostilities India may decide to sponsor the
cause of Tibetan independence; certainly supplies of
suitable equipment would enormously increase the capacity of
Tibetan guerrillas to harass an army of occupation dependent
on long lines of communication through wild mountain areas.
As against this potential threat the Chinese have made great
efforts since the suppression of the rising in Lhasa to
conciliate the Tibetan people, and Mr. Stuart Gelder has
recently brought back a glowing account of benevolent
Chinese empire builders behaving as the more enlightened
colonial powers used to behave to natives after pacifying
them. It is too early to judge how much success the current
Chinese policy will have, but the odds are against it; the
Tibetans are a separate nation with a culture of their own
and traditions of independence, and it is likely to be a
long time before they come to regard china as their
“motherland”.
The above extract reveals the dilemmas of
the British school of thought which has greatly influenced
our Anglophile Ministry of External Affairs and brings out
the contradictions which result from the heavy camouflage of
Britain’s betrayal of Tibet. Geoffrey Hudson and other
British Sino-logists have no one to blame but themselves for
being unable to judge how much success current Chinese
policy has had in Tibet. The brash manner in which
statements of the Dalai Lama’s Headquarters at Dharamsala or
the informed judgements of his principal advisers have been
ignored by British scholars contrasts with the constructive
attitude of Western research projects on Soviet Union and
East European countries Mr. Stuart Gelder’s frivolous
account shows how much of British emotionalism is
pro-Chinese It is therefore all the more significant that
Hudson should feel compelled to reflect seriously on two
realistic possibilities:
1.
Supply of arms by India to Tibetan rebels.
2.
India’s sponsorship of Tibetan independence.
The British analyst’s blind spots are nowhere more evident
than when he speculates on India’s fear of Chinese
retaliation against one or more of India’s more vulnerable
fronts. He gives the impression that after all the Chinese
are not so wicked and there is no reason why India should
want to negotiate from strength or should introduce a Theory
of Deterrence in her defence planning against China. These
are the same weaknesses evident in the old Pancha Sheel
attitude to China in which India was committed to
continuously appease Chinese intransigence. Nevertheless
Hudson’s belated acknowledgement that Tibet does not as yet
belong to the Chinese motherland and that it is China’s
thorniest problem is quite enlightening. The Government of
India experts might do well to initiate detailed studies on
the basis of the hints available in the Hudson article.
The Prime Minister has made it clear that he
is fully aware of the nuclear threat from china and has
adopted certain formulations in which observers have
detected a certain degree of new strategic thinking. The
Foreign Minister’s thinking, however, remains fairly
backward and there is particularly no indication that he
understands the serious consequences for India if the
Chinese are successful in emplacing missiles with nuclear
warheads in Tibet. He has failed to comprehend the
possibilities for nuclear blackmail by China. Even the most
casual observer could detect the parallel between the
security threat to United States from nuclear missiles in
Cuba and that which will arise for India from Chinese
missiles in Tibet. In fact the likelihood of a Cuban type
situation arising in Tibet is a very real one. As far as
one can make out Mr. Swaran Singh’s nuclear doctrine is a
fairly simple one, namely that once India has signed the
Moscow Test Ban Treaty, there is precious little that
remains to be done. This is altogether a dangerous and
irresponsible view from the perspective of our national
security. As a matter of fact, Article IV of the Moscow
Test Ban Treaty itself underlines the importance of
safeguarding national security. The Article reads:
“…Each Party shall in exercising its
national sovereignty have the right to withdraw from the
Treaty if it decides that extraordinary events, related to
the subject matter of this Treaty, have jeopardised the
supreme interests of its country. It shall give notice of
such withdrawal to all other Parties to the Treaty three
months in advance”.
This is, however, not the only action
possible and India facing “extraordinary events” which have
“jeopardised the supreme interests” of our country – in as
much as the nuclear developments in China pose the gravest
threat to our national security, - can take action under
Art. II of the Moscow Treaty part I which reads:
“Any party may propose amendments to this
Treaty. The text of any proposed amendment shall be
submitted to the Depository Governments which shall
circulate it to all Parties to this Treaty. Thereafter if
requested to do so by one – third or more of the Parties,
the Depository Governments shall convene a conference, to
which they shall invite all the Parties, to consider such
amendment.”
Clearly the Chinese nuclear explosions have
caused very great concern in our country and the very basis
on which we adhered to the Moscow Test Ban treaty has been
affected. We should have no hesitation in proposing
amendments to the existing treaty which should be aimed at
placing obstacles in the way of China executing her
aggressive nuclear strategy against us. In this connection
it is of the essence to appreciate the key role of Tibet. To
quote Oscar Morgenstern: “Tests might be made secretly… in
Tibet, where the prevalence of earth-quakes makes a
distinction between these and secret tests entirely
impossible.” The Government of India would be within its
right to demand that the Moscow Test Ban treaty be amended
by providing for denuclearisation of Tibet. Even if
Communist China has not been admitted to the UN, this need
not prevent the Moscow Treaty members from taking the
necessary action because apart from the registration of the
treaty under Art. 102 of the Charter, the United Nations has
no involvement in the operation of the Treaty.
A new Indian policy for Tibet is urgently
needed and this should extend to political and military
aspects. The Foreign Minister has cleverly sidetracked
these issues by playing up the Human Rights issue in
relation to Tibet. Some hard thinking is necessary and of
that the foreign Minister and Ministry of External Affairs
have provided no evidence in the recent Parliamentary debate
on Foreign Affairs.
There is nothing unreasonable about India
demanding international inspection of Tibet for possible
nuclear missile sites and for atomic tests. But it is clear
that such actions will sound hollow unless India revises its
stand on the political aspects of the Tibet problem. The
popular demand in India for the recognition of the
Government of the Dalai Lama as the Government of Tibet in
exile is by no means unrealistic. If the Africans can
contemplate action against the usurper government of Ian
Smith in Rhodesia there is good reason why India should
reopen the question of the legitimate authority in Lhasa.
The Soviet Union is aware that the chief objective of the
Chinese is to exercise hegemony over large extra territorial
areas. The Soviet Union cannot be expected to initiate
action on the Tibetan issue, but there are enough
indications to suggest that the soviets strongly dislike the
Chinese presence in Tibet and would encourage any move which
injures Chinese interests in Central Asia. The United
States under the influence of the United Kingdom has been
rather indifferent to the political rights of the Tibetans,
but it is clear that once India takes up the Tibetan issue
in right earnest public opinion in the United States would
compel the government to extend support to a political move
which would directly impinge upon the professed public
philosophy of the American people.
The possibilities of political action by
India on the Tibet question are quite promising but the
Foreign Minister is badly misinformed if he thinks by
supporting the human rights issue in Tibet he has worked out
a rational Tibet policy. It is problems of military
strategy and overall political considerations which the
Foreign Minister needs to take into account. If Mr. Shastri
is not to always pull the chestnuts of the fire for the
foreign Minister, then he must urge the latter to undertake
in his Ministry a strategic political study of Tibet and
give up the present practice of guess-work and “muddling
through”. |