The Role Of The Cold War In Indira Gandhi’s
Emergency
Saeed Naqvi
Indira Gandhi
declared the emergency in 1975, plonk in the middle of the most intense phase
of the cold war. Détente was going so badly for the Americans that stand up
comedians in Washington were comparing it to a wife swapping party “from where
you return alone.”
After the
Vietnam debacle, Washington was going to exert every muscle not to allow Moscow
to build upon the strategic asset it had created for itself in New Delhi during
the 1971 Bangladesh war.
In fact, the
Congress split of 1969 was itself an advantage for Moscow. Mrs. Gandhi had
discarded the conservative, pro capital big wigs, more comfortable with Congress
stalwarts like Morarji Desai whom she had defeated in the Parliamentary party
contest to become Prime Minister in 1966.
Not only was a
former card carrying communist (from Eton and Oxford too), Mohan Kumaramangalam
part author of the split, he had worked out an arrangement with the General
Secretary of the CPI, S.A. Dange described as a policy of “Unite and Struggle”.
We shall, said Dange, unite with the Congress’s progressive policies but
“struggle” against its “anti people” deviations.
This was a
pronounced leftward lurch and it was going to be resisted by a coalition of the
Right, both internal and external. Indeed, as early as 1967, within a year of
her coming to power, Mrs. Gandhi was given notice: she lost elections in eight
states to parties of the opposition. This groundswell would obviously suit the
purposes of the Congress old guard discarded by Mrs. Gandhi.
The most
succinct observation on Mrs. Gandhi’s ideological leanings came from the
correspondent of the Times London, Peter Hazelhurst: “She is a little to the
Left of self interest.”
Her
ideological inconsistency becomes apparent if one reverts to her earliest days
in 1959 as President of the Congress. She dismissed the world’s first communist
government which had come to power through the ballot box in Kerala. That she
took American help to unsettle Kerala to justify the state government’s
dismissal was revealed by US ambassador, Ellsworth Bunker in an oral interview
kept in the Columbia University archives. Whatever doubts there might have been
about the Bunker revelations, were cleared later by Ambassador Daniel Patrick
Moynihan in his memoirs.
During her
Prime Ministership in 1976, the Congress party raised a storm against the US
having installed a nuclear device on Nanda Devi peak to spy on China. The
controversy had many twists. A joint CIA and Intelligence Bureau effort to
install the device in 1965 (Lal Bahadur Shastri was Prime Minister then) had
failed because of bad weather. Worse, two plutonium laden capsules had been
lost. According to the Intelligence estimates the plutonium was enough for half
a Hiroshima bomb.
In the course
of an interview, Chester Bowles, US ambassador during Indira Gandhi’s first
innings, took my breath away. He couldn’t understand Congress protest. “After
all Indira had asked me to complete in 1966 the project which had been aborted
in 1965.”
Well, this is
how the Congress’s attitude towards the super powers varied from time to time.
But for the West the spectacle of Mrs. Gandhi and Dange in a warm embrace was
alarming because of the context. The West had taken a series of knocks –
Vietnam, Angola, Mozambique, Ethiopia, Nicaragua were all communist.
Additionally Communist leaders Enrico Berlinguer, Georges Marchais, Santiago
Carrillo in Italy, France and Spain respectively were a headache for the West. Given
this state of play, India was too priceless a trophy to be easily lost to Moscow’s
sphere of influence.
The obstacle
in the way of a counteroffensive was Mrs. Gandhi’s personality. She had evolved
into a charismatic and, therefore, invincible leader. Proprietor of the Indian
Express, Ramnath Goenka and Nanaji Deshmukh, fell into deep thought.
The Indian
mind reveres renunciation. It occurred to the head hunters that once a top ranking
Socialist leader, Jayaprakash Narayan had renounced political power. He was
keeping himself busy with Gandhiji’s ashrams and such unlikely causes as
Acharya Vinoba Bhave’s Bhoodan or Land Gift movement. JP agreed to lead the
movement provided it remained peaceful.
The youth were
in agitation across the globe against the excesses of the Vietnam War – Grosvenor
Square, London, barricades in Paris, police shooting down of students at the
Kent state university in Ohio, US. Soon thereafter the Navnirman Andolan, youth
agitation in Gujarat erupted on a seemingly flimsy issue of hostel fees. After
visiting Gujarat, JP was prevailed upon to launch a similar movement against
corruption and bad governance in Bihar. It was a tepid agenda livened up only by
the media dedicated to the task of keeping up the pressure on New Delhi, boosting
notions of a “total revolution” one day, asking police and the bureaucracy not
to obey “bad” orders another, and so on. The immediate target of the “movement”
was a hapless Chief Minister, Abdul Ghafoor, quite bewildered by his own
eminence. Why was he in the eye of a storm? He had sunken cheeks and a drooping
frame, draped in a much worn Sherwani. By way of hospitality for visiting scribes,
he would fetch a bottle of old smuggler Scotch whisky from his wardrobe full of
smudged clothes which were clearly waiting for laundry. He was a simple man,
not a plausible enough crook to invite a national movement for his ouster.
JP, who had
invited me to stay in his house in Patna’s Kadam Kuan, listened to my stories even
about the CM with a kindly smile. He was a trusting man and totally non
judgemental about the wide range of political interests who had clambered onto
his movement.
The movement
was carried mostly by RSS cadres, with a sprinkling of socialists, Gandhians
and Congress (O), mostly those who had been shown the door by Mrs. Gandhi in
1969. This exactly was the rough outline of the group which morphed into a
coalition in the course of the movement. The coalition came to power in 1977 as
the Janata Party.
Supposing the
Allahabad High Court had not disqualified Mrs. Gandhi, how would events have
shaped? If Sanjay Gandhi, Siddhartha Shankar Ray, Muhammad Yunus and others had
not forced her hand on the Emergency, how would the Mrs. Gandhi-JP standoff have
concluded?
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