NEW DELHI — Seated in the domed, red
sandstone government building unveiled by the British Raj less than two decades
before India threw off imperial rule, S. Jaishankar, the Indian foreign
minister, needs no reminder of how the tides of history sweep away antiquated
systems to usher in the new.
اضافة اعلان
Such, he believes, is today’s transformative
moment. A “world order which is still very, very deeply Western,” as he put it
in an interview, is being hurried out of existence by the impact of the war in
Ukraine, to be replaced by a world of “multialignment” where countries will
choose their own “particular policies and preferences and interests”.
A Hindu
ritual on the banks of the Ganges River in Varanasi, northern India, on
December 19, 2022.
Certainly, that is what India has done
since the war in Ukraine began February 24. It has rejected American and
European pressure at the United Nations to condemn the Russian invasion, turned
Moscow into its largest oil supplier, and dismissed the perceived hypocrisy of
the West. Far from apologetic, its tone has been unabashed and its
self-interest broadly naked.
The country is at a crossroads, poised between the vibrant plurality of its democracy since independence in 1947 and a turn toward illiberalism under Modi.
With its almost 1.4 billion inhabitants,
soon to overtake China as the world’s most populous country, India has a need
for cheap Russian oil to sustain its 7 percent annual growth and lift millions
out of poverty. That need is nonnegotiable. India gobbles up all the Russian
oil it requires, even some extra for export.
A bazaar
near the entrance to Kashi Vishwanath Temple and Gyanvapi Mosque in Varanasi,
northern India, on December 15, 2022.
Here comes Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s
India, pursuing its own interests with a new assertiveness, throwing off any
sense of inferiority and rejecting unalloyed alignment with the West. But which
India will strut the 21st-century global stage, and how will its influence be
felt?
The country is at a crossroads, poised
between the vibrant plurality of its democracy since independence in 1947 and a
turn toward illiberalism under Modi. His “Hindu Renaissance” has threatened
some of the core pillars of India’s democracy: equal treatment of all citizens,
the right to dissent, the independence of courts and the media.
Democracy and debate are still vigorous —
Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party lost a municipal election in
Delhi this month — and the prime minister’s popularity strong. For many, India
is just too vast and various ever to succumb to some unitary nationalist
diktat.
The postwar order had no place for India at
the top table. But now, at a moment when Russia’s military aggression under
President Vladimir Putin has provided a vivid illustration of how a world of
strongmen and imperial rivalry would look, India may have the power to tilt the
balance toward an order dominated by democratic pluralism or by repressive
leaders.
Sunset
on the beach in Chennai, India, where the economy is thriving, on December 17,
2022.
Which way Modi’s form of nationalism will
lean remains to be seen. It has given many Indians a new pride and bolstered
the country’s international stature, even as it has weakened the country’s
pluralist and secularist model.
There are no Muslims in Modi’s Cabinet.
Hindu mob attacks on Muslims have been met with silence by the prime minister.
“Hatred has penetrated into society at a
level that is absolutely terrifying,” acclaimed Indian novelist Arundhati Roy
said.
Hindu
faithfuls bathe in the Ganges River in Varanasi, northern India, on December
15, 2022.
That may be, but for now, Modi’s India
seems to brim with confidence.
The Ukraine war, compounding the effects of
the COVID-19 pandemic, has fueled the country’s ascent. Together they have
pushed corporations to make global supply chains less risky by diversifying
toward an open India and away from China’s surveillance state. They have
accentuated global economic turbulence from which India is relatively insulated
by its huge domestic market.
Those factors have contributed to buoyant
projections that India, now number five, will be the world’s third-largest
economy by 2030, behind only the US and China.
Communion and divisionModi, 72, who adopted Varanasi, Hinduism’s
holiest city, as his political constituency in 2014 when he embarked on his
campaign to lead India, saying he had been “called by the mother Ganges” — the
river of life — has cut a pinkish sandstone gash through it.
Workers
prepare wood for Hindu ritual cremation ceremonies on the banks of the Ganges
River in Varanasi, northern India, on December 19, 2022.
Known as “the corridor” and opened a year
ago, the project connects the Kashi Vishwanath Temple, dedicated to the Hindu
god Shiva, to the riverfront a quarter-mile away.
The broad and almost eerily spotless
pedestrian expanse, with its museum and other tourist facilities, links the
city’s most revered temple to the river where Hindus wash away their sins. It
is quintessential Modi.
Modi has chosen Varanasi as a core vehicle of his assertion of India as essentially a Hindu nation. Of course, the Indian leader did so in the interest of power consolidation, not conquest.
Cut through a labyrinth of more than 300
homes that were destroyed to make way for it, the passage intertwines the prime
minister’s political life with the deepest of Hindu traditions. At the same
time, it proclaims his readiness to fast-forward India through bold initiatives
that break with chaos and decay. Modi, a Hindu nationalist and tech enthusiast,
is a disrupter.
