World
Shashi Tharoor
May 27, 2016, 06:10 AM | Updated 06:10 AM IST
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As Chairman of Parliament’s External Affairs Committee, I have always proudly articulated our tradition that political differences stop at the water’s edge – there isn’t a Congress foreign policy or a BJP foreign policy, only Indian foreign policy. Yet I can’t help feeling that there are aspects of the Modi Government’s foreign policy in the last two years that are not easy for many to swallow as India’s, rather than his.
As the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) completes the second anniversary of its term in office, it is safe to conclude that we have at its helm a Prime Minister who serves as an energetic salesman abroad for the Government of India but one whose credibility finds itself increasingly under question. After all, how long can a salesman impress by the sheer force of oratory and cleverly designed international spectacles if the package he is selling is empty?
This
is, of course, leaving aside the fact that the “achche din” that were promised to the people of India also remain
completely out of sight. Lofty foreign policy pronouncements have helped divert
attention from domestic concerns and preserved the image of Mr Modi’s India to a
large extent, but even here a feeling of being let down has been mounting for
some time. Even the most fervent sympathisers of the Prime Minister are
beginning to tire of the photo-ops and the “breaking news” stories of Mr Modi’s
tireless travels abroad, seemingly with little connection to the needs of the aam aadmi at home.
For
a government driven by (and drawing political capital from) its lavishly funded
publicity machine, this is becoming a problem. India, as I have said often,
needs to strike a balance between its hard power and soft power, and it is not
the country with the bigger army that wins but that which tells the better
story—and at the moment, the story Mr Modi and his colleagues in government are
pitching to the world looks less and less convincing with every passing month.
If foreign policy were merely a question of making fine speeches, then the
Prime Minister would score top marks. But substance must follow grandiloquent
oratory and unfortunately for Mr Modi, he has very little substance to show for
his efforts abroad, and only a shipload more of promises to add to the titanic
stock already piled high at home.
Like most Indians, I acknowledge the energy he has
brought to his foreign travels – 21 trips in two years to 39 countries. (In
fact the Prime Minister has made more
addresses in parliaments abroad than to the Lok Sabha at home in his first two
years in office.) And I do think that
getting the United Nations to adopt International Yoga Day was a winner, since
it has meant people around the world following an Indian practice in a way that
enhances our global image (though the manner in which the Government pursued
the Guinness Book of World Records last year over the issue was, to put it
mildly, unseemly).
That, alas, is the extent of the positive side of the ledger, where the PM’s efforts have borne tangible results. For the rest, the report card is decidedly mixed.
India’s
foreign policy appears to many observers to be created impromptu on the hoof,
as it were, in the course of the Prime Minister’s peripatetic travels. Key
discussions which should have taken place in the preparation of these visits
seem to follow the Prime Minister’s pronouncements, rather than precede and
justify them. The announcements, usually of investments to come, have largely
failed to materialize. And stated goals, such as those accompanying the
impressive India-African Summit in New Delhi, do not seem to be accompanied by
the investment of adequate resources to fulfil them, or co-ordination with
various government agencies to achieve their announced goals.
The Summit showcased this government’s tendency to see such occasions as events
to be well-managed, rather than part of a strategy requiring meticulous
implementation.
Indeed,
the External Affairs Ministry does not appear to be involved in much serious
follow-up work to the PM’s tours, so that they remain one-off events rather
than part of a planned grand design for Indian foreign policy. Fundamental
decisions are taken in the PMO, if not by the Prime Minister himself, along
with his National Security Adviser. And while the External Affairs Minister is
herself a respected and widely-liked politician, her role in the formulation of
foreign policy appears to be so tightly circumscribed that diplomats in Delhi
have taken to referring to her, with a smile, as the Minister for Consular
Affairs.
Where
has Mr Modi’s India been found wanting in the process?
Let
us begin with the neighbourhood, which is where any government must act with
the greatest caution and sensitivity to balance our national interests with
regional circumstances beyond our control. Since Mr Modi’s swearing in—a
pageant of sorts that saw the premiers of Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and
Afghanistan in attendance and which was lauded as the grand inauguration of a
new chapter in our international relations—India’s ties with Pakistan have
witnessed more ups and downs than a child’s yo-yo. The Prime Minister—a man who
systematically obstructed the UPA Government’s peacemaking efforts with
Pakistan and whose campaign speeches thrived on demonising that country —
had
excoriated the Congress for “serving chicken biriyani” to a Pakistani visitor. Now he was exchanging shawls and saris with
his Islamabad counterpart, along with sentimental letters to each other’s
mothers. (I mischievously tweeted my hope that chicken biriyani would be on
Modi’s dinner menu for his Pakistani guest: it wasn’t.)
By
inviting Nawaz Sharif to Delhi when he took office, Mr Modi was believed to
have turned a historic page, and opened a new era of bilateral
relations. But less than two months had passed before both countries were
exchanging artillery fire across the still-sensitive border. Talks between our
respective foreign secretaries were called off when the Pakistanis proposed
meeting Indian Kashmiri separatist leaders on their proposed visit—something
our visitors had always done and to which earlier governments had responded
with confident official indifference. In November of the same year, at the
SAARC summit in Nepal, Mr Modi pointedly stared at a brochure to ignore his
Pakistani counterpart as he walked past, though it was later revealed that the
two leaders had met privately in a hotel suite belonging to an Indian
businessman. The pattern repeated itself when late last year Mr Modi made an
impromptu visit to Lahore to attend a celebration at Mr Sharif’s home; a week
later relations turned frosty again after seven Indians were killed by
Pakistani militants at the Pathankot Air Force Base.
