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April
27, 2002
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National
Interest
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September 11, February 28
Lecturing the world to lay off GUjarat is dumb—and dangerous
Its
now been so long since the Cold War ended that we are even beginning
to forget the old Soviet-American jokes. Until a Murli Manohar Joshi
reminds you of one.
Do
you, for example, recall the one about an American tourist being
shown around Moscow by a Russian? Both were boasting about how successful
their political systems were. The American bragged about how an
aircraft takes off or lands every minute from Chicagos OHare
airport. To counter that the Russian took the American to, say,
Kievsky Voksal, one of Moscows many large railway stations.
See,
he said, how many trains come in and go here every minute.
And each one of them will be absolutely on time. Bet you Americans
cant beat that.
It
just so happened that at that point of time signboards were displaying
several trains running behind schedule. See that. Such
a thing would never happen in America, said the delighted
tourist.
That
may be so. But what about the lousy way you treat your blacks?
countered the Russian.
Trust
Murli Manohar Joshi now to remind us, and the Americans, of the
fate of blacks in their country before they
lecture us on how we treat our minorities. He did this in Jaipur
on Thursday in response to a question at his press conference. While
it is one thing for ministers in government to be irritated with
the persistent and open Western criticism of their record in Gujarat,
Joshi even forgot that the US is the one Western power that has
chosen to keep absolutely quiet on the issue even while its European
allies are shouting blue murder.
But
dont fault a minister on his general knowledge. Ministers,
anywhere, are not chosen for their GK even if their portfolios sometimes
tend to confuse you as to their intellectual calibre. But you can
certainly question them on their politics. What would Joshis
colleague Jaswant Singh do if one of these days Colin Powell or
Condoleezza Rice turned around and asked what business his government
had to complain about the treatment of blacks in the US? This was
an American stereotype that died and was buried no later than the
late eighties.
Rice
and Powell are not the only blacks to wield real power in the US
of today. Diversity, equal opportunity and political correctness
are the buzzwords around the rapidly modernising world. In fact,
today Rice and Powell could even ask Jaswant Singh if the cabinet
to which he belongs has similarly empowered the minorities and Dalits.
He will have a problem answering that because this is a huge but
unique cabinet in that it doesnt have a prominent portfolio
with a Muslim, Sikh, Christian or anybody from a minority or even
the Scheduled Castes. Dont try to fob us off by mentioning
George Fernandes. We all know he takes his oath of office and secrecy
not in the name of God but through a socialistic I solemnly
affirm.
Jaswant
Singh would actually have to handle problems and questions more
complex than that. His own partys ineptitude in Gujarat and
then the churlish, bitter way in which it has handled the aftermath
has pushed him on the backfoot for the first time in his tenure.
Beginning with the Lahore bus ride and then through to Kargil, Agra,
9/11 and 13/12, he has held the moral high ground in international
diplomacy as no Indian foreign minister ever did in the past. He
may be too much of a gentleman to say it in public but he must rue
this massive self-goal, this completely avoidable turning of the
table on ourselves.
He
knows better than anybody else that post-9/11 diplomacy is not run
by acquiring the image of being anti-Muslim, of running a government
that cannot prevent the slaughtering of minorities, rape of their
women and the burning of their babies. Other countries are not self-seeking
members of the NDA coalition so that they will only see the Gujarat
killings in the light of the grave provocation of Godhra.
They
wont even complain about the killings so much riots
are known to break out in India once in a while or even about
the unquestioning defence of someone called Narendra Modi as they
would about the political attitude with which this government and
its ministers have responded to the tragedy. The counter-attack
on the European Union, now even a pre-emptive assault on the Americans,
the dont sermonise us, clean up your own act
tactic will only complicate matters at a time when we have actually
been going out of our way to engage with the world by being the
first to condemn 9/11 and to offer to join the worldwide coalition
against terror.
The
idea that somehow globalisation is confined to markets and trade
is dangerously fallacious. What comes along, and mercifully so,
is also the globalisation of ideas, attitudes, modern values, principles
of democracy and equality. And given the way we have been set up
by the founding fathers, this suits us fine. For a half century,
we thought we had inherited the right to lecture the world on celebrating
diversity and equality. After all, which other nation, with a per
capita income of $400 or thereabouts, could boast of such an equal
constitution, such an old cultural and religious belief in equality
of mankind and such a vibrant political system to ensure the spoils
were at least distributed widely, if not evenly? When we tell the
Europeans, the Chinese and the Americans now to shut up and mind
their own business, it only brings us contempt and derision. After
embracing the idea of globalisation, no government can adopt Door
hato ai duniya waalo Hindustan hamaara hai... as its theme song.
If that is the idea, lets also revert to socialism, khadi,
swadeshi, equal distribution of wealth (such as there might be)
and other such nonsense.
This
approach is dangerous because, instead of some honest introspection,
once you convince yourself of this worldwide conspiracy to defame
and malign India, the backwards momentum can be quite overpowering.
Much as we admire Israel, India is not Israel, and thank God for
that. We would never vote a Sharon into power but we also do not
have the kind of clout where we can defy the world to drive us into
isolation.
On
the other hand, given our own history of inward-looking protectionism,
our exaggerated notions of cultural superiority and a deep victim
complex, we must always worry about the prospect of receding into
international isolationism. At a time when the economy is showing
the first signs of revival, when the war against Al-Qaeda has not
yet ended and when our army is still sitting on the border waiting
for the snows to melt to find out if the Pakistanis keep their promise
of stopping infiltration, the last thing we need is this cantankerous,
defensive, prickly mindset towards the world in general.
Globalisation
and our own quest to be taken more seriously as a world power go
hand in hand. If you want to be taken seriously in the big league,
you also must conform to certain minimum standards of modern ideas
of equality and governance. We have so far been doing remarkably
well in a world thats been coming closer. We cannot let our
entirely misplaced peeve make us drift away from this now. He may
not tell you that, but this, I am sure, is what Jaswant Singh is
worrying about.
The
writer can be reached at sg@expressindia.com
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