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Part
I
PREFACE
This article was originally written and published on the internet
about three years ago (during the last Awami League regime) without
an effective response or counter argument to rebut my original charges
against the Indian government past, present and possibly future.
It was written as a rejoinder to Mr. Robin in London who challenged
my assertion that India had hegemonic and imperialistic designs
for the subcontinent. His claim was that India had never publicly
proposed such a policy and so we should not jump to such unsubstantiated
conclusions that India indeed has such a policy or has ever followed
such a policy in the past: A very twisted logic considering the
dynamics prevailing in South Asia. There is also the increased possibility
that India will take advantage of any war in the Middle East or
Korea to harass and victimise Bangladesh further and even resort
to war in an effort to reduce our population which is considered
a vital matter for India’s present ruling elites and their perceived
national security interests (an issue I will come back to later).
Speculation and rumour is also rife that the present government
in Bangladesh will be toppled and replaced with an administration
that is more India centric and sympathetic to their obscurantist
tendencies.
For these reasons, it has been suggested to me that my article ‘Akhand
Hindustan’ should be republished considering the more intense and
aggressive posturing of the Indian government after the fall of
the Awami League government from power and the success of the BNP
in the October 2001 elections in Bangladesh.
I have kept the original form of the article except for a few alterations
and a preface.
THE PROPAGANDA WAR
The onslaught carried on by the Indian press and media assisted
by the international news networks only added support to my view
of Indian imperialism on the sub-continent. The recent visit of
Sheikh Hasina (in November 2002) to India and her reception there
along with the vicious comments of L.K. Advani and India's foreign
minister Yashwant Sinha about Islamic fundamentalism in Bangladesh
and terrorist dens confirmed my suspicions of a conspiracy. This
was also supported to some extent by prominent journalists in Bangladesh:
“…a section of the Indian press, presumably prompted by a quiet
Indian RAW agenda, built up a propaganda dossier about Al-Qaeda
activity in Bangladesh by planted reports from time to time. Contributors
to the Western media clandestinely visited Bangladesh to confirm
those reports and made sensational headlines by stories published
in Time, Far Eastern Economic Review, Wall Street Journal, etc.
A contractor for Channel Four TV in the United Kingdom sent a clandestine
team to film staged scenes of Al-Qaeda agitation in Bangladesh.
That team’s intent has been foiled by police intervention, the foreign
members of which have now been expelled from the country after due
process of law. They were reportedly found to be guided by Indians,
Bombay-based, as well as by Sheikh Hasina’s connections, Dhaka based.”
(Sadeq Khan – ‘BD can’t slacken alert in diplomatic and security
fronts’ in Holiday December 13, 2002; See also ‘India is causing
trouble’ by Philip Bowring – International Herald Tribune Wednesday,
January 22, 2003)
THE DILEMMA FOR BANGLADESH
After writing ‘Akhand Hindustan’ several other articles appeared
on related subjects and the reader may consider looking at those
for more examples of India’s grand design which now appears to involve
something close to ethnic cleansing (e.g. Gujarat and an announced
expulsion of Muslim Bengalis from India) as well as the financial
crippling of neighbouring countries through international propaganda
and finance to achieve an ulterior goal or objective that is both
pernicious and destructive for all its neighbours. A devastating
example for Bangladesh is the United States decision to put Bangladesh
and four other countries under more stringent immigration rules
that are being enforced after the September 11 attacks on the Twin
Towers and the Pentagon. Under the rules, male citizens aged between
16 and 45 years from these countries will face strict scrutiny and
will be required to visit local Immigration and Naturalisation Service
(INS) offices to be photographed, questioned and fingerprinted.
They will also have to show certain documents to INS for keeping
track on their movements in the USA.
Indeed this is a humiliating dénouement for Bangladesh but we did
not reach this precipice all by ourselves. We were rather shoved
into this predicament by India and the Awami League with their repeated
allegations of Al-Qaeda and Taliban elements in the government and
terrorist training camps within our territory. The government could
have been more effective in countering these accusations but we
are all aware that there are Indian operatives within the ruling
party itself. I am also not averse to admitting that Sheikh Hasina
is a far more skilful politician than anyone presently in the BNP
led government. The manner in which she has managed to turn the
tables on the government in regard to the US decision is a prime
example of her skilfulness in political manoeuvring, although the
entire populace of Bangladesh had been suspecting that it was entirely
the fault of the Awami League and India for this debacle. The belated
manner in which the government responded to Sheikh Hasina’s allegations
about incompetence only led to further confusion as to the identity
of the guilty or responsible party.
For the United States, this policy of registration of foreigners
could create a terrible predicament especially in regard to the
situation with Bangladesh and Pakistan. This policy makes President
Bush’s remarks of friendship and trust towards Muslims appear facetious
and contradictory but we could overlook such gross policy somersaults,
as we all must recognise that America will do whatever is necessary
to protect its citizens and country from terrorist’s threats. This
may have been less insulting to Muslims if the policy was implemented
more uniformly across the board so as to include other known terrorist
states such as Israel and India. India with a population of 1 billion
which includes that of 200 million Muslims has been excluded from
this registration process while Pakistan and Bangladesh finds itself
targeted. This should make policy makers in these countries ponder
whether the United States is encouraging India to further its territorial
designs as there does not appear to be any other reason for such
discriminatory practises especially with India’s track record in
Kashmir and Gujarat. From another perspective, it may be suggested
that the United States does not consider India and Israel a threat
due to their anti-Muslim stance and successful subjugation of their
Muslim populations.
The United States should perceive that by aligning itself with these
nations without critical considerations of the implications could
be more disastrous in the long run. I have reflected on these matters
thoroughly in another article ‘September 11 and the New World Disorder’.