A
family taking part in a Hindu ritual in Varanasi, northern India, on December
15, 2022.
A self-made man from a humble background in
the western state of Gujarat — and from a low status in India’s caste system,
or social hierarchy — Modi has come to embody an aspirational India.
Vishwambhar Nath Mishra, a Hindu religious
leader in Varanasi and an engineering professor, said that the corridor had
been a “blunder” that had destroyed 142 old shrines, an example of the
bulldozing style Modi favors.
“We have always been a unique family in
Varanasi, Muslims and Christians and Hindus who sit down and work things out,
but Modi chooses to create tensions to get elected,” Mishra said. “If he is
trying to establish a Hindu nation, that is very dangerous.”
It is not easy to get into the complex, at
the top of Modi’s new corridor, where the 17th-century white-domed Gyanvapi
Mosque abuts the Kashi Vishwanath Temple. Intense security checks take a long
time to negotiate because this is an epicenter of the inflamed Hindu-Muslim
tension in India.
Traffic in the Old City of New Delhi, on
December 12, 2022.
Armed guards are everywhere. They stand
beside the mosque, which is encased behind a 6-m metal fence topped with coils
of razor wire.
A flurry of legal cases now centers on the
mosque. A court survey this year claimed to have uncovered an ancient lingam on
the premises of the mosque — so establishing, at least for hard-line Hindus,
that they should be allowed to pray there. Large Muslim prayer gatherings have
been banned.
In the ascendant Hindu narrative that Modi
has done nothing to discourage, India belongs in the first place to its Hindu
majority. The Muslim interlopers of the Mughal Empire and other periods of
conquest take second place. Mosque must yield to temple if it can be
demonstrated that a temple predated it.
If Putin has chosen to portray Ukraine as a
birthplace of the Russian world inseparable from the motherland and embraced
the Orthodox Church as a bastion of his power, Modi has chosen Varanasi as a
core vehicle of his assertion of India as essentially a Hindu nation. Of
course, the Indian leader did so in the interest of power consolidation, not
conquest.
“In India, despite being subjected to colonialism for two centuries, there’s no animus against the world, no anger. It is a very open society.”
Three decades ago, the razing by a Hindu
mob of a 16th-century mosque in the northern Indian city of Ayodhya, which
Hindus believe is the birthplace of the god Ram, led to the death of 2,000
people and propelled the rise of Modi’s party.
A temple is now being built there. Modi,
who presided over the groundbreaking in 2020, has called it “the modern symbol
of our traditions”.
Students at a playground in Chennai, India
on December 17, 2022.
Faced by such moves, Roy, the novelist,
voiced a common concern. “You know, the Varanasi sari, worn by Hindus, woven by
Muslims, was a symbol of everything that was so interwoven and is now being
ripped apart,” she said. “A threat of violence hangs over the city.”
A delicate balanceIndia believes that the interconnectedness
of today’s world outweighs the pull of fragmentation and makes a nonsense of
talk of a renewed Cold War. If a period of disorder seems inevitable as Western
power declines, it will most likely be tempered by economic interdependence,
the Indian argument goes.
With inequality worsening, food security
worsening, energy security worsening and climate change accelerating, more
countries are asking what answers the post-1945 Western-dominated order can
provide. India, it seems, believes it can be a broker, bridging East-West and
North-South divisions.
“I would argue that generally in the
history of India, India has had a much more peaceful, productive relationship
with the world than, for example, Europe has had,” Jaishankar said. “Europe has
been very expansionist, which is why we had the period of imperialism and
colonialism. But in India, despite being subjected to colonialism for two
centuries, there’s no animus against the world, no anger. It is a very open
society.”
It is also situated between two hostile
powers: Pakistan and China.
In December, there was another skirmish at
the 3,400-km disputed Chinese-Indian border. Nobody was killed, unlike in 2020,
when at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers died. But tensions remain
high. “The relationship is very fraught,” Jaishankar said.
Escalation at the border is possible at any
moment, but it appears unlikely that India can count on Russia, given Moscow’s
growing economic and military dependence on China. That makes India’s strategic
relationship with the West critical.
In light of the war in Ukraine, however,
each party is adjusting to the fact that the other will pick and choose its
principles.
India is in a delicate position. In the
face of American criticism, the country chose to take part this year in Russian
military exercises that included units from China. At the same time, India is
part of a four-nation coalition known as the Quad that includes the US, Japan,
and Australia and works for a “free and open Indo-Pacific”.
This is Indian multialignment at work. The
Ukraine war has only reinforced New Delhi’s commitment to this course.
Washington has worked hard over many years to make India Asia’s democratic
counterbalance to President Xi Jinping’s authoritarian China. But the world, as
seen from India, is too complex for such binary options.
If the Biden administration has been
unhappy with India’s business-as-usual approach to Putin since Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine, it has also been accepting of it; American realpolitik, as
China rises, demands that Modi not be alienated.
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