Commentary/ Fuzail Jafferey
Washington will not allow peace to prevail in the subcontinent as long
as India does not accept US hegemony in its internal affairs
Failures of national development have often produced
scapegoats. In India, the scapegoats for these failures are the
Muslims and any other so-called minorities whose actions are deemed
to threaten the Indian State, its national unity and integrity.
These failures and scapegoats provide an essential
base for the recent rise in militant Hindu nationalism.'
The above is neither an extract from the speech of Qazi Hussain Ahmad, the Jamat-e-Islami chief of Pakistan,
nor of any misguided Indian Muslim leader like Abdullah Bukhari who charged the Indian state with encouraging militant
Hindu nationalism in the country.
These are the utterances of a prominent American
professor who recently declared that the Indian State has been
a total failure in 'providing to Indians the national self-respect
they demand in the world'. Professor Paul R Brass of the University
of Washington, while participating in a seminar by the Woodrow
Wilson centre to assess the 'Progress, problems and prospects'
of India and Pakistan, made an extremely
bitter and scathing attack on India, which is aspiring to be recognised
as an 'equal' by the great powers.
Those American experts who
have been of late predicting that India would achieve the status
of an economic giant by the end of the century must have felt
shocked and surprised by Professor Brass's uncharitable remarks. According to the learned professor (who has authored quite a few books on India), the
economic policies pursued by the Indian leaders in the post-Independence
era have not succeeded in turning it into an economically powerful
country. It had failed miserably in improving the lives of its
people in a manner that the western world considers 'sufficient or even
decent'.
There is no doubt that poverty continues to be a
major hurdle in India's progress. At the same time, as the noted
Indian economist, Professor A M Khusro, recently pointed out, the
number of Indians who crossed the poverty line during the last
two decades or so is more than the total population of Europe.
Oblivious of such facts, Professor Brass continued his tirade
against India emphasising that a country where millions upon millions
live in the most degraded conditions imaginable, and which was
dreaming of becoming a Hindu state could never become the world
power.
A couple of interesting facts before we go ahead:
the seminar at which Professor Brass embarrassed India in every possible
way was held on June 8, the day on which
the Washington Post came out with its fabricated story about
India's deployment of ballistic missiles on the Pakistan border,
and that it was attended among others by Robin Raphel, assistant
secretary for South Asia at the US state department and a known India
baiter, and Riaz Khokhar, Pakistan's new ambassador to the US.
Since then, the Pakistani press has vociferously attacked
India and mobilised public opinion against Nawaz Sharief's
friendly gestures towards I K Gujral. Some
Pakistani columnists have also been trying to incite Indian
Muslims against the government. But before going into details,
let us ponder for a moment as to why the US and its ally Pakistan
have suddenly renewed their outburst against India in the golden
jubilee year of Independence.
Apart from India's
firm insistence on its freedom to keep its defence and nuclear
options open, certain pleasant development in recent weeks have
made the US and Pakistan feel uneasy and unhappy. After a long
gap, India now has a prime minister who is more a statesman
than a mere politician. The Gujral doctrine is fast catching
up with South Asian countries, especially Muslim-dominated ones such as Indonesia, Iran and Malaysia. Gujral enjoys the confidence of the minority community as he
has been, since long, a great champion of the composite culture
and has always taken a greater interest in the development of
Urdu than that of Hindi or even his mother tongue Punjabi.
Another development which has annoyed America and
Pakistan is the visible change in the attitude of the Indian Muslims
and the Bharatiya Janata Party towards each other. While Muslim
leaders have stopped harping on their demand for reconstructing
the Babri mosque, the BJP has realised, though belated, that
it cannot politically flourish without Muslim support. Thanks to his swarna jayanti yatra,
BJP president Lal Kishinchand Advani has acquired almost a new avatar.
While addressing a public rally in Calcutta, he not only praised
the secular and democratic ideals of Nehru and requested Muslims
not to treat the BJP as a political untouchable, but was also quite
apologetic about the Ayodhya incident.
All this has not gone down well with the US and Pakistan
who want India to remain politically instable. Taking cue from
the Washington Post and Seminar, the Pakistani press has again
started spreading all sorts of rumours.
Muslims, both at home and abroad, are warned that India is relentlessly
nurturing its 'strategic vision' of 'Akhand Bharat.' While none
including the Nagpur bosses talk about establishing a Hindu
raj even in India, the Pakistani journalists tell us that India's
'hegemonic external policies' are aimed at establishing 'a mythical
Hindu empire in the whole region including Sri Lanka and Afghanistan'.
The peace-loving Pakistani citizens who
want closer ties with India are told that Prithvi is not only
a formidable lethal weapon but is also immune to counter missile
systems like the Patriot. The major population centres in Pakistan
like Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore and Faisalabad, they are told, are hostages to the Indian missile.
The Pakistani prime minister who developed a very
good equation with Gujral during the Male summit is under
great fire these days. According to Ikrammullah, a senior
commentator, Nawaz Sharief is not at all concerned with the
threats posed from the Indian side. ''Miyan saheb sees no evil,
hears no evil and therefore speaks no evil. His faith in his friend
Gujral prevents him from even smelling the threat
that is emerging on Pakistan's western borders."
The Pakistani press has
almost unanimously condemned Sharief for giving an interview
to an Indian television channel. They feel that if at all he had to do so, he should have reflected the mood of the nation ''by
showing his fist to Indians in the manner Liaquat Ali Khan did
in 1951, rather than talking in a conciliatory tune. It is further
argued that Sharief has no mandate to strike a deal with
India on the Kashmir issue."
Since all such editorials and articles end up with
an appeal to Washington to take more active interest in the region,
we cannot but draw the conclusion that the US will not allow lasting
peace to prevail in the subcontinent as long as India too, like
Pakistan, does not accept its hegemony in the internal affairs
of the country.
The US administration is worried about India's growing
political, economic and ballistic strength. It is afraid that
if India is not checked in time, it may soon fill the gap created
by the collapse of the Soviet Union. It is no wonder then that
the anti-India tirade initiated by Professor Brass in Washington, supported by the Washington Post's baseless allegations, is now
taken over by the US lobby in Pakistan which is yet again indulging
in a sort of proxy war. No one can predict how long Nawaz
Sharief who had to increase the defence budget under pressure,
would continue with his efforts of building bridges with India.
It is the time the government and people of India extended
all possible moral help to the Pakistani premier who is under
seige, despite his numerical majority in the national assembly.
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