[lbo-talk] India toes the line on Lebanon

Colin Brace cb at lim.nl
Sat Aug 12 03:39:02 PDT 2006


Behind India's near-total silence on the Israeli assault on Lebanon

By Arun Kumar and Keith Jones 12 August 2006

India has pretensions to be a world power, professes to be a spokesman for the underdeveloped countries in world affairs, considers west Asia to be part of its "extended neighbourhood," and has hundreds of soldiers deployed in Lebanon as United Nations peace-keepers. Yet it has remained all but completely silent on the four-week-old Israeli aggression against Lebanon—an aggression that has cost more than a thousand Lebanese civilians their lives, forced a million Lebanese to flee their homes, destroyed much of the country's infrastructure and threatens, due to the blockading of vital food and medical supplies, to cause an even greater humanitarian crisis.

Behind this silence lies India's pursuit of a strategic partnership with the US, its burgeoning military and security ties with Israel, and its own use of the "war on terror" as a propaganda and geopolitical weapon.

On July 13, less than 48 hours after Israel had launched bomb and missile attacks on Lebanon, and sent in troops, India's Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance issued a perfunctory statement "on the tension at the Israel-Lebanon border." The statement demanded Hezbollah return the two captured Israeli soldiers and condemned in "equally strong" terms "the excessive and disproportionate military retaliation by Israel."

Then over the next two weeks—two weeks during which Israel waged a war of terror against the Lebanese people, a war it vowed would end only once it had irreversibly altered the geopolitical equation in the Middle East, and the Bush administration came to Israel's aid by rushing it military supplies and opposing a ceasefire—the UPA government fell all but completely mute.

New Delhi could hardly stir itself to issue a protest when an Indian soldier serving with the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFL) was injured by an Israeli bomb in Lebanon's south. And an Indian External Affairs Ministry officially tartly dismissed a reporter who asked whether New Delhi intended to protest the July 18 bombing of a Bekaa Valley factory in which one Indian migrant worker was killed and three others injured, saying it was not a "diplomatic incident but a bombing incident."

Only on July 27, after demonstrations and protest rallies had been held in cities across India, did Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh make a statement to parliament on the situation in Lebanon and call for an "immediate ceasefire."

Not wanting, however, to offend either Washington or Tel Aviv, Singh's statement was almost entirely equivocation, obfuscation and diversion.

Much of the statement was given over to explaining what the UPA government had done to evacuate Indian nationals from Lebanon. After reiterating India's July 13 joint condemnation of Hezbollah and Israel, Singh decried Israel's continued detention of ministers of the Palestinian National Authority, then affirmed—without stating that Israel and the US are responsible for it—that the destruction of Lebanon is deplorable. Said Singh, "The virtual destruction of a country, which has been painfully rebuilt after two decades of civil war, can hardly be countenanced by any civilized state."

Four days later, and in the immediate aftermath of the Israeli atrocity at Qana, India's lower house of parliament (Lok Sabha) unanimously passed a resolution on the crisis in West Asia. It called for an "immediate ceasefire" and condemned "the large-scale and indiscriminate Israeli bombing of Lebanon that has been under way for many days, which has resulted in the killing and suffering of large numbers of innocent civilians, including women and children, and caused widespread damage to civilian infrastructure."

Unlike Singh's July 27 statement, the resolution made no reference to the hollow pretext Israel has given for its war of aggression—Hezbollah's July 12 capture of two Israeli soldiers.

The Lok Sabha motion, however, has in no way changed the stance of the Indian government. Rather it is using the motion to provide political cover for its continuing refusal to lift a diplomatic finger to protest the Israeli aggression against Lebanon, an aggression which is being wholly supported by the Bush administration as part of its preparations for possible future military action against Syria and Iran.

The UPA government has repeatedly denied that it has made any changes in India's traditional geopolitical posture to win Washington's support for a nuclear accord under which India will be given a unique exemption from the international nuclear regulatory regime, thereby allowing it to gain access to international civilian nuclear technology and fuel.

But this is belied by India's voting record at the International Atomic Energy Agency. In the 13 months since Manmohan Singh and Bush initialled a framework agreement on the nuclear issue, New Delhi has sided with the US in key votes on Iran's nuclear program at the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Bush administration officials and US congressmen, meanwhile, have repeatedly made clear that the nuclear accord is contingent on India siding with the US in its confrontation with Iran and that their long-term aim is to harness India to the US and thereby contain, and, if need be, threaten China.

The UPA government and India's corporate elite perceive the nuclear accord as critical for several reasons: It constitutes implicit recognition of India as a nuclear weapons state and great power; provides tangible proof of US willingness to enter into a strategic partnership with India, while consigning arch-rival Pakistan to a lesser status; and will give India access to the nuclear fuel and technology it needs to reduce its dependence on oil and natural gas imports, while enabling it to concentrate the resources of its domestic nuclear program on developing its nuclear arsenal.

As the legislation that will enable the Bush administration to implement the Indo-US nuclear accord is now before the US Congress, the UPA government is especially anxious not to do anything that could rile a US political establishment that views Israel as Washington's most important ally in the oil-rich Middle East and Hezbollah as a synonym for Iran.

[...]

full: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/aug2006/indi-a12.shtml

See also:

India Bans Arab TV Channels Under Pressure From Israel

BOMBAY, 6 August 2006 — In a country widely referred to as the world's largest democracy, the Indian government has succumbed to mounting Israeli pressure and ordered a nationwide ban on the broadcast of Arab television channels.

[...]

full: <http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=75907&d=6&m=8&y=2006>

--

Colin Brace

Amsterdam



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