Indian Eggs in Saudi Basket
By B. Raman
The Indian interest in closer relations with
Saudi Arabia dates back to the period from
1980 to 84 when Indira Gandhi was the Prime
Minister. As she was generally in the habit
of doing, she initially sent a senior
official of the Indian intelligence
community on a secret visit to Saudi Arabia
to test the waters for making an overture to
the then ruling family. R.N.Kao, who was
then the Senior Adviser to her, did the
spade work in paving the way for a visit by
her to Saudi Arabia. The then Indian
Ambassador to Saudi Arabia played a
significant role in convincing her about the
positive feelings for India in the Saudi
ruling family. These preliminary steps
culminated in a successful visit by her to
Saudi Arabia in 1982.
2. Her interest in closer relations with
Saudi Arabia had four objectives---- to
strengthen India's energy security, to use
the good offices of Saudi Arabia to
persuade Pakistan to stop supporting the
Khalistan movement, to remove suspicions in
the Islamic world in general and in Saudi
Arabia in particular about India's Afghan
policy which was widely perceived in the
West and the Islamic world as supporting the
Soviet interests in Afghanistan and to
retain the continued support of the Indian
Muslim community for the Congress (I).
3. The high expectations aroused by her
visit did not materialise. Saudi Arabia was
not able to or was not in a position to make
Pakistan stop supporting the Khalistan
movement. While the economic ties between
the two countries continued to grow in fits
and starts, there were no political or
long-term strategic dividends from the
visit. Even hopes that the visit could pave
the way for a formal liaison relationship
between the intelligence agencies of the two
countries resulting in intelligence-sharing
arrangements were belied.
4. Among the reasons for the disappointing
sequel were---firstly, Indira Gandhi's
preoccupation with countering the Khalistan
movement which ultimately led to her
assassination in October, 1984, and,
secondly, the emergence of Pakistan as a
frontline state in the jihad against the
Soviet troops in Afghanistan and the
consequent reluctance of Saudi Arabia and
the US to exercise pressure on Pakistan to
make it stop supporting the Khalistan
movement.
5. Under Rajiv Gandhi and Narasimha Rao as
Prime Ministers, the exercise to upgrade our
relations with Saudi Arabia was given a low
priority. Both of them realised that India
had to fight Khalistani terrorism and
Pakistani sponsorship of it in its own way
and through its own means and that it would
be futile to expect the US or Saudi Arabia
or any other country to exercise pressure on
Pakistan. How to make the Pakistani use of
Khalistani terrorism prohibitively costly to
Islamabad? That became the main objective of
Rajiv Gandhi and Narasimha Rao.
6. Any scope for a new look at India's
relations with Saudi Arabia was considerably
reduced by the success of the Afghan
Mujahideen supported by the US, Pakistan and
Saudi Arabia in overthrowing the
India-friendly Government of Najibullah in
Kabul and capturing power in 1992, the
emergence of the Taliban in 1994 and its
capture of power in Kabul in 1996, the Saudi
support for the Taliban Government and the
Saudi sympathies for the Pakistan-backed
jihadi terrorist organisations in Jammu &
Kashmir post-1989.
7. Faced with these developments, India
started exploring new diplomatic and
operational options --- with some success.
Iran played a central role in the Indian
search for new options. Among these options,
one could mention India enlisting the
support of Iran to defeat the move of the
Benazir Bhutto Government to have India
condemned in the UN Human Rights Commission
on the Kashmir issue in 1994 and the covert
alliance with Iran and Russia to help the
Northern Alliance in its fight against the
Taliban. India's relations with Iran reached
the height of their development under
Narasimha Rao. Iran became the toast of the
Indian diplomacy in the Islamic world just
as Saudi Arabia seems to be becoming of the
Manmohan Singh Government's diplomacy.
Narasimha Rao braved the displeasure of the
US Government in developing India's
relations with Iran and of the Arab world in
developing relations with Israel. Iran and
Israel became the two fulcra around which
Indian overt and covert diplomacy to counter
Pakistan turned.
8. The Manmohan Singh Government's renewed
interest in developing closer relations with
Saudi Arabia could be traced to his visit to
Washington in July, 2005, during which the
civilian nuclear co-operation agreement with
the US was signed. New Delhi had to pay an
unadmitted price for this
agreement----downgrading its relations with
Iran. The Indian vote against Iran in the
International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna
and the low priority given by India to its
participation in the project for the
construction of a gas pipeline from Iran to
India via Pakistan were the outcome of Dr.
