India’s
trajectory to regional and global power:
Risks, Obstacles and Strengths
By A. K. Verma
(This paper was
prepared & published by Cenjows)
Many observers have
commented that the 21st century
belongs to India (and China). Since
economics is increasingly becoming the
currency of power this statement
acknowledges the changing balance of power
in the world and is a tribute to the growing
economics muscles of India.
Since the 1990s India
is on a new economic path. The forecast was
that by 2020, its economy would treble and
by 2050 it will leave US economy behind.
That surely implies that India will by then
be seated on the high table because with
economic power will also come the political
strengths. As a result courting of India by
other powers has already begun.
Globalization, with new
interconnectivity and fillip to trade
through opening of markets, has brought new
prosperity to India. Liberalization enabled
India’s economic revolution to match the
levels achieved by East Asian Tiger states.
The credit for the new
economic momentum goes to Prime Minister PV
Narsimha Rao. All subsequent Central
Governments of India followed his lead. The
years 2003-07 recorded a big surge in the
economy which touched 9.4% of the GDP in
2006-07. Unfortunately, the subprime
mortgage crisis of 2008 in the US has
initiated a world recession which will drop
India’s growth during 2008-09 to 7% or
nearabouts. India’s economic fundamentals
are now very sound which should enable India
to get back to her accelerated growth by
2010-11 at the latest. But for this hiccup,
thanks to the financial breakthrough
achieved in the previous five years, Indian
economy was expected to double every eight
years. At this rate India was destined to
become the 5th largest consumer
market in the world. India’s status then
would not be high just in Asia, but in the
entire world.
The drawback was that
the new prosperity was not reaching all
sections of people in India. The rich were
becoming richer, the poor remaining poor.
Inequality between the urban and rural areas
was widening. It is also going to have a
spatial north-south divide with southern
states and west moving far ahead of the rest
of the country causing an imbalance that may
move people towards these regions. Social
and political changes were not keeping pace
with the economic growth. Estimates were
that in 2004-05, 33.6% of people were living
on less than $ 1 per day. The state
continuously failed to deliver to the people
on basic issues of health, education,
employment and infrastructure. In a sense
the economic miracle was also creating
transformational disruption. Naxalism which
started as a revolt against the state for
its political and economic policies from a
village called Naxalbari in the Darjeeling
district of West Bengal in 1965 has spread
to 16 states affecting more than 150
districts. Lobbying for power on the basis
of caste has fragmented Indian politics.
The Indian growth story
is, thus, not a smooth process. India’s
future trajectory on the power graph will
depend upon how the impediments to economic
growth get removed and with what success.
Apart from societal ones, the impediments
lie scattered in several sectors notably
governance and regulatory. Corruption has
consistently remained one of the main causes
for failure of delivery.
The Government,
however, is doing its best to surmount these
obstacles so that economic growth could be
sustained at the levels already achieved and
the nation building programs do not falter.
There is a heavy accent on expansion of
education and infrastructure. New job
opportunities are being created and it is
hoped that in time, more people, employed
presently in agriculture and related
activities which are poorly paid will be
able to join industry and businesses. What
has been done and achieved still remains
miniscule in comparison with what needs or
remains to be done but there is hope and
confidence in the air that India is on the
march ahead. With that India is acquiring a
new vision of itself vis a vis the region
and the world.
This vision while
keeping national security at the top seeks
to develop a cooperative and friendly
attitude with all countries of the world.
India has no hidden agenda but it is well
aware that other nations may not feel
equally benign towards it. Its nuclear
program was designed to forestall any
surprises from the neighborhood as well as
to seek recognition that India is on its way
to becoming a leading power of the world.
Slowly, India is building a blue navy with
aircraft carriers and nuclear submarines
which signify a high military status. It has
the fourth largest land army in the world.
It has a powerful and advanced air fleet for
defense. With its space and lunar programs
and recent successful orbiting of the moon,
it has sent a message that it is seriously
developing its credentials as a global
power. Its quest for permanent membership of
UN Security Council is to get the world
accept its status which demography and
economic growth entitles it to. In the field
of IT its unique and worldwide standing has
already been accepted.
