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Politics by proxy is disturbing internal peace
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DC PATHAK (Source: IANS) | 04 Jul, 2022
The diminished opposition in the second term of Prime Minister Narendra
Modi in office has stepped up its propaganda offensive against the
regime and in concert with certain civil society fora in the country and
anti-India lobbies abroad, tried to build narratives to project Prime
Minister Narendra Modi as a practitioner of majoritarianism,
authoritarianism and an anti-minority policy.
This
'alliance' has now tried to build a new theme for running down Modi's
government by finding flaws with the latter's ability to 'build
resilience against the threats to the strategic autonomy' of India.
Clearly,
there is no room for the opposition to fault Prime Minister Modi's
handling of national security as such - the political will shown by him
in ordering the surgical strike at Balakot in February 2019 in reply to
the Pak-sponsored terror attack on a CRPF convoy at Pulwama was a
glaring contrast to the Congress government's weak-kneed response to
the horrific 26/11 attacks on Mumbai, and the clarity of decision-making
that he displayed in ensuring a rapid build-up of our army in Eastern
Ladakh following the Chinese aggressive conduct at Galwan valley in June
2020, to enable our troops to take on PLA there in a very direct manner
- the approach of friendship towards China that Prime Minister Modi had
legitimately adopted in his interactions with President Xi Jinping
earlier was discarded without hesitation - all showed beyond doubt that
India under Modi is totally geared to safeguarding national security.
Strategic
autonomy is tested primarily on three fronts - defence, international
relations and internal security. The common context to these is provided
by the state of the country's economy - it is now universally accepted
that national security is inseparable from economic security - and it is
nobody's case that Prime Minister Modi did not have plans of economic
recovery in the Covid affected scenario.
In fact, Modi
can be said to be even ahead of his economic advisors in constantly
devoting to building India's economy - his emphasis on 'vocal for
local', encouragement to entrepreneurship and start-ups and the policy
of promoting 'ease of doing business' through comprehensive reforms in
different sectors, speak for themselves.
Individuals and
think-tank platforms taking up advocacy of some specific measures -
ranging from private partnership in policy formulation to 'welfarism' -
are welcome so long as their intention is to provide inputs for
decision-making, but if in the process they start questioning the
sovereign right of a democratic state to decide things in its own
wisdom, that would amount to an attempt to push their own
politically-motivated agenda.
Anti-Modi forces are tearing down every policy of the government and this gives away their true intentions.
Floating
intellectual debates on public issues to project tinted views should
not become a route to 'politics by proxy'. There has been a concerted
attempt of anti-BJP lobbies in India and abroad, elements of the
opposition and the practitioners of 'minority politics', to unleash
certain narratives to undermine the Modi government through
non-Parliamentary means.
The Gujarat riots of 2002
largely provoked by a backlash of the gruesome burning to death of 60
Hindus, including children, returning from Ayoddhya in a bogey of
Sabarmati Express at Godhra Railway Station, were blamed on the alleged
complicity of Modi - who was the Chief Minister of Gujarat then - by the
anti-Modi lobby for long years.
The Supreme Court of
India has finally thrown out all those allegations, giving a clean chit
to Modi which would rightly reinforce his image as a national leader.
International
relations constitute one of the most important spheres of strategic
autonomy and this has been handled by Modi exceptionally well. A
consistent policy of opting for bilateral relations based on mutually
beneficial economic and security gains, without detriment to the cause
of world peace, enabled Modi to develop an ever-deepening friendship
with the US, strong bonds with leading democracies like Japan, Australia
and the European nations - apart from those of South East Asia and
Israel - and an even relationship with the countries of the Gulf.
What
is even more important, Modi struck a mutually sustainable friendship
with Russian President Vladimir Putin - again with a personal equation
at his level that has marked the international relations of India with
major countries in Modi's time.
After the outbreak of
the Ukraine-Russia military conflict in February this year, Modi was
upfront in taking a line of positive non-alignment between the US and
Russia as India noted that US President Joe Biden, unlike his
predecessor, had declared Russia as an enemy and activated US alliance
with NATO, creating some security concerns for Putin in relation to
Ukraine.