India-Pakistan
relations have since swung back and forth, as though they are determined more
by the unpredictable moods of our leadership than on a coherent foreign policy
and vision for peace, let alone a practical roadmap. One day the Government
declares its “red lines” and twice calls off talks with Pakistan because its
representatives met with the Kashmiri-separatist Hurriyat; the next day the red
lines don’t matter. One day the ruling party avers that talks and terror don’t
go together and that Pakistan cannot be rewarded with a visit till it makes
progress on punishing the perpetrators of 26/11; the next day the PM is winging
impulsively to Lahore, sending India’s surprised High Commissioner scurrying
(too late) to the airport to receive his boss. This is foreign policy by whim,
not by design.
So too with Nepal – where New Delhi’s de facto blockade choked the nation’s economy, cut off its oil supplies, created genuine hardship and provoked a groundswell of hostility among ordinary Nepalis. This, and the behaviour that accompanied the episode, was a blunder of such Himalayan proportions that the only country on earth whose relationship with us has been fraternal enough for us to maintain open borders with it, now mutters about turning towards China instead.
One astute observer
told me privately that “PMO took its eyes off the ball”. But when
decision-making has been so centralized in the Modi regime that every ministry
has to send its important files to the PMO for clearance, how many balls can Mr
Modi and his beleaguered minions keep their eyes on?
India’s mess in Nepal adds to the growing sense of disquiet amongst students of Indian foreign policy about the Modi government’s management of relations on the subcontinent. A combination of arrogance and ineptitude is all-too-often visible where subtlety and pro-active diplomacy could have delivered the desired results. A raid into Myanmar in hot pursuit of terrorist sanctuaries had six precedents under the UPA, but each had been shrouded in a discreet silence; the Modi government chose to announce their one raid with such bellicose rhetoric that it embarrassed Myanmar, the violation of whose sovereignty New Delhi was trumpeting. Relations with three of our neighbours – Pakistan, the Maldives and now Nepal – are worse than they have ever been. If we don’t soon embark on a serious course correction, the only question will be who we are going to alienate next.
There have been successes, but these have almost entirely been in areas where Mr Modi and his party chose to follow the path already laid by successive previous governments without upsetting the delicate balance upon which this balance rested. One of the Prime Minister’s greatest achievements is that he has reversed the BJP’s formal opposition in Parliament to the Indo-US Nuclear Deal and to the seminal land boundary agreement with Bangladesh—both of which were UPA initiatives and both of which were wise policy reversals by the NDA Government of the positions the BJP had taken in opposition.
In the election campaign, Modi had breathed fire and
brimstone about Bangladesh, accusing it of sending millions of illegal
immigrants into India and promising that the moment he won the election, they
would all have to “pack their bags” and leave India for home. Bangladeshi
officials had publicly and privately expressed their disquiet that any attempt
to do this could be deeply destabilizing for their politically fragile state.
Within weeks of his victory, however, Modi’s Foreign Minister was all smiles on
her first official visit abroad – to Bangladesh. Illegal immigration wasn’t
even mentioned in Dhaka. (However, the victorious BJP government in Assam this
week has unwisely reopened the issue, and disquiet is mounting in our friendly
neighbour.)
The Land Boundary Agreement with Bangladesh concluded by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, which Indian diplomats had considered vital to removing bilateral irritants, had never been implemented because UPA couldn’t win the BJP’s support in Parliament to ratify the territorial swaps required. But now the Modi Government is the biggest votary of the Land Boundary Agreement, which the Opposition co-operated fully in ratifying.
The BJP had been virulently critical of the Indo-US nuclear deal, Manmohan Singh’s signature foreign policy triumph. They had even supported a no-confidence motion against the UPA government on the issue of the deal. Yet, in a quiet and under-reported move, the Modi government wisely ratified the India-specific Additional Protocol, a UPA undertaking to grant greater access to India’s civilian nuclear sitesto the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency.
In the lead-up to and during his election campaign, Modi and the BJP had constantly berated the government of India for being unable to do anything about frequent Chinese incursions across the disputed frontier. Today, the same Mr Modi has not only had effusive meetings with both the Chinese President and Foreign Minister, but is inviting China to help modernize the Indian railways and has removed government restrictions on Chinese investment in sensitive sectors like ports and telecoms. As to the border incursions, the BJP government echoes the very line it had denounced when the Congress government uttered it – that since the two countries have differing perceptions of where the border lies, each patrols in areas the other considers to be theirs. What was excoriated by Modi as pusillanimity and appeasement in the Congress has become wisdom and statesmanship in the BJP.
Where you stand on foreign policy, in other words, depends on where you sit. Your stand is different when you’re sitting in South Block and not in Gandhinagar.
The cerebral American politician, New York Governor Mario Cuomo, once memorably observed that you campaign in poetry, but govern in prose. Hard reality, he suggested, replaces the fights of policy fantasy that afflict those without power.
Welcome to the foreign policy world of Narendra Modi.
Dr Shashi Tharoor is a two-time MP from Thiruvananthapuram, the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs, the former Union Minister of State for External Affairs and Human Resource Development and the former UN Under-Secretary-General. He has written 15 books, including, most recently, India Shastra: Reflections On the Nation in Our Time.