I would only add in reference to that article that in the context
of the Indian sub-continent Muslims in this region already consider
the United States-Israel-India as the real axis of evil. They are
surprised that the international community should tolerate such
naked aggression against peoples that are already suppressed and
unfairly treated. According to many, this is tantamount to appeasement,
as Israel and India have continually ignored United Nations Resolutions
for decades without a flicker of protest from the West. To most
Muslims it appears that United Nations Resolutions aimed at them
bear more weight and influence within the West considering the zealous
way in which such resolutions are enforced and implemented. If the
push-in attempts taking place on the Bangladesh border with India
were to have occurred in Europe the world would have described it
as ethnic cleansing and the media networks would be falling over
themselves to investigate what is going on and report it. As of
February 2003, not much has been said or is likely to be said in
the international media unless there is war. The Indians would then
justify this war by saying that there are Islamic terrorists in
Bangladesh and it was necessary to invade for there own security
and this would be eaten whole by the West’s media corporations as
well as their publics. (See also Shahidul Islam’s article, ‘India’s
‘push-in’ constitutes unprovoked aggression’ in Holiday February
7, 2003 issue; also in the same issue see Nurul Kabir’s, ‘India
pursuing agenda at human cost’.)
The most frightening aspect to all this is the similarities to events
preceding World War II. India is moving to a more intolerant and
fascist type governance under the present BJP administration. In
a review of Law Minister Moudud Ahmed’s book ‘Crisis of Development
– The Case of Bangladesh’, Prof. Emajuddin Ahmed (Former Vice-Chancellor
of Dhaka University) states the dilemma very accurately and presciently
in my view,
“Like many political analysts both in India and elsewhere in South
Asia, Moudud Ahmed has been deeply worried at “the rise of Shiv
Sena and the BJP to power” in India because he feels and quite rightly
that “the future of South Asia largely depends on the future of
India.” Indeed the emergence of “Hindu fundamentalism as a strong
political force” in India despite “the constitutional pronouncement
of secularism” may have serious repercussions both within India
and in the neighbouring countries. Recent atrocities committed on
the Muslim community in Gujarat and much to the chagrin of many,
the landslide victory of the intensely fundamentalist group led
by Narendra Modi even after that, thus reinvigorating the communal
frenzy all over the system, are but some of its dire consequences.
Moudud knows it very well that this is an age old story of the Indian
society. One may recollect what an eminent RSS leader Madhav Sadashiv
Golwalker said when the BJP was not even born: “Hindustan is the
land of the Hindus and is the terra firma for the Hindu nation alone
to flourish … Today India’s vision has gone past South Asia; its
aim is now to have “Predominance” established and the Indian Ocean
rim. For having this end achieved it does not need cooperation;
rather India needs its neighbouring countries as its extended frontiers
so that the depth of its offensive and defensive exercises become
stable.” (Independent Magazine – 17 January 2003; See also Barrister
Harun-ur-Rashids article, ‘India’s conduct towards Bangladesh is
short-sighted’ in Holiday February 7, 2003 issue; Pankaj Mishra
– ‘The Other Face of Fanaticism’ in Holiday February 21, 2003 issue]
In view of all this, the statements of the Indian External Affairs
Minister Yashwant Sinha in ‘The Daily Star’ (February 8, 2003) seem
surreal. Placing the entire blame on the Bangladesh side for the
Indian push-in attempts of alleged illegal immigrants to India from
Bangladesh appears ingenious and incredulous to most Bangladeshis.
According to Mr. Sinha, Dhaka has not been sensitive to Delhi’s
security needs while ignoring the fact that most terrorist attacks
in Bangladesh have been backed, financed, and planned by India.
The Mymensingh cinema blasts clearly suggest an Indian link to that
explosion which killed almost a dozen people. The policy objective
of the Indian government which is made clear by Mr. Sinha’s interview
is that India desires a new economic and political framework in
South Asia (dominated by India) and that Bangladesh should abandon
its Pakistan-China ‘economic-friendly’ diplomacy. Mr. Sinha claims
that SAARC has not served ‘us’ (the Indians?) very well and so ‘innovations’
in bilateral relations should be pursued. It may have escaped Mr.
Sinha’s mind but SAARC has failed due to no lack of trying on the
part of the Indians to make it fail. Why cannot these new ‘innovations’
suggested by Mr. Sinha be introduced through the SAARC framework
on a multilateral basis?
THE PAKISTAN FACTOR
The answer to the question lies in the Pakistan factor which is
uppermost in the minds of the Indians and was frankly admitted to
by the Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee. Late last year,
Mr. Sinha told the Indian Parliament that the Pakistan High Commission
in Dhaka had become the ‘hub’ of ISI activities. The Prime Minister
Atal Behari Vajpayee on 8th February 2003 claimed Pakistan’s ISI
was using ‘terrorists of Bangladesh and Nepal to pursue its anti-Indian
agenda.’ (The Daily Star 9 February 2003) Anyone living in Dhaka
and associated with the Pakistan High Commission would inform you
that the officials there are completely incapable of carrying out
so organised an operation as suggested by the Indians and show no
inclination in that direction even if they were able to. (See also
Praful Bidwai ‘Grave crisis in South Asian ties: Neighbours as enemies.’
The Daily Star: February 17, 2003)
The real concern of the Indians is that Pakistan is the only country
in South Asia not to toe the Indian line but is prepared to take
decisions that are solely within its national interest regardless
of Indian concerns. However, unlike India, it is prepared to work
through SAARC to resolve regional issues and come to amicable settlements.
That Bangladesh is also slowly adopting such an independent line
is worrisome to India since it [India] has not successfully been
able to shed its skin of impotent Hinduism and a paranoid Hindu
inferiority complex which requires aggressive territorial aggrandisement
to rewrite history and erase the thought of independent Muslim rule
on the sub-continent. In addition to this is the demographic time
bomb that will result in a Muslim majority in the subcontinent as
a whole within 20 years. The Hindu nationalists realise that they
are running out of time and the only solution is mass slaughter
of Muslims as occurred in Gujarat and that the push-in policy is
only an excuse for further encroachment and eventual genocide of
Muslims at least in West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa and Bangladesh. This
last mentioned theory is an original contribution of Mr. Maqsoodul
Haq of ‘Bangladesh Dak’ who has tirelessly campaigned for an open
debate on the issue but as usually failed due to the narrow mindedness
of the so-called Bangladeshi intellectuals in the pay of India.
