Is India soft-selling its hard power?

The video of the book launch event in Mumbai hosted by Asia Society on Oct 9 instant featured a conversation involving former Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Vishnu Bhageat, former CINC, Western naval Command Vice Admiral Madanjit Singh and myself. It was videographed and uploaded today to the Asia Society website and is available at
http://asiasociety.org/india/india-soft-selling-its-hard-power.

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Carnegie event with Tellis, Markey, Curtis & Rossow

For those interested and residing in the Washington area and farther afield, the US launch event of my book — ‘Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet)’ is scheduled at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington DC for Thursday Nov 12, 1030-1230 hrs. Carnegie requires registration. The event notice, etc. at
http://carnegieendowment.org/2015/11/12/why-india-is-not-great-power-yet/ikva

Posted in Asian geopolitics, Great Power imperatives, society, South Asia | 2 Comments

ECFR podcast

For interested persons, following my talk on the topic ‘How should the West regard India in a multipolar world?’ and interaction with the audience in the ‘Black Coffee Morning’ session 0830hrs-0930hrs, Monday, Nov 9 at the European Council For Foreign Relations (at 16, John Smith Square, 7th Floor), there will be a conversation with Mark Leonard, Director, ECFR, which will be podcast and available at http://www.ecfr.eu/podcasts/world_30_mins.

Posted in Asian geopolitics, China, Europe, Geopolitics, Russia, United States, US. | Leave a comment

Decimating the Da’ish

The Islamic State (IS) or Da’ish may have made a big mistake by blowing up the Russian airliner over Sinai. That the debris was spread over a 20 square mile area suggests one of two things: a timed plastique explosive or bomb loaded on to the plane at Sharm el-Sheikh. Or, a Russian SA-2/3 surface to air missile secured by the IS from the haemorrhaging Iraqi army and Syrian army inventories that can knock out targets at 30,000 feet — the plane’s cruising altitude. This is not far fetched a take because the IS core comprises the disaffected sunnis from the Iraqi Army. French sources with inside information — the downed plane being an Airbus 321 (a slightly modified version of the more popular 320) believe it was an explosion that instantly tore the plane apart midair. The Russian retribution — and this is what the wretched terrorists in the IS have most to fear, will not be long incoming and it will likely be horrible. Moscow may lead by deploying the most ruthlessly efficient units of the Russian Spetznaz (Special Forces)– the battalions with the Chechen Muslim fighters to take out the Da’ish leadership, followed by the use, perhaps, for the first time in mil operations, of FAEs (fuel air explosives), which are as destructive as kiloton nuclear devices. Putin will want very conspicuous revenge, and the IS are on point of suffering devastation.

There was, on a much smaller scale, a hit on the IS nearer home with the killing in southern Punjab by the police of Malik Ishaq — chief of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, who as the Express-Tribune reports (http://tribune.com.pk/story/983479/dangerous-nexus-malik-ishaq-was-set-to-join-is-before-his-death-says-official/ ) was about to join the Da’ish as its leader in this part of the world. The IS has acquired a small following in eastern Afghanistan and has been desperately trying to consolidate its presence by putting down deep roots in the region. If the Indian government was not so bent on demonizing Pakistan, this would have been the perfect opportunity to make common cause with Islamabad to take out the scourge of the deranged Da’ish from South Asia for good.

Posted in Afghanistan, Asian geopolitics, Culture, Geopolitics, Great Power imperatives, India's Pakistan Policy, India's strategic thinking and policy, indian policy -- Israel, Iran and West Asia, Internal Security, Iran and West Asia, Missiles, Pakistan, Pakistan military, Russia, russian military, society, South Asia, South East Asia, Special Forces, Terrorism, Weapons, West Asia | 2 Comments

