It'll be a strategic nightmare for India if Russia joins China-Pak group: Prof Ashok Swain
By Daanish Bin Nabi
Professor of Peace and
Conflict Research at the Department of Peace and Conflict Research, Uppsala
University, Sweden, Ashok Swain has
been a fierce critic of the present political dispensation in India. India’s
foreign policy, he says, has been reduced to ‘unwanted hugging’ of world
leaders and India seems to need Russia for only maintaining her arms and
ammunitions and to veto any resolution in the United Nations on Kashmir.
Here are excerpts from the
interview:
India has had close ties with both Russia and Ukraine and has been
importing industrial goods and defence equipment from both. Could India have
played a more pro-active role in defusing the crisis?
Yes, but the relations were
in the past based on principles, ideals, geostrategic vision and meeting of
minds between leaders. India’s ties with these two countries have been reduced
to being purely transactional in the last eight years. For all practical
purposes, India’s decision to sign the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of
Agreement (LEMOA) with the US in 2016 took away the option for India to remain
a non-aligned or even a neutral country when the world is fast becoming bipolar
again.
India has officially become
an ally of the US by boycotting China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and
becoming a member of the Quad, which China-Russia perceive as a military
alliance against them in Asia-Pacific. To put it bluntly, Russia has come
closer to China and Pakistan in response to India’s drift towards the US.
India’s dependence on Russia continues on two fronts: India needs arms and
ammunition from Russia and India has no one but Russia to trust to use its veto
whenever Kashmir comes up in the UN Security Council.
India has very little
leverage now on Russia while Russia holds all the cards. When the relationship
is so lopsided, expecting it to play an important role in defusing the Ukraine
crisis is just wishful thinking.
Leaders of Turkey and
Israel have played a critical role in bringing the war to an end. India has
also failed on that front as India has a leader who is entirely out of his
depth in foreign policy and global politics.
Did India have any leverage with Moscow or Kyiv to persuade them
to stop fighting and start talking?
Russian President Putin
clearly values the partnership with Chinese President Xi. Russia is also
looking to sell its arms to Pakistan and Iran as it sees the Indian market
shrinking. Moreover, China is becoming increasingly unhappy over Russian arms
sales to India and Vietnam.
In recent years, Ukraine
has never probably found any place for India’s diplomatic engagements. The
relationship is limited to importing sunflower oil from Ukraine and sending
some students to study medicine there. When everyone in the world knew that a
crisis in Ukraine was escalating, India issued a transfer order of its
ambassador in Kyiv in November 2021, and he was asked to join his new
assignment in January 2022. The same ambassador was asked to continue as the
war started. It seems neither Indian external affairs ministry has any
understanding of the conflict nor any interest in playing a mediator or
interlocutor.
Should India have at least appealed for an immediate cessation of
hostilities?
It was the least that was
expected from India. India’s foreign policy focus should be to get a ceasefire
as soon as possible. The longer the armed conflict continues, it will not only
create a huge humanitarian crisis but also has the potential of leading to a
much larger war. Economic and energy crises will be severe and global. There is
even fear of the use of nuclear weapons.
More than anything else,
India will be directly affected by the continuation of the war as it will make
Russia more dependent on China. India is facing the crisis of this century
because of China and Pakistan’s alliance on its North-Western front. If Russia
joins them, that will become a geopolitical nightmare for India. The birth of
AUKUS has reduced the Quad to a talking club, which is not going to come to
India’s rescue.
Do you think Moscow will help India settle its border disputes
with China?
Neither US nor Russia will
settle India’s border dispute with China. For the last two years, China has
been in occupation of large Indian territory and it shows that India’s alliance
with the US has not been of any help. With Russia becoming more dependent on
China, it is futile to expect Russia to help India get back its land from
China. Only a strong, developed and united India can stand up to China and get
the respect it deserves. Unfortunately, India’s economic growth has been
sluggish, the job crisis in the country is extremely serious and the country is
being divided on the basis of religion and caste.
A strategic expert recently said that the only option for India is
to either become a junior partner of the US or of China. Would you agree?
India is too big and proud
a country to be a junior partner of anyone in the 21st century. In the last
century, India had even refused to do so in its post-independence decades.
The problem is that India
has not just failed on the economic front in the last eight years but also
failed on the diplomatic front. No one knows what India’s foreign policy is
now. There is no vision and no aspiration. India needs to get back to its mantle
as a moral superpower. India needs to have a foreign policy that stands for
values and principles in global politics. That has to be matched at the
domestic front by having a vibrant democratic and secular society.
How do you see the conflict in Ukraine ending? Will it end with a
regime change in Kyiv?
Diplomacy is the only
option to bring an end to the conflict in Ukraine. There is a limit for the US
and NATO on how much they can engage in this war, and any direct involvement on
the battlefield can lead to a Third World War with the possible use of nuclear
weapons. On the other hand, though Russian military victory has not been as
swift as it was feared, there is little doubt that war in Ukraine will end up
soon as an urban insurgency It is difficult to imagine Putin will accept defeat
without getting a facesaving deal because of economic sanctions.
Whether that face-saver is
the regime change or a firm assurance on the autonomy of Ukraine’s eastern
region, acceptance of annexation of Crimea, or the firm assurance of Ukraine
not joining the NATO and EU will depend upon the state of the conflict when the
deal will be inked.
When will this war end, you think? Or is this the beginning of a
wider world war?
Russian military planners
seem to have underestimated the willingness and determination of Ukrainian
forces to fight back, which has surprised them. Also, unlike Crimea’s
annexation, this adventure of Putin lacked the element of surprise attack,
which also gave the Ukrainians and the West time to be better prepared. It is
also true that Russia has not used its firepower fully as it is still expecting
to force a deal without causing massive civilian casualties. However, that
approach is fast changing.
If the war and the
insurgency continue longer, a massive humanitarian crisis is waiting to happen.
The conflict in the East of Ukraine has already taken 14,000 lives since 2014.
But this time the number will be much higher. More than 2 million people have
already become refugees, and the fear is that number might go up to five
million or even more. This is very likely going to be a huge crisis for the EU
when the refugees start moving towards the West.
There is also strong
resentment against Russia in Europe, and it is becoming more robust and
profound with the prolongation of Russia’s military action. The hope is that
the various diplomatic channels that are being used will bring the war to an
end soon.
If the war escalates and spills into Europe, will India be drawn
into it?
If the war escalates and
other European countries join, then the war will be a wider world war. Not just
India, I don’t think any country in the world will escape from it.
Published
by National Herald on Published: 14 March 2022, 10:00 AM