THE CHINA FACTOR
In all these calculations China also plays a significant role. As
a major trade partner of both Pakistan and Bangladesh, it is perceived
by these countries as an alternative destination for their exports
and for mutually beneficial military cooperation. It is for this
reason that the Indian government and press have become hostile
and bellicose as they feeling threatened by the expressions of independence
amongst its neighbours. This was visibly displayed on the Bangladesh
Foreign Ministers visit to India when the press there circulated
rumours that Morshed Khan [the foreign minister] may lose his job:
‘The reports are said to have stemmed from the fact that Bangladesh’s
relations with two of its most important partners, the US and India,
have taken a nosedive in the past few months. Though Morshed Khan
is a leading businessman of Bangladesh, he has failed to bring foreign
investment into Bangladesh.’ (The Independent, Sunday 16 Feb. 03)
These last two quoted sentences may appear benign but are highly
menacing and ominous in view of the fact that these meetings in
India are taking place in the backdrop of the ‘push-in’ attempts
on Bangladesh’s borders. In reality, it was due to Morshed Khans
business links that the visit by Prime Minister Khaleda Zia to China
was so successful and many trade and military cooperation agreements
were signed. Bangladesh has taken this course of seeking closer
ties with China due to the aggressive and racist policies of the
Indian government. It was also due to India that relations with
the USA had become damaged. In other words, Bangladesh in an effort
to remain sovereign and independent has to make friends elsewhere.
According to some, “India’s Bangladesh policy is largely determined
by domestic-political considerations: the BJP wants to whip up xenophobia
and raise the communal temperature to electoral ends.” (Praful Bidwai
‘Grave crisis in South Asian ties: Neighbours as enemies’; See also
Mizanur Rahman Khan ‘ New Neighbours’ in PROBE news Magazine – January
16-31, 2003 Vol. 2 Issue 4)
CONCLUSIONS
I believe India’s plans for the sub-continent to be far more grandiose
and ambitious involving military invasion and territorial acquisition
to satisfy the fanatical Hindu’s penchant for greater lebensraum
an elimination of Muslims (‘the final solution’). I would agree
therefore, with the suggestion made by Maj. Gen. Syed Ahmed in the
Bangladesh Army Journal and reproduced in part by Probe magazine,
“Our geo-strategic realities demand that we take into consideration
the balance of power situation of South Asia and prepare accordingly.
To stand against a formidable enemy, a small state cannot afford
to renounce the possibility of making alliance with other larger
states. Enemy’s enemy is a friend: such wisdom remained the basis
of military alliances and the balance of power game through the
history of warfare. In the struggle for survival, Bangladesh will
definitely exploit all the available opportunities; in that the
possibility of alliance also remains open.”
Part II
THE EMERGENCE OF INDIA AND ITS POLICY OF REUNIFICATION
“Whoso writes the history of his own time must expect to be attacked
for everything he has said, and for everything he has not said;
but those little draw backs should not discourage a man who loves
truth and liberty, expects nothing, fears nothing, asks nothing,
and limits his ambition to the cultivation of letters”
(Voltaire)
INTRODUCTION
I am well aware that India has made no official statement to the
effect that it would pursue a policy seeking reunification of All-India
or ‘Akhand-Bharat’ or more provocatively for Muslims ‘Akhand-Hindustan’.
I doubt anyone expected such a controversial policy to be so explicitly
expressed or formulated in the same manner as I had suggested in
my previous comments on the subject. For all practical purposes,
what I am offering now is near enough in content to my original
proposition that many readers found so incredulous. What had astonished
me was the reaction to a single paragraph in that article where
I claimed there was a concerted and planned domination and encroachment
by India on its neighbors. The present military buildup (Feb 2003)
along India’s border with Bangladesh is a further testament to this
aggressive expansionist policy of India’s.
TWO NATION THEORY
I am amazed that so many people are ignorant of the fact that India
has never accepted the concept of the Two-Nation theory which resulted
in the break up of India into two separate parts in 1947. It is
well known that they have their stooges and quislings in all the
countries of the sub-continent promoting the view that the Two Nations
theory based on religion was a mistake. And it may surprise the
reader that I would agree with that assessment but not in an attempt
to distract from India’s own fissiparous and centrifugal forces
or in a cheap attempt to break up Pakistan further but to promote
a more realistic evaluation and appraisal of India’s conduct to
its neighbors. Two quite extraordinary books revealing the lack
of commonality between the two parts of Pakistan and the inherent
cultural anomalies within East Pakistan sheds light on why a Two
Nation Theory could not be a solution to Jinnah’s fear of Hindu
domination. The whole notion of Two Nations based on religion was
far too simplistic to begin with:
“If there were two religious ‘nations’ in India, there were many
more cultural and linguistic ‘nations’. Certainly what was true
of the U.P. Muslims was not so of their co-religionists in eastern
India, notwithstanding the fact that they professed the same faith.
The dominant culture of the former was based on the Mughal heritage
with Urdu as its nucleus, while the latter were integrated more
with the local Bengali culture than with any heritage of Muslim
rule in India. The former looked upon Kurta and paijama as the proper
dress for a Muslim, the latter wore a modest lungi, if not a dhoti
like their Hindu neighbors; one looked upon Urdu as the appropriate
language of Muslims in India, the latter hardly knew any word of
it.” (Rafiuddin Ahmed – “The Bengal Muslims 1871 – 1906 A Quest
for Identity” (Second Edition 1988))
There is still good reason for minorities and Moslems in both Pakistan
and Bangladesh to be apprehensive about current trends in India
even if the BJP Government and the RSS are taking a restrained approach
(this has drastically changed in more recent times):
“…the growth of extreme Hindu nationalism with symbols repugnant
to Muslims caused great uneasiness in their minds. A familiar idiom
of nationalist Hindu militancy was the anti-Muslim rhetoric, which
traced historically the Hindus fall from grace to the tyranny of
the ‘alien’ rule. Muslims were contemptuously referred to as yavanas,
melechchas, katchakholas and the like in the nationalist literature
and exclusive Hindu symbols introduced as sources of Indian nationalism.”