“Strike one” against China at the Hague

Several developments are converging for an interesting outcome. After deliberating on the matter since July, the Permanent Court of Arbitration operating under the UN auspices at the Hague accepted Manila’s plea and ruled that it has jurisdiction to decide the legality of China’s expansive and historically weak and unwarranted “nine dash-line” claims in the West Philippine Sea (aka, South China Sea) and, more importantly, to adjudicate on China’s sea territory dispute with the Philippines. The Court will now proceed to actually hear the case — a huge setback for Beijing. The Philippine arguments are based on the legality of the 1982 Convention on the UN Convention on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS), and of its provisions affording states fronting on the seas the singular and exclusive rights to manage, explore and exploit the maritime resources within the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) in the waters extending to 200 nautical miles from land, which are at variance with China’s so-called “indisputable” historical claims. Manila, cleverly, insisted it is not asking for the delimitation or delineation of the sea-territories under dispute; rather that it merely wants recognition of its UNCLOS-derived rights to the EEZ. This approach eased the pressure on the Arbitrators, who were no doubt negatively impacted by Beijing’s decision to not even participate in the judicial proceedings and, hence, questioning its bonafides. The Chinese contention (in its 147-page deposition) was that the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of the Parties in the South China Sea (or DOC) — a non-binding, non-aggression pact Beijing signed with the ASEAN, constitutes “an agreement to resolve disputes…exclusively through negotiation.” The Court struck this interpretation down, saying the DOC is only “a political agreement that was not intended to be legally binding and was therefore not relevant to the provisions” in UNCLOS that approves dispute resolution “through any means agreed between the Parties.” Beijing was quick to rubbish this ruling. Except, a verdict against China in this case would demolish the legal basis for its claims. The rub, however, is any ruling of the Arbitration Court is not enforceable, but it will strengthen the the legal and moral case of the Philippines and the other ASEAN states also in dispute, allowing them to apply political and diplomatic pressure on China and, more significantly, to legitimate external assistance they may seek to protect their rights.

The external assistance could be direct military help and, indirect, with major country navies asserting the freedom of peaceful navigation by frequently sailing warships, followed by merchantmen, through these contested sea ignoring the Chinese 12-mile zone restrictions off the several shoals in this area that China has cemented into artificial islands by dumping masses of sand and land-fill. Not coincidentally, the first challenge to China’s notion of maritime sovereignty was conducted by the American missile destroyer USS Lassen sailing into the area around the time Hague was pronouncing its preliminary verdict. This was in the face of the Chinese naval chief Admiral Wu Shengli’s warnings of risk of conflict. But the US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter had already indicated that America will “fly, sail, and operate whenever international law allows, as we do around the world, and the South China Sea is not and will not be an exception.” As if to reinforce the US position, he will very soon be swinging by Kuala Lumpur, there to liaise with the ASEAN members and, perhaps, to firm up a cooperative strategy based on the Hague case. The important thing to note is that Beijing did nothing against Lassen, and will be hard pushed to react harshly against ships from other countries either, to prevent the ganging up of all the littoral and far-off navies, thereby sinking what slight possibility there still is for Beijing to prosecute its longstanding strategy of refusing to deal with ASEAN but to cut separate deals with the regional states on a bilateral basis in order to get better terms.

Delhi should learn how to deal with China, to take note of small and weak Asian countries on China’s periphery standing up to Beijing even as India pussyfoots around issues, fearful of adverse Chinese reaction.

Posted in Asian geopolitics, China, China military, Great Power imperatives, India's China Policy, India's strategic thinking and policy, South Asia, South East Asia, Strategic Relations with South East Asia & Far East, UN, United States, US., Western militaries | 5 Comments

ECFR ‘Black Coffee Morning’ event in London

For readers of this blog residing in the UK, and especially the London metropolitan area, you may be interested in the following event to be hosted by the European Council on Foreign Relations, UK Chapter, Nov 9. The invite is pasted below:
———–
European Council for Foreign Relations
Black Coffee Mornings

‘How should the West regard India in a multipolar world?’

With Bharat Karnad, Professor in National Security Studies, Centre for Policy Research (New Delhi)
Chaired by Anthony Dworkin, Senior Policy Fellow, ECFR
Monday 9 November, 08.30-09.30 (registration from 08.15)
Venue: New ECFR office, Kings Buildings, 16 Smith Square, London SW1P 3JJ (map)

RSVP: london@ecfr.eu

The European Council on Foreign Relations is delighted to invite you to an on the record, invitation-only discussion with one of India’s most renowned security experts, on the occasion of Prime Minister Modi’s visit to the UK.
Since economic liberalisation of the early 1990s, India has been feted as an emerging great power. How should the West, and in particular the UK, work with India on the world stage? Does India deserve to be looked upon as a world leader?
Bharat Karnad is Professor in National Security Studies at the Centre for Policy Research (CPR). He is the author of Why India is not a great power (yet) (October 2015).