India has always wanted
an important role in the world. When the
South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation (SAARC) was mooted India was
quick to join it hoping that promotion of
trade, business and cultural interaction
would bring harmony and raise living
standards of the people in the region. But
deeply held animosities within the region
have come in the way of encouraging mutual
dialogue beyond a threshold. In the
meanwhile the Association of South East
Asian Nations (ASEAN) had been established
(1967) as a forum for dialogue to prevent
the compromise of the members’ national
interest by what appeared to be predatory
powers in the neighborhood, China and Japan
and across the Pacific, the USA. Regional
togetherness has made ASEAN countries close
knit. In 1993 a new entity, the Asean
Regional forum (ARF) came into existence
which includes India as a member. The
purpose was to keep taking stock of security
related issues of the region but the group
has so far refrained from discussing any
contentious issues. Yet another
organization, the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) came up in 2006,
pointedly for looking into issues of
regional terrorism and Islamic extremism.
India has an observer status with SCO. East
Asia Summit, set up in 2005, is the latest
new entity with sixteen members including
India. It’s not yet clear what East Asia
Summit is set to achieve but one thing is
clear: the emergence of these organizations
signifies that the Asian countries
increasingly feel the need for a collective
identity to forge cooperative common
policies which will keep in view the
interests of each nation. In time it may
lead to the constitution of an Asian Union
on the lines of European Union but right
now, given the mutual rivalries, fears and
aspirations, the prospects are nowhere in
sight. By being accorded a place in all
these bodies, either as a member or
observer, India’s role as a leader get
fairly well established. A place in the East
Asia Summit gives it a voice on affairs of
the region.
India’s rise has
attracted US attention, which consequent to
the shift of economic and political power to
Asia, is seeking to establish a new security
architecture in Asia as well as the world.
In the new geopolitical situation of today,
US prowess remains supreme and is likely to
remain so at least for 20 to 25 years more.
And yet, emergence of prospective power
centers principally in Asia and growth of
Islamic terrorism makes it feel vulnerable,
causing it to look for new friends.
In March 2005 the US
announced that it welcomes and supports
India’s growth to a great power status. US
shift towards India represented a
fundamental and strategic shift of an
exceptional nature, soon confirmed through
the civil nuclear agreement between the two
countries whereby, without having to sign
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, India
was to be made eligible for supply of
nuclear fuel and equipment to augment its
civil nuclear energy resources. Another
agreement in June 2005 provided for a joint
defense framework which laid the foundation
for a ten year project to promote a military
relationship between the two countries.
The shift clearly
signifies that the US was seeking India’s
cooperation in dealing with a resurgent
China which might challenge US's preeminence
in Asia and the world in future at sometime.
In US calculations India’s democratic system
was a big plus point. Japan and other
smaller countries of East Asia had a similar
understanding which had led to India being
welcomed to join East Asia Summit. Japan had
been indifferent towards India earlier but
is now seeking strategic cooperation,
keeping in mind the historical bitterness
with China. A new alliance of democracies
seems to be in the offing between US, Japan,
India and Australia that China perceives as
targeting it directly. Already a joint naval
exercise has been held between the navies of
these countries and Singapore in the Bay of
Bengal of 2007. However it is not easy to
make a firm assessment about Japan’s
commitment to India yet as its policiea have
appeared wobbly at times.
However, coming
together of US and India is just in the
nature of a strategic partnership and is not
a strategic alliance. Globalization has led
to a great deal of economic interdependence
with mutual trade and investments but
relations between states will also
simultaneously remain mutually competitive
for access to resources from outside.
Sometimes competition may bring forth a
military threat, or geopolitical rivalry. In
such times policy making becomes a complex
exercise. The present tilt in US policy
towards India is just a product of current
circumstances of US. If the context changes,
so can this tilt.
How true can this be is
amply illustrated by the policies of US
towards Pakistan. During the 1990s when the
US desperately needed Pakistan to be on its
side to prosecute the war against the Soviet
Union in Afghanistan, it completely closed
its eyes to Pakistan’s proliferation of
nuclear materials to North Korea, Libya and
Iran. Though the US knew India to be the
target of Pakistani nuclear weapons
development program, it never shared any
information about this program with India.
More recently, Pakistan’s campaign of terror
against India was never condemned by the US
in terms that would have required Pakistan
to change its ways. Taking all this into
consideration, it would be wise to treat
US’s current interest in India as arising
out of compulsions of its own national
interests and no more. Any power trajectory
that India may aspire to build in future
will have to be on its own, not on any
closeness to US. US objectives to get India
to cap, rollback and eliminate its nuclear
weapons program will not be given up. US
will mount pressures again the moment it
judges it to be the right one.
The country which India
has to be most wary about is China. It views
India as a threat to its preeminence in
Asia, which can engage in fierce
competitions for scarce resources, political
influences and friends. It will like to deny
India strategic space in Asia, Africa and
Latin America and to see India confined to
South Asia as a regional power. In such a
relationship some tension will always be
present. As years pass by, tensions could
rise. Another war, like 1962, may be
unlikely but can not be ruled out
altogether.