(Rafiuddin Ahmed; a must read is Muhammed Mohar Ali’s book, “History
of the Muslims of Bengal (First Edition 1985); see also Rounaq Jahan
– “Pakistan Failure in National Integration” (Second Impression
1977); Prof. K. Ali – “Bangladesh a New Nation”; Rick Fountain’s
‘Bangladesh War Secrets Revealed’ 1 January 2003))
In my opinion, it should not have been a Two-Nation theory but a
‘Several Nation Theory’. But Mountbatten was so enamored with a
unified India he failed to appreciate the autonomous tendencies
within India, particularly in Kashmir and the Seven Sisters. I would
also add that from its conception, Bangladesh should have been an
independent nation (see 1940 Lahore Resolution) but this would have
been unacceptable to both Mohammed Ali Jinnah and India. Sadly,
we had to settle for a moth eaten Pakistan (from a East Pakistan
perspective) that proved far too fragile and where there was no
mutual respect and understanding in its disparate parts. I would
go further and say that instead of having been attached to Pakistan
we had formed a loose Confederation of Bengal States separate, distinct
and independent from India then this would have been a viable entity
since the Seven Sisters have no real affinity to India as recent
autonomy demands suggest. A concept based on economics and tolerance
rather than solely on religion. Of course, this is a pie in the
sky idea with a little more than mischief making involved. At least
one thing appears to be true about this analysis and that is that
a deeper understanding and respect is gradually being achieved between
Pakistan and Bangladesh as separate entities than was ever accomplished
when the parts were together. Nevertheless, many commentators in
Bangladesh are saying a similar thing concerning a unity of Bengal
states but the difference is that according to their vision if put
into effect, we would become another province of India with limited
autonomy. However, this is not the subject of my present write up.
It is India’s territorial and hegemonic ambitions that are of greater
concern for me and for the region as a whole.
JAWAHARLAL NEHRU
As it is impossible to understand Hitler’s Germany without Mein
Kampf, the same applies to India in reference to Jawaharlal Nehru’s
compositions and publications. I would like to point out that I
am not trying to make a comparison between these two men but merely
offering an illustration for ease of understanding, although the
present BJP government would suitably fit such a comparison with
Nazi Germany.
Returning now to the question of India’s Foreign Policy objectives
and designs. These matters were in embryonic form in Jawaharlal
Nehru’s, ‘The Discovery of India’ (First edition-1946) from which
I now quote at length:
“If India is split up into two or more parts and can no longer function
as a political and economic unit, her progress will be seriously
affected. The much worse will be the inner psychological conflict
between those who wish to reunite her and those who oppose this
… Unity is always better than disunity, but an enforced unity is
a sham and dangerous affair, full of explosive possibilities. Unity
must be of the mind and heart, a sense of the belonging together
and of facing together those who attack it. I am convinced that
there is that basic unity in India, but it has been overlaid and
hidden to some extent by other forces. These latter may be temporary
and artificial and may pass off, but they count today and no man
can ignore them… Yet the fact remains that considerable numbers
of Moslems have become sentimentally attached to this idea of separation
without giving thought to its consequences … I think this sentiment
has been artificially created and has no roots in the Moslem mind
… It may be that some division of India is enforced, with some tenuous
bond joining the divided parts. Even if this happens, I am convinced
that the basic feeling of unity and world developments will later
bring the divided parts nearer to each other and result in a real
unity. It is obvious that whatever may be the future of India, and
even if there is a regular partition, the different parts will have
to co-operate with each other and in a hundred different ways. Even
independent nations have to co-operate with each other and must
hang together or deteriorate, disintegrate and loose their freedom…
Thus we arrive at the inevitable and ineluctable conclusion that,
whether Pakistan comes or not, a number of important and basic functions
of the state must be exercised on all-India basis if India is to
survive as a free state and progress. The alternative is stagnation,
decay and disintegration, leading to a loss of political and economic
freedom, both for India as a whole and its various separated parts.
As has been said by an eminent authority: ‘The inexorable logic
of the age presents the country with radically different alternatives:
union plus independence or disunion plus dependence.’ … There is
grave danger in a possibility of partition and division to begin
with. For such an attempt might well scotch the very beginnings
of freedom and the formation of a free national state … Indeed,
it is difficult to conceive of any free state emerging from such
a turmoil, and if something does emerge, it will be a pitiful caricature
full of contradictions and insoluble problems.” (Jawaharlal Nehru
– The Discovery of India (Ninth Impression) pp. 526-536).
HISTORICAL INTENTIONS
India’s views of partition have not fundamentally diverged from
this original standpoint and impression but may have become even
more extreme in recent decades. Jawaharlal Nehru, was the Prime
Minister of India from 1947-1964, having tremendous influence and
clout on subsequent generations of foreign policy makers in that
country. I doubt whether anyone would contradict me on this nor
is it a particularly contentious observation
These expressions of Prime Minister Nehru have also translated into
action in attempts to enfeeble and demoralize its neighbors. Take
for example, India’s and Pakistan’s agreement on the division of
financial and material assets of the British Raj. Pakistan had already
received 200 million rupees as advance and was to receive a further
additional 550 million rupees as balance of her share. The Indians
argued that the money would be used to purchase arms to kill Indian
soldiers, so India refused to pay the sum until the Kashmir problem
was resolved. Consequently, a cheque issued by the Pakistan Government
to the British Overseas Airways Corporation bounced because of insufficient
funds. This policy was sponsored by Sardar Patel and was endorsed
by Jawaharlal Nehru and the whole cabinet although Mountbatten had
gone to great lengths to finalize this comprehensive ‘package deal’.
