M.D.
Nalapat
When
President Barack Obama travels to India in early November, he will be visiting
a country much more conscious of skin color than his own. Because of his mixed
Euro-African ancestry, Barack Obama's election as President of the United
States is seen in India as a transformational event. The fact that millions of
American voters of European extraction preferred him to John McCain affirmed a
truth widely believed in India about the United States, that America is
culturally "quadricontinental" and not "unicontinental."
The American melting pot has given the world not just a vibrant people (of
multiple hues) but also a composite culture that is a fusion of strands from
Africa, Europe, Asia and South America. Unfortunately, change even in the Obama
administration seems to be only skin-deep. The contemporary Washington
"establishment" obsessively considers itself and America to be, in
effect, an extension of Europe, in much the same way as the ruling structures
in Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
All three
of these latter countries may be termed as belonging to the classical "Anglosphere," the
geopolitical construct ascribed to Winston Churchill in which ethnicity trumped
almost all other qualities. It was Churchill, the wartime prime minister of
Great Britain, who insisted over President Roosevelt's objections that the
freedoms promised in the Atlantic Charter were to apply only to the peoples of
Europe and not to those in Asia or Africa who were denied their liberty for
years after the Allied victory in the "war for democracy." A war in
which, let it be noted, more than two million Indian soldiers served (and a
further six million auxiliaries worked in defense industries and logistics).
This is a figure far in excess than the numbers mustered by France yet Winston
Churchill rewarded France with a seat at the post-war High Table in preference
to India. Had Churchill continued to get his way, even China would not have
gained admission to the Big Five in the United Nations Security Council, as the
country was not European or neo-European. While Churchill deserves the
admiration of the world for the manner in which he confronted Germany's Nazi
dictatorship, his attitude in matters of ethnicity marked him as belonging
firmly to the 19th century.
With Barack
Obama's 2009 entry into the Oval Office, it was expected that the United States
would lead the way to what may be termed a "21st Century
Anglosphere," the grouping of countries with common linguistic, cultural
and, let it be admitted, colonial ties to the former British Empire. While this
concept has been around for some time, especially since Churchill emphasized
the unity of the "English-speaking countries" in the period since
German aggression launched World War II, what may be termed the "Classical
(or Churchillian) Anglosphere" had ethnicity in addition to the English
language as its foundation. Churchill rejected Roosevelt's view that those of
the English-speaking world but not of European ancestry had the same claim to
cultural and other traditions of that world.
An
Entrenched Establishment Retards India's Political and Economic Development
Along with
the United States and, of course, the United Kingdom, India would be the major
player in a 21st century partnership of the English-speaking countries. Given
that India is still a "work in progress," a closer association with
the Anglosphere should help to nudge the country's ruling elites towards the
legal and institutional reforms needed for a deepening of its democracy. An
obvious candidate for change would be the prevailing political party structure
in India, each of which is dominated by either a single family or an equally
self-perpetuating clique of individuals.
Until the
Election Commission of India is mandated to enforce transparent and free
elections for party posts, there are zero prospects for a smooth power transfer
within political parties such as the world recently witnessed in other
Anglosphere countries. In the UK, Labour's Ed Milliband succeeded Gordon Brown
and in the United States, Barack Obama inherited Bill Clinton's Democratic
Party base. Until such a dynamic comes into play in India, the political system
there will continue to be skewed in favor of family rather than societal
interests, with negative consequences for probity and policy.
The
corollary to democracy within political parties would be transparency in
political expenditures. Given the absurdly low levels of spending legally
permitted in Indian elections, the overwhelming bulk of the money spent by
candidates comes from undeclared sources. By refusing to implement electoral
reforms, the political class in India is strengthening the influence of
unsavory elements over the body politic. Nearly half a billion dollars was
raised by the Obama presidential campaign, but this figure was known to the
public, unlike in India where campaign monies are not recorded. A healthy
system of laws would allow a candidate in India to spend as much as she or he
could collect, except that each rupee spent should be publicly declared.
Further, those found guilty of using undeclared money should be disqualified
from the election, or removed from office once found out. Money power is not
evil in a democracy, provided it is transparent.
Another set
of reforms that would bring India closer to the rest of the Anglosphere would
be reforms to its legal system. In India today, the balance of power between
government and the people approximates that of the system first introduced two
hundred and fifty years ago by British colonial authorities. Today, however,
the current Indian governing and legal structures have replaced the British.
While
British law for the British people has much to commend it, the same cannot be
said for British law for colonial subjects. While well-known Indian liberals
such as the economist and philosopher Amartya Sen and the writer Sunil Khilnani
have joined mainstream Indian historians in crediting Jawaharlal Nehru with
having forcefully championed democracy to an indifferent populace, the reality
is that independent India's first prime minister chose to preserve colonial law
as well as the colonial mode of administration.