China is feverishly
upgrading its military forces and space
capabilities. In 2007 it surprised the world
by shooting down a satellite with a missile.
Its military budget of $ 45 b in 2007 was
twice that of India and has for the past ten
years been recording a double digit rise.
Growing at this rate the Chinese armed
forces will become a formidable machine. It
is also developing a blue navy with nuclear
submarines and aircraft carriers that will
enable it to project power in distant seas
like the Indian Ocean.
Specially worrisome to
India is the ‘string of pearls’ it is
creating all around the sub continental
India, a deep sea port at Gwadar off
Baluchistan coast in Pakistan, a road from
Yunnan in China to Bay of Bengal,
surveillance facilities in islands of
Myanmar and ports in Myanmar and Sri Lanka.
It has arms supply relationship with Nepal
and Bangladesh.
The most damaging anti
Indian action by China has been to setup
Pakistan as its Israel. The Pakistani
nuclear weapons program which is India
specific was guided, nurtured, equipped and
overseen by China. In 1990 it tested a
Pakistani nuclear bomb at its test site in
Lop Nor. China is unlikely to unravel the
problems of borders in Arunachal Pradesh and
Aksai Chin as it does not believe that a
compromise will turn out to its advantage.
It has gone back on an understanding that
any border adjustment will not upset settled
populations. The issues remain mired in
procedures, far from substance. It may be
noted that officially backed Chinese think
tanks have even talk of retrieving Arunachal
Pradesh by force. China had opposed India’s’
access to Nuclear Supply Group in 2008 until
forced by the US. On the Mumbai terrorist
carnage by Pakistan, its scholars and media,
all state controlled, expressed doubts about
Pakistani complicity, placed the blame on
internal contradictions in India, and called
it a major blow to India’s big power
ambitions. Thrice China had blocked UN
efforts to have Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the
Pakistani organization behind the outrage,
declared an international terrorist
organization in 2006.
Chinese antagonism
against India emanates from its uneasiness
about sturdy Tibetan nationalism and the
fact that the Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai
Lama has made India his home along with 1,
00,000 other Tibetans. China has taken great
pains to pacify Tibet through development,
colonization and redemarcating its borders
with adjoining Chinese provinces. Tibet
seems to be firmly under Chinese control but
the religion based Tibetan identity is not
dead nor the power of Buddhist monasteries
in Tibet to serve as magnetic centers for
mobilization. Choosing a successor to Dalai
Lama on his death can prove to be an
explosive event. The Tibetans would want to
make the choice themselves but the Chinese
government is unlikely to grant this
privilege to them. If civil commotions break
out in Tibet over this issue that find an
echo in the diaspora abroad, relations
between China and India can nosedive.
Relationship with
Pakistan belongs altogether to a different
category: intensely problematic. It has been
so from day one when Pakistan came into
existence. The problem began with Pakistani
covetousness for the J&K state. Four wars
have been fought between the two countries
and a proxy war continues. Single minded
antagonism to India led to the emergence of
the Pakistani nuclear program. The Pakistani
Establishment has been itching to employ the
arsenal on India. There have been four
occasions in the past when they come close
to it US discovery of their intentions
thwarted them the last three times.
The first time was in
1982-83 when Pakistan suspected that India,
aided by Israel, was planning to bomb out
Kahuta where the Pakistani nuclear weapons
program was taking shape. The last three
were linked to Indian Brasstracks exercise
in 1987, commencement of Pakistani inspired
insurgency in J&K state (1990) and Kargil
(1999).
Meanwhile, new
developments have occurred which have
altered Pakistan’s strategic objectives. The
Pakistani state has greatly weakened and
grown unstable. A good part of its North
Western region has become Talibanised.
Sizeable sections of the security
establishment including its intelligence and
paramilitary forces subscribe to the
Islamist ideology. It is an easy
transformation from Islamism to Jihadism. As
Talibanisation creeps into the hinterland
and nearer Islamabad and Rawalpindi the
probability of the security establishment
donning the colours of Jihadism becomes
somewhat real.
The Jihadi aim is to
set up India as an Islamic Caliphate. They
count on Islamic injunctions to assume, not
proven so far, that large sections of Indian
Muslims will aid and support them.