Mountbatten described India’s conduct as ‘unstatesmanlike’, ‘unwise’
and ‘dishonourable’. The money was finally released to Pakistan
after intervention of Mahatma Gandhi where he threatened to fast
until death if India did not take the honourable course. (Collins
and Lapierre - ‘Freedom at Midnight’ (1984 reprint); H.V. Hodson
- ‘The Great Divide’ (First Published 1969); Stanley Wolpert – ‘Jinnah
of Pakistan’ (Fourth Impression 1998); Prof. K. Ali – “Bangladesh
a New Nation”; K.Z. Islam –‘Mountbatten’s India Bias’ – serialized
in the weekly Holiday); see also Sadeq Khan – ‘Allusions and Realities’
– The weekly Holiday July 7, 2000) ).
India’s attitude to partition and Pakistan was highlighted by Pandit
Nehru’s daughter Indira Gandhi at a public meeting on November 30,
1970 where she stated, “India has never reconciled with the existence
of Pakistan. Indian leaders always believed that Pakistan should
not have been created and that Pakistan nation has no right to exist.”
(‘India’s Nuclear Doctrine by Wing Comd. (Retd) Muhammed Irshid
– defence journal - Oct 99; see also Henry Kissinger – ‘The White
House Years’ (First Published 1979; Mohammed Tajammul Hussain –
Bangladesh Victim of Black Propaganda Intrigue and Indian Hegemony
(First Published May 1996); Rick Fountain’s ‘Bangladesh War Secrets
Revealed’ 1 January 2003). This by implication would include Bangladesh
though no one in this country would admit it in so many words. India’s
role in the war was naturally an extension of its own policy considerations:
“India’s support for Bangladesh basically emanated from its negative
approach towards Pakistan. For political, historical, and economic
reasons, it was India’s natural desire to see that her rival power
structure in the subcontinent is weakened. It was not so much love
for democracy or sense of brotherhood for the people of Bangladesh
that Indira Gandhi decided to support the Bengalis in their war
to achieve independence. The then Government of India acted on its
own calculations in order to achieve its own national and international
objectives. Once India got involved she became greatly interested
in seeing the struggle the Bengalis remain in its complete control.
The Indian Government wanted to ensure that following the removal
of the west Pakistani authority and effective government of its
own liking was established in Bangladesh.” (Moudud Ahmed – “Bangladesh:
Constitutional Quest for Autonomy” (Second Revised Edition 1991))
ANOTHER WAR OF INDEPENDENCE?
After the Liberation War in 1971, due to a want of strong leadership
we were only able to change our masters and to a certain degree
the quality of our enslavement but not the situation or position
of enslavement. This status still prevails for us today. Certainly
we were exploited and racially discriminated by the West Pakistani
military junta but that is still something we have to live with
in the present - now that we are under different overseers, namely,
the Indian government and international financial and media institutions
that assist it. We may no longer be physically in fetters but our
intellectual processes are still entangled and weighed down by a
ball and chain. Outside forces encourage our penchant for dispute
and argumentation that leads to factionalism and disharmony which
is the latter day policy of ‘divide and rule’. We are constantly
reminded of our weaknesses and deficiencies in face of a giant like
neighbor and so discouraged from any independent thinking.
Westerners may be astonished at this form of psychological warfare
conducted by adherents of a docile religion called Hinduism but
unfortunately they are assisted by persons bearing Muslim names
and possessing Bangladesh identity who have often been described
as Fifth Columnists by nationalistic commentators within Bangladesh
(e.g. Col. Sayyed Farook Rahman who originally used the term against
the sycophants surrounding Sheikh Mujibur Rahman). Notable examples
today include the leadership of the Awami League, Shariar Kabir
and most especially Abdul Gaffar Chowdhury. The last mentioned has
admonished the followers of the USA branch of the Hindu-Buddha-Christian
United Council (Oikya Parishad) to take up arms to establish their
rights in Bangladesh as USA and India will not help them to do so.
Praising the activities of the council he said, leaders of the Parishad
have to go back to Bangladesh and start fight against the present
Taliban government. Gaffar Chowdhury threatened, ‘Is there anybody
in Bangladesh to resist if India provides logistic support to declare
an independent Hindu region taking three districts of Bangladesh.
Bangladesh will not exist without Hindus.” He further added, “…the
promoters of Pakistani purposes are now being treated as patriotic
in Bangladesh.” (The Independent – Tuesday 11 February 2003)
After the bomb blasts in Mymensingh district several national newspapers
reported that a junior commissioned officer of the army, a former
lance corporal and a civilian have been arrested on charge of spying
for an Indian intelligence agency. One of the accused is charged
with having supplied maps, designs, employment files of important
army officials, directories of various formation training manuals,
load table, move plan, permanent addresses of officers of different
units, organizational structure of different units, list of arms
and manpower, abbreviation books and resolutions of important meetings
and other information. This particular accused sold off confidential
documents to India for a large sum of money. A fact that will be
conveniently forgotten by our intellectuals, press and media within
a short span of time. A point that confirms my conclusions concerning
the need for a new war of independence and the manner in which it
will be fought and the means by which it shall be won. If Abdul
Gaffar Chowdhury can exhort Hindus to take up arms in Bangladesh
against Muslims then Muslims should retain the right to defend themselves.
Part III
THE 1971 WAR OF LIBERATION AND AFTER
"The Athenians, it seems to me, may think a man to be clever without
paying him much attention. So long as they do not think that he
teaches his wisdom to others. But as soon as they think that he
makes other people clever, they get angry whether it be from jealousy,
… or from some other reason" (Socrates)
" … I shall prove that I am not a clever speaker in any way at all:
unless, indeed, by a clever speaker they mean a man who speaks the
truth" (Socrates)
AMERICA AND HENRY KISSINGER
The only other person that seems to have realized that India’s cooperation
during the Liberation War was self-motivated as well as self-centered
was Henry Kissinger. The creation of Bangladesh has brought untold
difficulties for India as well as a long-term dilemma that was recognized
by a handful of enlightened individuals, although at times overstated
in its complexity or analysis:
"The inevitable emergence of Bangladesh - which we postulated –
presented India with fierce long-term problems. For Bangladesh was
in effect East Bengal. Separated only by religion from India’s most
fractious and most separatist state, West Bengal. They shared language,
tradition, culture, and above all, a volatile national character.