Manmohan Singh's visit to the US and the new
strategic co-operation with the US. New
Delhi, which had consistently resisted US
pressure on its Iran policy, became
increasingly amenable to pressure from
Washington. Result: Iran quietly retaliated
on energy co-operation with India.
9. The need to find alternate sources for
India's increasing energy requirements in
the face of the post-2005 unhelpful attitude
of Iran once again made New Delhi turn to
Saudi Arabia for its energy security. Our
relations with Saudi Arabia have acquired a
Pakistani dimension after the 26/11
terrorist strikes in Mumbai. Despite the
terrorist strikes, the continuing Pakistani
support to organisations such as the
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) put the Manmohan Singh
Government in a dilemma---to retaliate or
not to retaliate. Dr. Manmohan Singh is not
a man of confrontation. Even though in
response to public anger and political
pressure from sections of his own party and
other political parties, he suspended the
composite dialogue with Pakistan and
wriggled out of the agreement reached by
him with Pakistani Prime Minister Yousef
Raza Gilani at Sharm-el-Sheikh in July last,
he has not given up his hopes of reaching
some sort of an agreement with Pakistan
which would make Pakistan discontinue the
use of terrorism against India in Indian and
Afghan territories as a prelude to the
resumption of the composite dialogue with
Pakistan on Kashmir and other issues.
10. Just as Indira Gandhi sought to use
----unsuccessfully---the help of Saudi
Arabia to make Pakistan stop supporting the
Khalistanis, Dr. Manmohan Singh has sought
the good offices of the Saudi King to make
Pakistan stop supporting anti-India
terrorism so that "he could walk the extra
mile" with Pakistan as he put it. We are in
for disappointment if we believe that Saudi
Arabia will exercise pressure on Pakistan,
another Sunni state, to stop supporting
anti-India Sunni/Wahabi terrorist groups.
There is a convergence between the views of
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan on the issue of
jihadi Sunni terrorism directed against
India. Both condemn jihadi Sunni terrorism
in the Indian territory outside Jammu &
Kashmir, but both look upon what is going
on in J&K as a "freedom struggle". In the
unlikely event of Saudi Arabia interceding
with Pakistan to give satisfaction to India
on the question of terrorism in hinterland
India outside Kashmir, it would expect India
to give satisfaction to Pakistan on Kashmir.
Would Dr. Manmohan Singh be prepared to do
it?
11. Some of the recent statements of Dr.
Manmohan Singh in Saudi Arabia are likely to
be misinterpreted by Islamabad as indicating
the beginning of a battle fatigue in New
Delhi. It would make Pakistan even more
determined than hitherto to keep up the
pressure on India through terrorism to force
a change in the status quo. Even if Saudi
Arabia sincerely tries to exercise pressure
on Pakistan on the terrorism issue, Pakistan
is unlikely to give in at a time when it
thinks that battle fatigue is setting in. It
is one thing to strengthen our energy
security by developing our relations with
Saudi Arabia, but it is another to put our
eggs in the Saudi basket in matters relating
to our core concerns about Pakistani
sponsorship of terrorism and Kashmir.
12. India is a frontline State in the battle
against global Sunni/Wahabi jihadi
terrorism. It has to fight the battle on its
own, through its own means with the help of
like-minded States. Saudi Arabia is
definitely not a like-minded State in this
regard. Another worrisome aspect of the
recent visit (February 27 to March 1,
2010) of Dr. Manmohan Singh to Saudi Arabia
is his support to the Arab point of view on
a peace settlement with Israel without
consideration to the core concerns and
sensitivities of Israel, which has been a
steadfast well-wisher of India and has been
quietly playing a helpful role in our
attempts to modernise our Armed Forces to
counter the modernisation of the Chinese
Armed Forces.
13. Just as Dr. Manmohan Singh paid a price
in terms of Iran in his keenness to get
closer to the US, he seems to be prepared to
pay a price in terms of Israel in his
keenness to get closer to Saudi Arabia. We
supported the Arabs right or wrong to the
detriment of Israel before 1967. What did
we get in return? It will be very
unfortunate if we revert to our pre-1967
policies in our keenness to cultivate Saudi
Arabia.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd.),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)