But
For Atal Behari Vajpayee, Kurdish Iraq Was Nearly Ours
Saeed Naqvi
Hard to believe, but Mosul, currently in
the news, would have been ours today had Atal Behari Vajpayee not played spoil
sport.
After their invasion of Iraq in April
2003, Americans realized fairly early that a full fledged occupation for an
unspecified period was not possible without allies taking responsibility to
administer large swathes of the ancient land.
Seldom has a US ambassador been more
effective than David Mulford was. It took very little persuasion for External
Affairs, Jaswant Singh, Defence Minister George Fernandez, and Army Chief N.C.
Vij to fall in line.
Ships were readied, battalions
shortlisted, Generals chosen for India’s first imperialist adventure since the
Cholas. We were going to rule a part of that country which alone of all the 52
Muslim states had stood by us at the UN, OIC and elsewhere on the Kashmir issue.
I suppose it must have been self
interest which caused us to turn turtle on Iraq as soon as the Americans were
in occupation of the country.
Our ambassador to Baghdad, B.B. Tyagi,
even risked his life. Iraqi resistance had identified him as a diplomat who was
supportive of the occupation. No wonder I was once ushered into his presence
while he sat in bed, his legs outstretched, eyes wide open as in a daze, his
hands on automatic weapons by both his sides. It was a frame for a possible Woody
Allen war film.
Just as the first US representative,
Paul Bremer, was convinced that the occupation would be a cakewalk, so was
South Block and, indeed, Tyagi.
Bremer, a devout Roman Catholic, had
turned up with a batch of Priests who smacked their lips at the prospect of
saving souls in a post Saddam Iraq. It turned out that Antique smugglers did
rather better, cleaning out the Baghdad museum on America’s watch.
South Block, like Bremer, had assumed that
once Saddam’s yoke was lifted from their necks, Iraqis would turn up in droves
to hug the Americans.
In anticipation of Iraq’s immediate
future in American hands, South Block parked Tyagi in a three star hotel in
Amman where he spent mornings, afternoons, evenings watching CNN and BBC for
the American progress in Iraq. The irony was that Lyse Ducet of the BBC was
herself in occupation of the terrace of Amman’s Intercontinental hotel watching
her Arab staff count their worry beads, waiting for the American flag to be
fluttering over all of Iraq.
Were this to happen, Tyagi would
helicopter into Baghdad’s Green Zone and offer his credentials to Bremer or his
Iraqi nominee.
Just imagine, New Delhi was all but
ready to open its embassy with the American occupiers of a country which had
given unstinted support to India always, particularly against Pakistani
machinations at the UN.
This being the state of affairs, who
could blame the US for being so confident of India’s enthusiastic willingness
to partner them and take charge of Kurdish Iraq. It had very nearly happened,
had Vajpayee not decided to show spine – just in the nick of time.
He kept his head while those around him
were losing theirs. On April 9, American marines brought down Saddam Hussain’s
statue and exactly the media which is lined up behind Hillary Clinton,
attributed the statue’s fall to popular rage.
Vajpayee kept his counsel. On April 18
he turned up in Srinagar. Remember, Armies of India and Pakistan were in an
eye-ball to eye-ball confrontation after the December 13, 2001 terrorist attack
on Indian Parliament.
The fall of Saddam’s statue had
registered differently with Vajpayee – this scale of western triumphalism was a
source of anxiety for him. An “awesome” power has arisen. In the new situation,
regional quarrels had to be composed, he said. Dramatically, he extended his
hand of Peace to Pakistan.
This was the beginning of the process
which led to India and Pakistan signing an agreement in Islamabad on January 4,
2004 that forbids the use of a country’s territory for cross border terrorism.
The word was not kept by Pakistan, but that is another story.
The “shining India” campaign mounted by
the BJP recoiled on it during the May 2004 elections. But for Indo-Pak
relations, it was an unfortunate turn. When Vajpayee became External Affairs
Minister in the 1977 Janata government, he had made up his mind on Pakistan:
“we cannot change our neighbours.” Among his first foreign visits was to
Pakistan in February 1978. The bus journey to Lahore in February 1999, and the
January 2004 visit which resulted in the agreement against cross border
terrorism, were audacious. But there were reverses.
He was able to cushion the reverses
because of his cross party stature nationally and his standing with the RSS.
But he persisted because he had grasped the triangle in which the country had
trapped itself since 1947 – Srinagar-New Delhi, India-Pakistan, Hindu-Muslim
are one complex of issues. Unless a holistic view is taken of this triangle to outline
suitable policy, eternal social strife would remain the nation’s lot.
He had the vision to pull India back
from the brink on Iraq. Just imagine what would have been our fate had ships
carrying Indian troops actually set sail.
The troop build up against Pakistan
after the Parliament attack was also a calculated move. The Sole super power
was in place to pull the protagonists back from the brink. It is just as well
that neither Russia, and China (nor the US) paid much credence to the “surgical
strikes”. In the absence of an overarching super power, real “surgical strikes”
may cause the situation to spiral out of control.
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sir is lekh ka hindi anuvad mil jaye to kripa hogi
ReplyDeleteGreat article,sir. Vajpayee indeed is relevant in these times
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