Whether, it turned nationalistic or radical, Bangladesh would overtime
accentuate India’s centrifugal tendencies. It might be a precedent
for the creation of other Moslem states, carved this time out of
India. Once it was independent, its Moslem heritage might eventually
lead to a rapprochement with Pakistan. All of this dictated to the
unsentimental planners in New Delhi that its birth had to be accompanied
by a dramatic demonstration of Indian predominance on the sub-continent
… Mrs. Gandhi was going to war not because she was convinced of
our failure but because she feared our success [in negotiations].
Ignoring the issues that had produced the crisis, she gave a little
lecture on the history of Pakistan. She denied that she was opposed
to its existence, but her analysis did little to sustain her disclaimer.
Her father, she averred, had been blamed for accepting partition.
And there was an element of truth, she said, in the often heard
charge that India had been brought into being by leaders of an indigenous
independence movement while Pakistan had been formed by British
collaborators who, as soon as they became ‘independent’ proceeded
to imprison the authentic fighters for independence. Pakistan was
a jerry-built structure held together by its hatred for India, which
was being stoked by each new generation of Pakistani leaders. Conditions
in East Pakistan reflected tendencies applicable to all of Pakistan.
Neither Baluchistan nor the Northwest Frontier properly belonged
to Pakistan; they too wanted and deserved greater autonomy: they
should never have been part of the original settlement.
This history lesson was hardly calculated to calm anxiety about
Indian intentions. It was at best irrelevant to the issues and at
worst a threat to cohesion of even West Pakistan. Mrs. Gandhi stressed
the congenital defects of Pakistan so insistently that she implied
that confining her demands to the secession of East Pakistan amounted
to Indian restraint, the continued existence of West Pakistan reflected
Indian forbearance…
…what had caused the war, in Nixon’s view and mine, went beyond
the refugee problem; it was India’s determination to use the crisis
to establish its preeminence on the subcontinent…
I remain convinced to this day that Mrs. Gandhi was not motivated
primarily by conditions in East Pakistan; many solutions to its
inevitable autonomy existed, several suggested by us…
We had no national interest to prevent self-determination for East
Pakistan – indeed, we had put several schemes to bring it about
– but we had a stake in the process by which it occurred. We wanted
it to be achieved by evolution, not by a traumatic shock to a country
in whose survival the United States, China, and the world community
(as shown in repeated UN votes) did feel a stake, or by a plain
violation of the rules by which the world must conduct itself if
it is to survive. India struck in late November; by the timetable
that we induced Yahya to accept, martial law would have ended and
a civilian government would have taken power at the end of December.
This would almost surely have led to the autonomy and independence
of East Pakistan – probably without the excesses of brutality, including
public bayoneting, in which the Indian – trained guerillas, the
Mukti Bahini, engaged when they in turn terrorized Dacca." (Henry
Kissinger – ‘The White House Years’ pp. 881-915; see also Zillur
R. Khan – "Leadership Crisis in Bangladesh" (First Published 1984)
and Rick Fountain’s ‘Bangladesh War Secrets Revealed’ 1 January
2003).
THREE BOOKS ON THE ‘ART OF IMPERIALISM’
This geopolitical analysis and rendering of facts does not wholly
square with the Indian interpretation. In fact, it seems to completely
contradict the Indian position on all points. Present authorship
in India has single mindedly attempted to explode and demolish all
the assumptions and explanations made in Mr. Kissinger’s book. A
case in point is ‘Liberation and Beyond’ by J.N. Dixit, a career
diplomat now retired. Whereas Mr. Kissinger has attempted a global
analysis of the 1971 conflict fitting it into a framework of international
politics, Mr. Dixit has confined himself into dealing with it as
if it were an episode solely happening in India’s backyard or a
very parochial matter of no interest to the international community
at all.
Even if sufficient credence is given to Mr. Kissinger’s alleged
bias or partiality, it does not explain the gulf between the two
books in their portrayal of events during the 1971 war. Apart from
the fact that Mr. Dixit has used quoted paragraphs from Mr. Kissinger’s
book and completely taken them out of context by not detailing what
preceded the quoted section nor what it was intended to explain
is damaging of itself. At least Mr. Kissinger had enough sense to
be denigrating of the Pakistani’s too, whereas Mr. Dixit clearly
shows us his pro-India bias.
The major discrepancies between the two books reside in their exposition
of facts and circumstances. In ‘Liberation and Beyond’ the author
states that though military operations were conducted under a Joint
Command Structure with General Osmani as the counterpart of General
Jagjit Singh Aurora, General Osmani was not present at the surrender
ceremony of Pakistani Forces in Dhaka. He describes this as a ‘major
political mistake’ and that the circumstances of General Osmani’s
omission created ‘widespread suspicion’ amongst Bangladeshis. He
describes the Indian ‘formal excuse’ as leading to ‘unfortunate
aberration’ in the Bangladeshi belief that India wished to highlight
its role in the war at the expense of Bangladesh, which India could
have apparently avoided.
This entire paragraph left me in utter confusion. If it was in India’s
power to ensure General Osmani’s attendance then why did they not
do so? Why a long-winded and ultimately confusing explanation that
leads the reader to conclude that there is more here than meets
the eye. These actions give the impression that India considers
Bangladesh a mere vassal state and that India was merely recovering
a piece of its territory from the Pakistanis.