The Nehru
Dynasty Places Personal Power Over Societal Empowerment
By valuing
the consolidation of power over societal empowerment, Nehru and his political
(and familial) descendants have ensured that India today is much poorer than
South Korea and China, both of which were more impoverished than India six
decades ago. Nehru cut away at freedoms for India's citizens, putting in place
a vast system of state ownership and privilege that to a very substantial
degree exists to this day. Next, Nehru ensured, through the promotion of his
daughter Indira Priyadarshini, that the Congress Party would evolve into a
Nehru family political dynasty headed, since 1991, by his grandson Rajiv
Gandhi's widow Sonia. Sonia's son, and Nehru's great grandson, Rahul Gandhi who
is currently a member of parliament, is being prepped as a future leader of the
Congress Party.
Although
current Congress Party Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has often expressed
admiration for British values and traditions and Congress Party President Sonia
Gandhi cannot be accused of hostility to the Anglosphere, neither has done much
to ensure that the common Indian citizen be given more autonomy vis a vis state
agencies. In fact, since 2004, the pendulum has been swinging in the opposite
direction, with partial reforms introduced by a Congress government from
1992-1994 having been rolled back in recent years.
Greater
contact with the rest of the Anglosphere would help to align Indian
institutions and regulations to be closer to those of mature democracies rather
than resembling those of Haiti under the despotic reign of the Duvaliers. The magnitude
of the failure of the political class in "free" India can be seen
from the fact that there are 300 million Indian citizens whose living standards
are worse than that of the average Haitian citizen and a further 500 million
whose lives are well below internationally acceptable standards of adequacy.
The effect
of this failure to entrench individual liberty over official discretion in
India has been the perpetuation of poverty and ignorance. The political elite
in India understands that only an unlettered and undernourished electorate
would continue to apathetically vote them back into office. They therefore seek
to ensure that the marginalized and the disadvantaged are frozen in their
existing lifestyles, all in the name of "protecting culture and heritage."
Too Little
Being Done in India to Promote English Language Proficiency
There are
many in India who are dismissive of their country's Anglospheric links and want
to dilute them despite the fact that Jawaharlal Nehru was culturally far more
British than he was Indian (or perhaps because of this), very little was done
during his time to expand English-language education in India. Indeed, Nehru's
government seemed to be preparing the way for the abandonment of English, a
step that his successor, Lal Bahadur Shastri, wisely refused to take. If India
is a success story of unity as well of economic progress, the credit goes to
Prime Minister Shastri for having ensured the continuation of the English
language and, subsequently to Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao for having
introduced the first shoots of comprehensive economic liberalization in the
economy. Subsequently, apart from 1998-2000 (the first two years of Prime
Minister Vajpayee's Bharatiya Janata Party government), very little has been
done to move forward the process of economic liberalization. Indeed, the
current United Progressive Alliance government (dominated by the Congress
Party) in particular has seen a return to the regulatory mindset of the Nehru
era, with immense additional discretion being given to state authorities and
zero efforts at reform of the administrative structure to remove graft and
enhance efficiency.
In India,
such politicians oppose the spread of the English language, as they fear that
this may result in a less docile population, one that votes in terms of direct
interests. Increased contact with the Anglosphere would strengthen those
elements within civil society that are working towards greater modernization.
If there are 200 million Indian citizens who can get by in English, there are
at least 400 million more eager to learn but have been deprived of the
opportunity by deliberate state policy. By depriving all except those with
above average incomes access to English-language skills, India's political
class has put in place a modern variant of the caste system, where (as in
certain epochs) advanced education is a privilege open only to the few.
Balancing
the Anglosphere with India's Relations with Russia and China
Forming a
trinity with the United States and the UK would, of course, not mean the
abandonment of India's prospects for better relations with China, Russia and
Iran. All three are important to India, the first two very much so. While
increasing its pool of English-language speakers and reforming its institutions
to reflect the values and practices of a free rather than a colonized society,
India would energetically pursue its unique geopolitical interests even if they
are unpopular in London or Washington.
It must be
remembered that the attitudes and policies of what may again be termed the
Classical Anglosphere continue to infect much of the policy of countries in
this now obsolete grouping. Hence, if India were today to engage in joint
activities with China or Russia especially in locations such as Africa or Asia,
would possibly harm the country's interests because of the Euro-centrism that
still drives much of American policy. In such regions, India must continue to
go its own way in fashioning alliances distinct from those crafted by the
countries of the Classical Anglosphere.
Countries
that would be natural claimants to membership in a 21st century Anglosphere
would be Israel and Singapore followed later by South Africa and, in time,
Kuwait and Oman. Apart from the common misfortune of having once been ruled
from London, each of these countries has a vibrant, English-speaking middle
class and a moderate social and religious ethos.
When
President Barack Obama comes to India, he does so not merely as the head of
state of the country that is India's top geopolitical priority (followed by
China and the European Union) but also as the leader of the world's most
powerful English-speaking country. It is this essential difference that
distinguishes his visit to India from his visit to China irrespective of the fact
that the Chinese political system is vastly different from that of India.