Anthony Dworkin is a Senior Policy Fellow at ECFR. He is currently serving as interim research director for ECFR.

We very much hope you can join us. Places are limited, and will be allocated on a first come, first served basis. We might allocate a limited number of seats for each organisation when demand for a specific event is high. Please confirm your participation as soon as possible by email to london@ecfr.eu. For more information about the work of the European Council on Foreign Relations please visit http://www.ecfr.eu or follow us on Twitter @ecfr.

Mark Leonard
Director
European Council on Foreign Relations
twitter: @markhleonard
——–

Posted in Asian geopolitics, Europe, Geopolitics, Great Power imperatives, Indian democracy, Indian ecobomic situation, Strategic Relations with the US & West, Western militaries | Leave a comment

London book event

My new book — Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet), is to be launched by the Royal United Service Institution, London, on Nov 9, at 6 PM; venue is 61, Whitehall, London SW1A 2ET. Blog followers and others interested in South Asia/Asian security affairs in the London metropolitan area desirous of attending it may please complete the formalities by registering at
https://www.rusi.org/events/ref:E5624D33141755#.VjV1G0196Uk

The event will involve a panel discussion on the theme of the book involving the Head of Security Studies at RUSI, Rafaello Pantucci, RUSI Research Fellow Shashank Joshi, and the author.

Hope to make your acquaintance at the event.

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UNSC membership — wrong emphasis at I-A summit

Delhi, predictably (in that that’s how much MEA/GOI is not clued into trends into mainstream African thinking), is fluffing it even as the grand show Modi is hosting for African countries gets underway. Modi and, only hours before the inaugural session, external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj’s emphasis on getting the African bloc to strongly back India’s candidature for a UN Security Council permanent seat by coupling it with the placement of an African nation in the same forum, couldn’t be wronger.

African states, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, are in the gimme mode and are looking for Indian investment in industrial and, its power areas — education and software sectors, and offering their natural resources as inducement and incentive, also as a means of setting up India as a counterweight to China in the extractive industrial sphere. Most of these states don’t give a fig about the UN — nothing but a useless talkshop. They’ll be disinclined and distinctively chary about getting in on this Indian campaign full bore because it will only exacerbate the differences and the divisiveness inherent in choosing between South Africa, Nigeria, and Egypt to represent the continent in the UNSC. They’d rather not get into it, if they can help it. So, for New Delhi to push for a consensus backing for India and an Africa seat makes little sense because even if there’s wide support for India among the African nations, there’s no agreement whatsoever about the African candidate. Here the competition divides up between the states constituting the Muslem North, and the black states south of the Sahara, and then between whom to back — Pretoria or Lagos?

It would have been more sensible for Modi govt to not have made much of this issue, concentrating instead on the mining concessions India can utilize and the related infrastructure projects it can finance, and particularly stress security linkages with offers of military training, exports of Indian made armaments, and establishing the Indian military presence in embryo on the East African littoral.

Then again, there’s no point in expecting anything strategically farsighted from the MEA-directed Indian foreign policy.

Posted in Africa, arms exports, Asian geopolitics, China, Culture, Defence Industry, India's strategic thinking and policy, Indian ecobomic situation, Indian Navy, Indian Ocean, UN, Weapons | 2 Comments

Black Africa — not on MEA’s “radar”

On the eve of the India-Africa Forum Summit involving 54 states from that continent lying across the Ïndian lake, some home truths need to be acknowledged. While our foreign policy rhetoric and public posture has been pro-Third World, in the essential interests and thrust of Indian foreign policy New Delhi has been anything but attentive. African states have been the worst sufferers from Nehru’s time, primarily because relations with black states segue into the traditional subcontinental varna prejudices — fair & lovely, dark & ugly, etc, manifested also in the routine discrimination faced by African students in Indian colleges and universities. In the Indian Foreign Service, not surprisingly then, its members kill each other and scruple to nothing to wrangle a posting to even minor West European outposts, what to talk of prize billets in Washington, NY, San Francisco, and London, an African posting is seen as career death!