Another area where Mr. Dixit reveals more than he would have desired
is his continual denial that India had any territorial aspirations
in West Pakistan. But his comments belie his real meaning and Indian
perspectives on the war. He says on several occasions that, "India
would not liberate Pakistan-occupied Kashmir." These are an interesting
choice of words. I will leave it to the intelligent reader to decipher
what it means and implies.
At the end of the chapter, the author provides a number of press
releases emanating from the 1971 war that discloses atrocities committed
by West Pakistan forces in East Pakistan. Ninety per cent of the
newspaper cuttings are of Indian origin. This could mean that the
propaganda effort on behalf of the Bangladeshi Government was carried
out by India or that the author’s research was very limited or he
wishes to emphasize the support that India provided to Bangladesh.
I would assume that it would be in India’s interest to make Pakistan
look exceedingly ugly regardless of what happened in the Eastern
theatre of operations. I am not denying that the Pakistani military
committed heinous aggression upon the East Pakistanis but that we
in the end were simply pawns in a wider diplomatic game and we consequently
lost our ability to think for ourselves.
The manner in which the author has constructed his chapters on the
war puts India in good stead but there is a disturbing inconsistency
in the chronology of events from that found in ‘The White House
Years.’ I would tend to believe Mr. Kissinger’s account, as it is
more logical in its lay out and description.
In ‘Liberation and Beyond’ there is a tendency to overplay and overestimate
the role of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in the military sequence of events.
The author repeatedly lays stress on the relationship of Yahya Khan
and Bhutto to demonstrate a clear characterization of a unified
Pakistan onslaught. What purpose this serves I do not know. Bhutto
only appeared when the Pakistan military debacle became evident
and he exploited this to eventually oust Yahya. Bhutto was certainly
responsible for the break up of Pakistan and much disliked amongst
many of his own people but according to a number of books he was
unawares of the military option being adopted by Yahya Khan. Kissinger
virtually ignores Bhutto for most part and concentrates on the deeds
of Yahya. There is one section of the book where Mr. Kissinger highly
praises the brilliance and sophistication of Bhutto. We are also
made abundantly aware of Mr. Bhutto’s immoderate and emotionally
unstable side: "Zulfi suspected and feared collusion between Yahya
and Mujib, and between Yahya and the fundamentalist Islamic parties
of the West … Zulfi felt neglected by Yahya, offended by that little
general to whom he had extended much hospitality in Larkana and
had been especially moderate, thanks to Peerzada’s adroit diplomacy,
never attacking him as mercilessly as he had attacked Ayub Khan.
Soon Yayha’s turn would come, however, for he had the temerity to
speak of Mujib as "prime minister.” (Stanley Wolpert – ‘Zulfi Bhutto
of Pakistan" (1993))
The central argument in "Liberation and Beyond" can be summarized
as follows: That it was Pakistan that conspired to create a situation
against East Pakistan so as to find an excuse to make an assault
upon India and its national integrity. In other words, it was Pakistan
that desired a break up of India. That India did not want a neighbouring
country to be fragmented and destroyed but due to the humanitarian
concern for East Pakistan, it could not stand by under such naked
aggression of the Pakistanis against the East Pakistan populace.
That India tried it’s utmost to seek a diplomatic and negotiated
settlement to the dispute but due to Pakistani intransigence, this
was not possible. That the United States was uncooperative by not
pressuring Pakistan to adopt a more conciliatory stance. That the
United States continued to supply military hardware to Pakistan
even after an arms embargo. That Bhutto was an important factor
in the dispute implying that Pakistan wished to carry out his dream
of eliminating India. That India did not want a reversal of partition
nor a reunification of those parts but was deeply convinced that
religion alone did not make a nation. A non-hostile Bangladesh would
be far more preferable than a hostile East Pakistan and a positive
response to the Bangladesh movement would reduce chances of other
states in India seeking autonomy. That the might of the Pakistan
army in East Pakistan was so strong that the liberation struggle
would eventually peter out without active support from India. (J.N.
Dixit – ‘Liberation and Beyond: Indo-Bangladesh Relations’ (First
Published 1999) pp. 30-130)
There was much more I could have included in this summary but this
will suffice to illustrate my point. The whole of that paragraph
is in complete conflict with Mr. Kissinger’s rendition of history
and parts of Mr. Wolperts exposition. I would also add that much
of it does not accord with common sense or reality. The purpose
of this exercise is to show how false history can be induced into
our national psyche and has been the case since our independence.
This is not to suggest that Mr. Kissinger’s account is not tainted
with national loyalties of his own but until a history is written
by us and by some one who wants to know the truth with out being
influenced by the Pakistanis, Indians or Americans we will continue
to be mystified. It is also my argument that India has bombarded
and pummeled us with propaganda so that we are constantly at our
own necks so as we become incapable of developing an independent
national identity. The most recent of these examples is the stories
concerning ISI agents roaming around Bangladesh creating havoc with
the aid of Taliban and Osama bin Laden terrorists. No one has been
arrested so far in this connection but ironically many Indian spies
have been apprehended while carrying out activities detrimental
to the stability of Bangladesh.
THE PROPAGANDA OFFENSIVE
Ever since our independence, India has taken on a propaganda offensive
by flooding our markets with books that support Indian contentions
of what happened during the liberation war but the literature is
so inherently flawed that any intelligent reader could see them
for what they really are. Apart from ‘Liberation and Beyond’, books
such as Kuldip Nayar’s ‘Distant Neighbours: A Tale of the Subcontinent’
(Delhi 1972), J.K.R. Jacob, Lt. Gen. ‘Surrender at Dacca: Birth
of a Nation’ (Dhaka 1997) and most recently Enayetur and Joyce Rahim’s
‘Bangladesh Liberation War and the Nixon White House 1971’ (February
2000) are further examples of this trend. There are numerous other
books written by Bangladeshis in Bangladesh that support the Indian
assertions but the authors are mere ‘dalals’ (brokers) for India
and they are paid large amounts of money to write such trite. I
have even provided references to their works in this article but
I will not be any more specific here. Organizations such as the
MUKTIJUDDER CHETONA BASTOBAION O EKATTURER GHATOK DALAL NIRMUL JATIO
SOMANNAY COMMITTEE have participated and contributed to this spreading
of falsified history.