Obama
Admin. Less Open to India Than Predecessor
India had
expected that President Obama, who has been a quick learner on the campaign
trail but has been less nimble once in office, would understand the difference
between India and China and seek to build on the Anglospheric commonalities
between the United States and India. Thus far, however, the omens from his
Administration are not promising. More than the liberalism of Franklin D.
Roosevelt, what is most visible is President Obama's use of a patronizing tone
reminiscent of that used by President Bill Clinton who saw India as needing to
belong, in perpetuity, to a lower order of nations than the United States and
its primary allies in Europe.
While such
views were certainly present within President George W. Bush's team, they were,
on more than one occasion, overcome by the recognition by both he and his key
foreign policy advisor Condoleezza Rice that India merited a status and rights
at least the equal of Japan and Germany, if still not that of Britain and
France.
Will a 21st
Century Anglosphere evolve? Looking at the approach of the new British
government, they are good. The significance (of India being the second-largest
English-speaking country after the United States) has not been lost on David
Cameron. When the new prime minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
& Northern Ireland visited India recently, he made his acceptance of this
new reality transparent. Unlike many of his predecessors, Cameron did not talk
down to his Indian interlocutors but instead openly recognized them not just as
equals but as representatives of a power that international geopolitics, with
its matrix of threats and opportunities, has made a mandatory ally of the
United States and the UK.
If He Bucks
His Advisers, President Obama Could Lead a Powerful New Alliance
Should he
follow George W. Bush and David Cameron's lead and accept that India is an
essential component in the alliance architecture of the English-speaking world,
President Obama could yet transform U.S.-India relations and act as the prime
mover behind a new alliance of English-speaking democracies. If, on the other
hand, he comes to India as a follower of President Bill Clinton's paternalistic
legacies he would stand in the way of fashioning an alliance of significant
importance to the Anglosphere, the Eurosphere and indeed all democratic
countries.
If he chose
to free himself of the toxic legacy of the Clinton-Gore administration,
President Obama would have to fend off efforts by his bureaucracy to restrict
the avenues of cooperation with India. In short, President Obama would need to
follow George W. Bush's example of seeing India as a country kindred to his own
and who would then battle his own Euro-centric bureaucracy to remove some of
the restrictions that had been placed on technological and other exchanges with
India. This, despite the fact that President Bush's first Secretary of State,
Colin Powell, held a stronger Euro-centric views than the natives of that
continent, seeing India as a lesser power than much smaller European countries.
Incidentally, Powell was the author, together with Vice President Cheney, of
the disastrous American lurch towards the Pakistan army after 9/11.
Both
President Bush and now Prime Minister Cameron have shown that despite being
conservatives, they have moved beyond the mindset of the "Churchill
School" and have accepted that the only way for the Anglosphere and,
indeed, the entire European continent can retain its global primacy is through
a close alliance with India. In short, rather than becoming nostalgic for the
19th century Anglosphere, they have accepted and indeed embraced its 21st
Century evolution in a way that the Obama administration seems unable or
unwilling to.
Thus far,
President Obama has shown little indication that he understands the immense
potential in the Anglosphere connection between India and the United States.
Unfortunately, a significant section of the "Thought Leaders" within
America's Democratic Party are wedded to the Eurosphere, seeing the United
States as an extension of the European Union. For such individuals, it would be
difficult to factor in the chemistry that is evolving in the rest of the world
which is probably why they continue to use the faded, and failed, nostrums of
the past in fashioning policies for the present.
Understanding
India's Significance
India must
go a long way before its people enjoy the freedoms - and, of course, the
lifestyle - of their partners in the United States or the UK. Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh has less than four years to ensure that the shackles of colonial
law and administrative methods are removed from a country whose people can
raise the rate of economic growth to 15 percent if only their own government
did not perpetuate both private and public monopolies and impede necessary
education for modernization.
The next
month will show if President Obama understands the significance of India as the
holder of the second largest economy in the English-speaking world (and perhaps
to one day become the largest, provided present constraints on modern education
are diluted). If he does, it would greatly assist India's own honest and
far-seeing Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, in his efforts at launching a second
wave of the reforms needed to ensure that India takes its place among the Big
Four (along with the United States, the EU and China) at the international High
Table.
India is
not just an abstraction but also a civilization that has close links to that
which has nourished President Obama's experience. Avoiding a clash of
civilizations may not always be possible but what is needed to prevail in such
eventualities is a "confluence of civilizations," led by the United
States and India, the two largest English-speaking countries on Earth.
Read your Anglosphere text with great interest after a well-read JNU student directed me to it on Monday, following my talk there on the very same subjeck. Would it be possible for us to get in touch over email please? My info is here http://www.idsa.in/profile/SrdjanVucetic
ReplyDeleteThank you!
Srdjan