Round The World
New Delhi, 4 March 2022
Russian Invasion
Of Ukraine
DECIPHERING
WHERE INDIA STANDS!
By D.K.
Giri
(Prof.
International Politics, JIMMC)
The invasion of
Ukraine, a sovereign and independent country, by Russia has shaken the international
community. It is unlike the NATO and American forces moving into Iraq, Syria or
Afghanistan, where dictators and fundamentalists were torturing their own
people. Russia invaded Ukraine on a twisted narrative of Russian leader
Vladimir Putin about the history between the two countries, that Russians and
Ukrainians are one people and hence inseparable.
Various reasons and
interpretations of the motivations for Russian outright armed invasion have
been put forth by leaders, experts and observers. The front-running perspective
of the war is that Ukraine has become a hapless pawn in rivalry between US-led
NATO and Russia. NATO sought to expand uptoUkraine and through Ukraine to Russian
borders, which the Russian ‘strong-man’ Putin resisted.
After Russia had
annexed Crimea in 2014, Ukraine had tilted to the West and was contemplating
joining the European Union and NATO. Russia was trying to keep Ukraine under
its influence by supporting Russian-speaking insurgents, by bullying Ukraine
with massive deployment of force on Ukraine-Russian border, and finally moving
Russian army into Ukraine.
The other major
interpretation of Russian military action is Putin’s reading of history which
suggests that Ukrainians and Russians have same ancestry and thus, Ukraine is
an inseparable part of Russia. Putin colours this view by seeking to bring
order in Ukraine. He said in a television speech on 21 February 2022, that “the
special military operation is to protect people who have been abused by the
genocide of Kyiv region for eight years. We will strive for the
demilitarization and, de- Nazifications of Ukraine”.
One could write trees
of notes to explain the reasons for Russian invasion. That is not the remit in
this article. The war is on causing deaths and destruction in Ukraine. The
urgent objective is to end the war, and analyse what other countries in the
international community are doing or not doing to contribute to this end.
We are here talking
about India’s stance on the war between Russia and Ukraine. To put it pithily,
New Delhi’s position vis-à-vis the Ukrainian crisis has been disappointing so
far. It has also diminished India’s chance or to be precise, Prime Minister
Narendra Modi’s ambition of becoming a Vishwa Guru. India’s balancing role between
two super powers (in the cold war era), and now between the US led Bloc and the
United Front comprising Russia and China has reached a biting point; New Delhi
could neither go forward or backward.
In the current war,India
has shown a pro-Russian tilt which is a function of New Delhi’s ‘time tested’
friendship with Moscow as well as of geopolitical necessity. So say the pro-government
strategic community and the proponents of the concept of strategic autonomy.
The foregoing
formulation does not hold water. In fact, it was started by Jawaharlal Nehru
who had conceived the policy of non-alignment. It was an impractical idea from
the word, go. All countries are interdependent, no country could remain
non-aligned or isolated. Nehru could not maintain it. In 1956, he criticised the
Anglo-French invasion of Suez Canal, but kept quiet on Soviet Union’s attack on
Hungary the same year. The explanation for such contrasting positions was that Nehru
relied on the Russian Veto on Kashmir. But it was Nehruwho took an incredible
and inexplicable step in taking the Kashmir dispute to the United Nations. At
any rate, that is history.
The current regime
which is super-critical of Nehru on his foreign policy is adopting the same stance of neutrality, middle-of-the
road, and so-called balancing act. Truly, India’s foreign policy has been
dubbed by many as ‘continuity and change.’ Modi is following the same policy of
continuing with non-alignment. He even addressed digitally a non-alignment
meeting. Admittedly, there has been some change, but no departure from the past
on China and Russia.
What could India do
in the case of invasion of Ukraine? Agree that New Delhi could not suddenly
oppose Russia. But some of us have been urging New Delhi to choose the corner,
either the Democratic world or the Authoritarian block, either US and its
allies or the China- Russia axis.
India has abstained
twice (once in the company of China) in the United Nations on Russian invasion
with small murmurs against the invasion. New Delhi did not want to offend
Russia for their long friendship and the arms trade. If India joined a security bloc with tacit
assurance of support for her territorial integrity, India’s dependence on
Russian arms would have been reduced. If New Delhi actively made friends with
Japan and South Korea at the behest of United States, it would not have relied
on Chinese material for her economy after China has taken away at least 50000 square
kilometres of our land.
Secondly, the
so-called strategic autonomy has cost India billions of dollars in arms
purchase affecting her growth and development. India, as a poor and developing
country, could have followed the policies adopted by Japan and Germany in
reducing the defence budget and built her economy.
Anyway, here we are
now. India’s option to get out of China-Russia axis, like SCO, or BRICS is
limited by the mistakes made by the West. American and NATO leadership should
not have seduced Ukraine into joining NATO. There has been a promise by
Americans that NATO would not expand into the East. George Kennan, the American
diplomat had warned, “expanding NATO would be the most fateful error of
American policy…..it would inflame the nationalistic and militaristic
tendencies in Russia.” Taking Ukraine into NATO is like Americans sitting on
Russian borders. In a sense, Americans provoked the invasion without
guaranteeing Ukraine’s security.
New Delhi has a great
scope in resolving the impasse and stop the on-going war. New Delhi is
correctly focusing its diplomatic resources in evacuating Indians in Ukraine.
New Delhi should take two more steps. The Indian leadership should convince
Putin that annexing Ukraine or proxy-ruling the country as a vassal state is
not an option. Ukraine could be declared as an internationally acknowledged
neutral country like Austria and Switzerland are. That would be a fair
compromise.Enrolling Ukraine as a member of European Union or NATO may not work
too.
The second step for
New Delhi could be, should the first step fail, to differentiate between Putin
and Russia. Evidently, many Russians are against the war, and Putin’s autocracy
has opposition in the country. Putin has violated international laws and the
BRICS resolution just six months ago forgoing the use of force. New Delhi could
be seen as guilty of complicity unless it finds a way out for Russia or condemn
it.
New Delhi could
establish other channels than Putin to help consolidate democracy in Russia.
That will help India also in the long run. In any event India’s credibility and
capability are challenged at this time of International Politics. We wish India
succeeds in overcoming those challenges. ---INFA
(Copyright, India
News & Feature Alliance)
New Delhi
2 March 2022
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