Enayetur and Joyce Rahim’s ‘Bangladesh Liberation War and the Nixon
White House 1971’ is a good example of how blatant some of these
writings are. The writers claim that the primary objective of their
work is to provide verbatim documentation to the Nixon administrations
policy, and involvement in the conflict. This could not be further
from the truth and their praise for India ad infinitum is quite
nauseating. The first part of their book claims to derive its materials
from newspaper articles. At a closer inspection, the entire first
part is made up of articles from one newspaper "The Independent"
and from write-ups written from 26th February 1999 to 28th May 1999.
This is stretching contemporaneity a little too far for my liking.
To make matters worse all the articles in the first part have been
written by the authors themselves in "The Independent" of Dhaka,
so while proclaiming their objectivity they are publishing writings
by themselves that are so slanted and biased to make the most bigoted
man throw up. The timing of these write-ups and circumstances of
their authorship would make anyone harbour doubts about the sincerity
and objectivity of the writers. From reading the Preface to the
book one is thrown back by how twisted and unbalanced the whole
project is. They do not attempt to hide their prejudice or from
what angle they are writing. One can only conclude that this was
supported with the tacit if not explicit support of the Awami League
and the Indian Government. One should not be surprised that "The
Independent" also serialized the J.N. Dixit book. I am only offended
that the so-called educated elite in our country has not been able
to see through this game. No I am not merely offended but appalled
by the cowardice and lack of scholarly insight amongst our pompous
intellectuals. My uneducated grandmother could have given a better
account of herself. So far we have only been able to produce personalized
histories of the Liberation War that generally swallow the Indian
line without questioning the writers basic assumptions (Rafiq-ul-Islam
– "A Tale of Millions" (October 1981)). It is time we moved on to
a more mature and well-researched analysis of our recent history:
a history written by us, for us, and without political interference.
THE NEHRU DOCTRINE AND INDIA’S FORWARD POLICY
The big brotherly attitude of India which other nations have found
overbearing and an irritant is a culmination of the thinking of
Pandit Nehru and India’s Forward Policy. An example of this Forward
Policy, not surprisingly, is found in what has been called the Nehru
Doctrine. Its focus has been directed at Nepal but has meaning and
resonance for all of India’s neighbours. Pandit Nehru on 17th March,
1950 in Parliament expressed it thus, "apart from any kind of alliance
the fact remains that we can’t tolerate any foreign invasion from
any foreign country in any part of the Indian sub-continent. Any
possible invasion of Nepal will inevitably involve the safety of
India." One may recall India’s strong opposition to any military
pact between the United States and Bangladesh, so the doctrine also
encompasses preventing any alliances as well. The Nehru Doctrine
infringes upon the independent sovereign rights of nations and interferes
in their internal decision making processes. If control is not de
jure, it is certainly at least de facto. I am sure India will assign
the right to interpret the word ‘invasions’ according to its own
wisdom and thought processes. As has been pointed out by Secretary
of State Kissinger, "I did not find in Indian History or in Indian
conduct towards its own people or its neighbours a unique moral
sensitivity."
Much closer to home, the Forward Policy and the Nehru Doctrine were
at play during our own Liberation War, as explained by Secretary
of State Kissinger, "Despite Yahya’s proclamation of an amnesty
India made the return of refugees to East Pakistan depend on a political
settlement there. But India reserved the right to define what constituted
an acceptable political settlement on the sovereign territory of
its neighbour." (Henry Kissinger – ‘The White House Years; see also
Zillur R. Khan – Leadership Crisis in Bangladesh; Mohammed Tajammul
Hussain – Bangladesh Victim of Black Propaganda Intrigue and Indian
Hegemony; also see Sadeq Khan – ‘A Coded Message of expansion" in
the weekly ‘Holiday’ July 14th 2000) )
GLOBAL POLITICS AND AMBITIONS OF NATIONS
Bangladesh’s suspicion of India is only natural; since I am sure
India does not have our best interests in mind. This is something
I noted on a previous occasion but it did not receive the same type
of response as my last write-up did. There is a good academic reason
why nations that share borders with India should be wary and I am
saying this at the risk of repeating myself:
"Whether a nation be mighty today and rich or not depends not on
the abundance or security of its power and riches, but principally
on whether its neighbours have more or less of it." (German mercantilist
Von Hornigk – From Paul Kennedy – ‘The Rise and Fall of the Great
Powers (First Published 1988))
Under the last Awami League government Bangladesh had adopted a
foreign policy of least resistance and no direction. We should therefore
not blame the Indians but ourselves. If we cannot compete because
we tend to be lazy or just plain stupid with no feeling of patriotism
then we can only expect that India will take advantage of this situation
at our cost:
“... the power of a nation-state by no means consists only in its
armed forces, but also in its economic and technological resources;
in the dexterity, foresight and resolution with which its foreign
policy is conducted; in the efficiency of its social and political
organization. It consists most of all in the nation itself, the
people; their skills, energy, ambition, discipline, initiative;
their beliefs, myths and illusions. And it consists, further, in
the way all these factors are related to one another. Moreover national
power has to be considered not only in itself, in its absolute extent,
but relative to the state's foreign or imperial obligations; it
has to be considered relative to the power of other states." (Corelli
Barnett – From Paul Kennedy – ‘The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers’)
What was not evident when I originally wrote this article in 2001
was that if Bangladesh even attempts an independent foreign policy
the Indian government would directly intervene military to bring
the Bangladesh government into line. This explains the recent allegations
of terrorist bases in Bangladesh which have been repeated in the
international media but charges that still remain unproved and the
ethnic cleaning taking place in West Bengal and bordering states
against Muslims which is a possible ruse for military conflict.
Even with such hostile actions Bangladesh should resist and persist
in developing an independent thought process that is in the best
interests of the nation.
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