M.D. Nalapat
NEW DELHI, Feb. 13
(UPI) -- The foreign ministers of the three giants of the Asian landmass --
Russia, China and India -- will meet Feb. 14 in New Delhi to advance an old
proposal for a Trilateral Global Alliance that would effectively exclude the
West from a position of superiority in Asia, before achieving the same purpose
in Africa and South America.
Although at present
only a gleam in the eye of geopoliticians, the TGA has made enough progress in
the past two years to indicate that within the next three, a framework
agreement could be signed by the three heads of government that would codify
the principles and objectives of this partnership aimed at limiting Western
power.
It is interesting to
note that European powers all won special advantages in the rest of the world
not by peaceful cooperation, but by conquest. This is perhaps the reason why
soldiers, sailors and airmen play a much bigger role in Western
"diplomacy" than diplomats themselves.
Australia, for
example, has now joined hands with New Zealand in sending armed troops to small
island countries near them, in order to enforce their will over the peoples
there. So dominating is Australia that even the present Timorese leadership --
the recipient of huge funds and other aid from Canberra in its long battle
against Indonesia -- has now sought to distance itself from a country that
seems determined to rule the territory by the gun.
In Africa, there have been dozens of cases of armed intervention by France, always to protect the local, France-dominated elites from accountability and loss of power. In Venezuela, it is no secret that Washington repeated its method of dealing with former President Salvador Allende in Chile -- seeking to use local partners to force the ouster of President Hugo Chavez, who seeks to dilute the influence of Europeanist elites that for centuries have drained almost 90 percent of the wealth of the continent while accounting for less than 10 percent of the population.
In Africa, there have been dozens of cases of armed intervention by France, always to protect the local, France-dominated elites from accountability and loss of power. In Venezuela, it is no secret that Washington repeated its method of dealing with former President Salvador Allende in Chile -- seeking to use local partners to force the ouster of President Hugo Chavez, who seeks to dilute the influence of Europeanist elites that for centuries have drained almost 90 percent of the wealth of the continent while accounting for less than 10 percent of the population.
Similarly, in Iraq,
U.S. and British forces routinely arrest even ministers in the elected
government of Iraq and diplomats who should be protected from such arbitrary
action according to international law and practice. The Western world has, for
the past five centuries up to the present, relied on tooth and claw to create
and retain its supremacy. This state of affairs is unacceptable to Moscow and
Beijing, and in time, possibly to New Delhi as well.
Although the Russian
people look "European," the fact is that they are separate culturally
from Europe. They have their own mindset, traditions and values, and hence will
always be opposed, silently or overtly, by continental European powers such as
Germany and France, which recognize Russia as not only different, but with the
potential to overshadow both of them, should Moscow ever be admitted into the
European Union.
After years of seeking
to become "good Europeans" by leaving behind their Russian heritage
-- a process that began with Mikhail Gorbachev and lasted even into the Putin
presidency -- the Russian leadership has finally realized that the major
continental European powers have zero intention of giving parity, let alone
primacy, to Moscow. Hence, President Vladimir Putin has focused as much on Asia
as on Europe, and with far better results than from his several failed efforts
at integration into Europe. This has opened the way for an India-China-Russia
alliance.
In the case of China,
both Mao Zedong -- under whose leadership China "stood up" in 1949
after centuries of servitude -- and Deng Xiaoping understood that a
relationship with the Western world could only be tactical and temporary, and
that finally the clash of interests would lead to tensions. However there were
others who sought to create an equitable partnership with the West, especially
the United States, much as Putin tried in his first years in power. Today, the
strong leadership of President Hu Jintao has clearly recognized that: a) China
needs to rely on its own strength first; and b) the best way of developing this
power is through a partnership with India and Russia.
In the next round,
Iran and Indonesia would enter as partners within the TGA, followed by some key
countries in Southeast Asia, the Middle East and a peacefully unified,
nuclear-armed Korea. The TGA would have an Asian membership, but global
influence, even in Phase I, when only Russia, China and India would be members.
Phase II would see the entry of other Asian powers, while Phase III would
witness the entry of selected countries in South America, such as Brazil, and
Africa, such as Nigeria and South Africa.
The change in attitude
by both the Chinese and Russian leaderships toward the Western world is the
engine driving forward this partnership. In the case of India, after six
decades of conducting a foreign policy independent of the West, now a team
similar to Boris Yeltsin's is in office in New Delhi, for whom the only
desirable path is accommodation with Western demands.
China went through
such a phase during the Jiang Zemin period, while Russia's similar period
lasted from 1985 till 2003. That year Moscow realized that the policy of the
continental European powers was to cut away at its relationships and sphere of
influence, so that finally Moscow would become as irrelevant in Europe as
Belgium, a country with which it is often compared in economic terms.
The reality is that
Russia possesses a single item -- its nuclear and missile arsenal -- that gives
the country greater weight than Germany, France and Italy combined. The same
goes for China. India is thus far a relative pygmy in the strategic field,
although the scientific base of the country is strong enough to close this gap
within six to seven years, should the political leadership decide on such a
course.
Since the mid-1990s,
several within the Indian strategic establishment -- including this writer --
believed the Western world would be farsighted enough to make India a partner
on terms of parity. However, many are now veering to the view that the Western
world still sees India much as the British did in the past, as a secondary
power that ought to be satisfied with crumbs.
This refusal of the
Western alliance to acknowledge the equality of China, Russia and India with
themselves is the reason the years ahead are likely to witness the birth of an
India-China-Russia global alliance that would soon become the biggest
geopolitical factor in Asia, and then in Africa and South America.
This is the future
that may be in the process of creation when the foreign ministers of three
countries that comprise 40 percent of the world's population meet in New Delhi.
-(Professor M.D.
Nalapat is director of the School of Geopolitics at the Manipal Academy of
Higher Education, India.)
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