by Jayanta Roy
Chowdhury
The Pakistani Surrender at Dhaka, December 16, 1971 |
Forty one years
ago on December 16, independent India won its finest victory, in a war which
was not merely a necessity, but perhaps one of the few in the annals of modern
history which could be described as righteous.
The victory was
not merely won by military muscle but by a combination of outstanding diplomatic,
intelligence and industrial effort. India managed to gain the moral high ground
even before entering the battlefield through a sustained global public
relations campaign which exposed Pakistan’s ghastly record of murdering 2
million Bangladeshi civilians, raping over a quarter million women and driving
out a seventh of its population to Indian refugee camps.
Our
intelligence agencies had managed to gather vital intelligence on Pakistan’s
war intentions, while fooling the rival army into believing we would not carry
through the war effort to liberate the whole of East Pakistan.
The Indian
military-industrial machinery had managed to manufacture and supply all
necessary munitions and war materials despite a ban on arms sales by Western
powers, imposed after the 1965 war with Pakistan.
The creation of
a new nation Bangladesh, made the world sit up and look at India in a new
light. Not only had India liberated a country, the size of Syria in fortnight’s
time and taken some 92,000 Pakistani soldiers prisoners of war in the process,
it had defied the most powerful nation in the world – the United States of
America – through this war. As everyone knows, the United States famously sent
its Seventh Fleet to threaten India’s intervention in East Pakistan, and asked
allies Jordan and Turkey to send military aircraft to Pakistan’s aid.
Other western
powers too were not exactly happy with the turn of events nor was Pakistan’s
all weather friend – China – all of whom saw the emergence of Bangladesh under
a new secular leadership as a challenge to their control of Asia. Not much
reported, was the movement of a British naval group led by the aircraft carrier
Eagle closer to India’s territorial waters in what could have been pincer
movement in conjunction with the US Seventh Fleet and exhortations by US
President Nixon and his secretary of state Henry Kissinger to the Chinese
leadership to `threaten’ India on its northern borders.
Kissinger with Mao |
By any account,
this was a victory,which could be said to equal that of the Pandavas over Kauravas in the
Mahabharatan era, of the Grecian wars against Persia or in more modern times of
Rommel against the British in Libya.
Yet, strangely,
India does not celebrate this victory outside its military cantonments, nor
celebrate the men and women associated with this victory by building statues to
them or through street naming ceremonies.
If India had
been England or the US or even Australia, we would have been holding public
commemorative services for those who died, victory parades with participation
of defence forces, students and firemen, with floats and dancers on December
16. Statues of Field Marshall Sam Maneckshaw and Air Chief Marshall P.C. Lal
would have dotted town squares along with Indira Gandhi’s. School history
textbooks would have had whole chapters devoted to this one single decisive
war.
But then this
is India. Anything militaristic is frowned upon ever since Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru’s time, perhaps out of a sense of paranoia, fuelled by coups across Asia
by Pakistani, Egyptian and Burmese Generals.
Gen
J.N.Chaudhuri, who besides winning the 1965 war, also built up the Indian Army after a disastrous rout in 1962
from a 2.5 lakh-strong demoralised army to a three-fold larger and yet more
professional national force, was sidelined
without much ado by Mrs Indira Gandhi. Documents leaked now, reveal that his
phone was probably tapped and that defence minister Y.B.Chavan even went to the
extent of questioning him on the possibility of the army trying out a
coup-de-etat!
Pt Jawaharlal Nehru with Gen Chaudhuri after 1962 war |
Compounding
this fear, was a lack of appreciation on the part of independent India’s
leaders of the positive role a modern military can play as an instrument of
state policy and in actual policy formulation, especially foreign policy.
Possibly the
only two leaders who understood the potential of the military as an instrument
of state policy in the 20th century were Subhash Chandra Bose and
Indira Gandhi. Bose, as head of the Azad Hind government during the Second
World War, of course, discussed politics and political solutions with the
military leaders of the Indian National Army and even went to the extent of
consulting them on such issues as whether to declare war on the US and other
allied nations or to limit his war to combating Great Britain. Mrs Gandhi is
well known to have taken the military leadership into confidence well ahead of
the 1971 war and in ensuring a holistic approach to the war effort.Nehru, on the other hand kept the army at bay by appointing his close aide Krishna Menon, an over-rated intellectual as defence minister and a buffer between himself and the army he rated so lowly.
