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Friendship
With India Reflects Dishonorable Intentions
By Sarita Sarvate, Pacific News Service, June 19, 2001
Among the few major powers expressing support for the Nuclear
Missile Defense Program is India, a country that has kept itself
at arm's length from the United States for many years. Although
India's position is well supported by its citizens, Indians
living in this country see the possibility of harm from this
new friendship. PNS Commentator Sarita Sarvate, a physicist
by training, writes for India Currents.
A popular story in Pakistan tells of the Muslim priest who delivered
an hour-long lecture during Friday services to convince worshippers
it would be sinful for Pakistan to sign the Comprehensive Test
Ban Treaty. Asked just which aspects of the treaty were sinful,
the clergyman replied that he didn't care for the details --
but he was certain it was sinful.
It is that way with India and Bush's Nuclear Missile Defense
(NMD). Indians seem convinced that opposing it would anger Shiva,
the Hindu God of war. Never mind the details.
It is ironic that a proposed new weapons system has been able
to deliver what a Democratic U.S. administration could not --
friendly overtures between Washington and India.
The Clinton administration wanted India as a hi-tech partner,
but ran into conflicts with Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpeyi
over India's nuclear tests and its refusal to sign the Anti
Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty. Now, with a government that
wants to build another version of the Star Wars system, Washington
and India are at long last on the same wavelength.
The Indian press is going gaga over Bush, because it is run
by an elite -- Oxford and Cambridge graduates -- who have not
outgrown the colonial mentality, fawning to white men, the inventors
of Mickey Mouse, McDonald's, microchips, and missiles.
So India will take American friendship at any cost, even if
it means being used as a pawn in Washington's game of International
Shatranj (chess, which was invented in India).
But many Indian Americans realize that this new relationship
is hardly destined to bring lasting peace or prosperity for
their native country. They see the Bush administration using
India in its dangerous game of expanding America's weapons capability
one way or another.
The administration is friendly to India at this juncture because
it sees it as expedient. It wants to exploit India to flare
up old conflicts with neighboring Pakistan and China so the
U.S. can justify its new era of arms expansion.
For the United States, whether or not it happens to be on the
side of India is quite incidental. But in this particular situation
-- with several members of NATO skeptical of NMD, and Russia
and China on the sidelines -- the U.S. would like to bolster
support for its new military hardware by labeling Pakistan a
"rogue state," and India a democratic ally of the U.S.
One can't but wonder if Colin Powell and Condoleeza Rice would
have called India a rogue state, if they could have. The catch
is that India is the second largest country in the world and
its largest democracy, and the NMD is based on the notion that
smaller, rogue states will attack the United States, however
ridiculous that idea might seem.
Hence, Pakistan, a former ally of America, is about to be named
a rogue state. Its harboring of some terrorists in recent years
has made such labeling all too easy.
Indian Americans know that although the Bush Administration
is using India as an ally, in the long run Missile Defense will
further increase animosity between their native country and
Pakistan, and perhaps keep the war in Kashmir brewing for many
more decades to come.
There is some irony in the contrast between Clinton's view of
India as a high-tech superpower whose brains the U.S. could
not live without and Bush's desire to use India's brawn.
Sadly, the lingering energy crisis and faltering tech stocks
mean the Bush government needs NMD, just as the Reagan administration
needed supply side economics, simply as a belief system to keep
the faith of its citizenry.
So Indians have joined the ranks of the believers. And although
Indian Americans at large are aware of the unreality of Star
Wars, powerful business interests within the community are likely
to support it, just to keep the visas and the capital flowing
to India, and the workers and the software from India flowing
back to America.
The only thing left for the Indian populace is to start praying
to Lord Shiva to ensure that the Bush Missile Defense actually
delivers something fruitful for India. |
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