The Cold War had already ended with the
dismemberment of the USSR as the Superpower and Russia was a diminished
successor of the same. The West should have explored the possibility of
democratically run former East European states like Ukraine having pacts
with Russia for peaceful coexistence.
As it is, the
Ukraine-Russia conflict is seeing the US camp pumping in fire arms into
Ukraine in the hope of weakening the Russian war machine, but this may
lead to an unpredictable scenario. The UN should explore terms for peace
between the two neighbours.
It goes to the credit of
Prime Minister Modi -- now known as a world leader committed to a fair
approach to international relations -- that both Ukraine President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Putin wanted him to act as the peacemaker and
that Modi also lost no time in talking to both of them to call for
immediate cessation of military action and resumption of peace talks.
India
did not support the moves of the US and Russia in the UNSC. Many
democratic powers like Australia, France and Germany did show a sense of
understanding towards India's stand.
Biden also did not
make any direct criticism of India and in fact went on to describe the
India-US friendship as potentially the best in the world. India has
expressed its willingness to join any peace intervention on behalf of
the UN.
The remarkable rise of India as a counsel of the
world is reflected in the fact that Modi was heard with great attention
in all fora like Quad, BRICS and G20 and India was able to secure
unanimous condemnation of Terrorism - a threat that has become
particularly grave for India because of Sino- Pak axis. An upshot of
India's successful foreign policy during the Modi regime is that the
world is already acknowledging the advent of a multi-polar order.
The
defence and foreign policies of the Modi government have proved
effective, sustainable and long-range in application. The opposition and
the anti-Modi lobbies have therefore concentrated on raking up issues
that pertained to internal security, national cohesion and communal
peace. They have taken recourse to agitational politics, militant street
protests and whipping up of Hindu-Muslim discords.
A
concerted attempt was made to blame the Modi government for acts of
violence - prevention of which squarely fell on the shoulders of the
respective state governments. This happened in the recent incidents of
communal violence and the protest calls against the Agnipath scheme of
the Centre.
Even if the number of soldiers proposed to
be recruited in Agnipath is small, there is an avenue of useful
temporary employment with the defence services at that level which gets
the youth willing to avail of it, an educational upgrade, benefit of
specialised training that commanded a premium and a lump sum of savings
fund for support.
A subsequent announcement of
reservation in an entire set of organisations under the Defence and Home
Ministries, takes the sting out of any criticism of the scheme. How can
something positive be rejected on the plea that the scale of employment
offered is not large enough?
The narratives of
authoritarianism, lack of attention to the poor or anti-minority bias
remain in place because lobbies are active behind the opposition in
pursuit of politics by other means. At present, the issue of perceived
'insult' caused to a religion, through some remarks or depiction against
its Gods or Prophet, has come into limelight in India and is becoming
instrumental in precipitating fanatic violence in public.
Any
offensive speech or writing is punishable under a set of laws and
cannot be made a justification for heinous acts of raw violence against
person or property. The sensitivities of all communities have to be
equally respected - an alleged 'criticism' of the Prophet or an 'insult'
to some body's God cannot be treated differently.
Leaders
of the Muslim minority in India are expected to acknowledge the
legitimacy of Gods other communities believe in. The vulnerability of
this country to communal conflicts has made this issue a potential
destabiliser of internal security, particularly because radical
extremists and enemy agents are out to cause an escalation under foreign
guidance.
We need 'intelligence from below' to deal
with the situation. On matters of internal security that are placed
above politics, the state and district intelligence machinery should
take guidance from and functionally be accountable to the Intelligence
Bureau - this in fact was the tradition set after Independence.
Meanwhile,
the ongoing advancement of India in the spheres of both national
security and economic development is expected to keep the Modi
government on the side of the people - India, it may be noted, has
always found democratic means of appreciating or faulting the government
on merit.
(The writer is a former Director of Intelligence Bureau. The views expressed are personal)
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