World
Khalistani terrorist Gurpatwant Singh Pannun.
A US federal prosecutor in New York has charged an Indian, Nikhil Gupta, with conspiring to assassinate a Khalistani separatist, Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, on American soil.
The allegation is that an Indian government official was behind Gupta’s efforts to get Pannun killed, an official codenamed CC1 in the court filings.
Apparently, the plot unravelled when Gupta tried to use a hired gun, who happened to be a US Department of Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) source, to do the job. In all probability Gupta fell for a DEA sting operation.
Clearly, the US government has decided to use this incident to build pressure on India for two main reasons: one, it does not take kindly to foreign powers acting on its soil even if it is to protect the latter’s own national interest.
Never mind that the US does not believe this rule applies to itself. In international relations, hypocrisy is often the best policy. And two, the US wants to use the Khalistanis operating on its soil to maintain some degree of leverage against India, and this alleged plot to assassinate Pannun comes in handy.
The US would like India as an ally against China, but it wants a weaker India that is more like a yes-man than a country capable of making its own choices. This incident will be used to vitiate Indian domestic politics too.
The real issue is not the morality (or the lack of it) in using assassinations as a part of state policy. The issue is how does India neutralise the US leverage and pressure without antagonising Uncle Sam. For obvious reasons, both economic and military, India needs the US a little more than the US needs us.
India has to stand firm on that, and the committee cannot be anything more than an effort to buy time. All this is, of course, assuming that India did indeed have something to do with the planned assassination.
Second, and this has to be done on a war-footing, if not already done. India must seek covert means for building counter-leverage. It is highly unlikely that the US deep state and spy agencies do not use bribes and other ways of compromising Indian officials so that they can be used to infiltrate Indian policy-making apparatus, and get the US’s job done.
There must be literally hundreds of cases where US spy agencies have financed or funded the education, health or other needs of Indians in the US or its client states in order to buy their loyalties.
We must find these people and the handlers behind them to build some degree of counter leverage in the Pannun case. If we have a US official named as a party to subverting Indian policy-making, we have counter-leverage.
What we must not do is talk too much about morality and make in-your-face accusations against the US or its agencies. We have to build and use any counter-leverage covertly.
India needs the US for becoming a $10 trillion economy and a military superpower by the mid- to late 2030s. A formal rupture in relations is not in our interests, just as formal capitulation to US pressure is also not an option.
We have to play this game behind the scenes, with firmness and sagacity. Building leverage against the US, if we haven’t already done so, is the need of the hour.