Such designs and the
nuclear arsenal of Pakistan, make it today
the most dangerous spot in the world. If
another 9/11 hits the US, most western
intelligence believe the source would be
Pakistan which has provided refuge to the Al
Qaeda leadership. Pakistani duplicity of
masquerading as a US ally in the fight
against international terror while giving
covert support to Talibans in Afghanistan
against the US stands exposed. The US has
now warned Pakistan that if does not move
against the Al Qaeda leaders hiding in
Pakistan, its ground forces will enter
Pakistan to finish the job themselves. Such
an event if it occurs will exacerbate
tensions between Muslims and non Muslims all
over the world. A collapsed Pakistan may be
good for India but India may face
unpredictable consequences.
Japan is another
country to watch. The three greats in Asia
in times ahead will be China, Japan and
India, each engaged in a furious economic
competition with the other two. But while
Japan is unlikely to cease regarding China
as an abiding threat for reasons of history
and quarrels over territory in East China
Sea, its attitude towards India is changing
from indifference to active strategic
cooperation. The largest quantity of
Japanese aid now flows to India not China.
In the new balance of power politics in
Asia, the Japanese support will be a plus
factor for India provided one can count on
it.
India’s relationship
with most of its immediate neighbors has not
been happy. This includes besides Pakistan,
Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.
Part of the reason is India’s size as
compared to that of the neighbors, which
gives rise to misplaced suspicions of
hegemonism. In response, neighbors have
permitted or promoted terror against India
and given shelter to leaders of insurgencies
fighting India. Such an environment allows
easy access to Chinese interests into these
countries. Lack of mutual trust becomes a
cause for impeding growth of economic and
trade relations. In the Saarc region,
India’s trade with its neighbors is no more
than 3%. Perhaps Saarc has no future and our
best hope may be to revert back to bilateral
relations selectively.
Thus, there are
multiple challenges for India in its
neighborhood. The way to deal with Myanmar
will be not to waste too much time on the
character of its Government which is
authoritarian and undemocratic but to
concentrate on trade and economic relations
which should include investments and aid to
development. In Bangladesh a new window of
opportunity has opened up with Hasina, the
recently elected new Prime Minister who has
already indicated a firm resolve to
eradicate terrorism from its soil.
Bangladeshi infiltration into India poses
another primary security problem. Bangladesh
is also a land of grinding poverty. Indian
attitudes need to be governed both by
compassion and concerns for national
security. Nepal has just run through
cataclysmic changes with internal stability
still elusive but Nepalese Maoists have
definitely chosen to be embourgeoised. A new
chapter is waiting to be opened in Indo
Nepal relationship which can heal
existential animosities and suspicions. The
new relationship should abjure the military
dimension and be predicated entirely on how
economic and cultural benefits can be
secured for both the countries. The Nepalese
Maoists have generally kept themselves away
from the Indian Maoists with the latter
considering the former revisionists. It is
unlikely that the Nepalese Maoists will aid
their Indian counterparts against Indian
interests. Sri Lanka appears to have
succeeded in destroying the LTTE but it does
not end Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism. India
would need to insist with the Colombo
government to give a fair deal to the Tamils
within the overall unitary structure of the
country.
The most obdurate
challenge would remain terminating
Pakistan’s proxy war. Right now the
Pakistani political scene is enveloped by an
impenetrable haze that makes difficult
deciphering who commands the shots,
President Zardari or Prime Minister Gilani
though the Generals will always have the
last word if it comes to a crunch. The US is
a powerful factor in Pakistan and it appears
to be on the side of Zardari. Both want
democratization to strengthen, Islamic
extremism to be uprooted and the military to
be confined to the barracks. The unknown
factor is the degree of Islamism in the
Armed Forces. If it has reached high levels
the probability of this section of the
forces, Islamist and extremist groups and
the Talibans including Neo Talibans in FATA,
NWFP AND Afghanistan, making a common cause
can become high. Presence of a nuclear
arsenal in Pakistan makes the environment
infinitely more dangerous. A whole galaxy of
scenarios is possible. Indian interests will
be served best by working with the US and as
many countries as possible, the Security
Council and the General Assembly to get
Pakistan to eschew terrorism and, to have
Pakistan declared a terrorist state if it
does not fall in line.
The way ahead for India
is not going to be smooth even as it most
certainly rises to regional and global
eminence. Its economic potential and its
transparency will serve as magnets to propel
it to that destiny. Still to be counted in
the equation is the demographic dividend
which a combination of improving education
standards and growing young population will
secure for it. Fortunately, India has moved
out from the mode of idealism to one of
pragmatism. National Security is, therefore,
expected to remain its highest priority.
(The author can be reached at
e-mail:verma_anandkumar@yahoo.com)