Menon and Nehru
had such a low esteem of the Indian military leadership’s abilities as advisors
for their foreign policy, that they never bothered to take their inputs on
India’s options in the border spat with China in the early years of the
dispute. Rather they treated the army as a police force to be deployed on the
border without questions.
Raising the Indian flag at Haji Pir Pass |
In more recent times, Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh is reported to have been on the verge of signing a deal which would have seen Indian forces vacating Siachen ! Luckily last minute consultations with the Army and apprehensions voiced by the military leadership, besides continued Pakistani belligerence, placed that proposal on the backburner.
Unlike in the US, India does not use policy inputs from its Generals’ in forming its foreign policy. Generals come into the picture as bit players asked to advise when issues related to the border are almost finalised!
On a more philosophical plane, the Indian state has formulated a policy which rejects the use of force as an instrument of politics in favour of a policy of strategic restraint that minimizes the importance of the military.
This is
said to spring from Gandhian principles. But in reality stems perhaps from a
strong lack of trust of the country’s military among its elected leadership.
This anti-militarism despite the reality of conflict and war that followed
independence, has effectively tied India’s hands in dealing with states like
Pakistan, whose state policy lies in forcing India to part with territory
through overt or covert use of its military-intelligence infrastructure.
As a
result, India blindly searches for a way to manage Pakistan’s provocations,
every time it is hit in the face by it. Whether it be a Kargil, a terror strike
in Mumbai, bombings of marketplaces and mosques or nuclear blackmail at every
stage.
Similarly,
devoid of proper coordination in formulating foreign policy and military
planning, India does not know how to proceed when Chinese forces test India
with a Sumdrongchu or threaten Indian ships in the South China Sea.
Without
game theorising involving all essential arms of the government, including the
Armed Forces, India can never realise which move by its opponents is a bluff, which a blind, which a
real threat. When Chinese forces supposedly threatened India in Arunachal Pradesh
in the late 1980s, Pakistan’s bomb was ticking away towards fruition. Were we
fooled into a defensive stand, so that Pakistan gained valuable time to
complete its Nuclear Bomb, without risking a raid by Indian fighter jets?
19th Century Cartoon on China-phobia |
As strategic thinker Stephen Cohen once
remarked in an essay “Indian leaders simply have not seen the use of force as a
useful instrument of politics”, simply because they did not trust the use of
force or those they would have to employ in the effort.
Rather they would do well to understand that in the modern world as in
the ancient, power and projection of power are ways to define and shape foreign
policy. It was not for nothing, that Theodore Roosevelt, who was US President
at beginning of the 20th century formulated America’s foreign policy
stance till the Second World War – “Walk softly, but carry a big stick.”
6 comments:
Excellent analysis... made for very, very interesting reading. Thanks.... Kalyan Biswas.
Decisions should and must come from a position of dignity and justice. Unfortunately, that has not always been the case.
Good piece, as always!
Thanks Jayanta, Excellent analytical piece- very informative.
I always wonder the same. How to overcome this?
Nicely done Jayanta. My thoughts:
Gross lack of discipline and no notion of loyalty to the nation is a malady that must be addressed first of all. It is always I before we. Do we need at least one year of compulsory military service? But then as you write, when our elected leaders are not taking the military fully on board how can public do so? Pacificst, peace loving nation, that is our image. You mentioned Mahabharat in your piece. All diplomacy failed there. It ended in a bloody war with unimaginable casualties both for the victor and the vanquised. Are we headed that way?
Jayanta,
A good piece to read. The sore point is that the Military comes to the rescue of the political leaders who have created a wide gap between the 'Olive Green' and its much touted 'Babus' and the Khakis',just because we consider ourselves disciplined. Is the discipline to flow always and ever, one sided!?
Aalok Sood
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