From the beginning, the MEA’s treatment of black African states has been condescending and patronizing– the very attitude, ironically, Delhi has always been over-sensitive about when dealing with white, Western countries! Indeed, so disinterested has the Foreign Office been in sub-Saharan Africa that not long ago when Mozambique and Tanzania offered India the richest iron ore vein in East Africa to mine on condition that it also build a 700 km railway line from site to the coast — which would have been needed anyway to carry the mined ore to Indian ships — the Indian ambassador who had worked these govts and secured the concession was told gruffly by the MEA Desk that “[Black] Africa is not on our radar”!

This and other opportunities that MEA/GOI has squandered over the years are detailed and analyzed in my new book — ‘Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet)’. A particularly egregious example in the book of how Delhi turned down a security role on the East African littoral concerns Mozambique. Being satisfied with the perimeter security provided the African Union Summit by the Indian Navy, Maputo was keen that India help it found and equip its navy, including officering it at the highest echelon, and has permitted an Indian radar station to be set up on its northern coast as part of the surveillance grid IN oversees in the Southwestern Indian Ocean. The Indian Navy was jumping at this chance to gain enormous goodwill, have a demonstration effect elsewhere in the littoral, and to project power. But, yea, MEA negatived it!!! And we are now talking about contesting this Africa space with China where strategic opportunities have been witlessly ignored and neglected? PM Modi expects this same Foreign Office, manned by diplomats who look down on black African states to suddenly turn around, and realize his grand plans? Well, Good Luck, 7, Race Course Road!

Posted in Africa, arms exports, Asian geopolitics, China, domestic politics, Europe, Geopolitics, Great Power imperatives, India's China Policy, Indian ecobomic situation, Indian Navy, Indian Ocean, Indian Politics, society, South Asia, United States, US. | 3 Comments

Invite for Mumbai launch of book

For those blog readers residing in and around Mumbai, pasted below is the invite to the Mumbai event to launch my book — ‘Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet)’hosted by the Asia Society, India chapter, at the Nehru Centre, Worli at 6 PM. The original invite accessible at http://www.asiasociety.org/india. Unfortunately, the technical capability for audio/video recording is unavailable for this event.
———-
Asia Society India

Is India Soft Selling its Hard Power?


Pictured Above: Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet)

Economic growth, demographics and soft power are all cited to substantiate India’s potential “great power” status. One of the factors that receives relatively little attention, however, is India’s military might. As nations manoeuvre the waters of geostrategic decisions, extending their influence through hard power and realpolitik, is India being left behind? Could greater vision and strategy in India’s military capabilities reinforce national objectives as it moves toward attaining the status of a “great power”? Join us as Bharat Karnad, Research Professor, Centre for Policy Research and Vice Admiral Madanjit Singh, Former Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Western Naval Command explore this crucial aspect of foreign policy in a conversation centered on ‘Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet)’.

Bharat Karnad is Professor of National Security Studies, Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi and author of ‘Why India is Not a Great Power (Yet)’. One of the foremost national security strategists of India, he has been a member of the National Security Advisory Board, the Nuclear Doctrine-drafting Group, and Adviser, Defence Expenditure (10th) Finance Commission, India.

Vice Admiral Madanjit Singh was commissioned into the Indian Navy in January 1966, Vice Admiral Singh PVSM, AVSM, specialised in gunnery and missiles. Before taking charge as Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief Western Naval Command, he was FOC-in-C, Southern Command. Among his various afloat and ashore appointments have been the command of five ships including the frigate INS Ganga and the aircraft carrier INS Viraat.

Speakers:

Bharat Karnad,
Research Professor,
Centre for Policy Research

Vice Admiral
Madanjit Singh,
Former Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief,
Western Naval Command

Date: Wednesday,
28 October 2015

Time: 6:30 pm
Registration & Refreshments: 6:00 pm

Venue:
Hall of Harmony,
Nehru Centre,
Dr. Annie Besant Road,
Worli, Mumbai 400018.

Admission: Free

RSVP Required:
asiasocietyindiacentre
@asiasociety.org

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