India’s Middle East policy is due for an overhaul
By Eli Bernstein*
It is no secret India is about to turn a corner and enter the world stage. Modi is well positioned to steer India from a developing nation to a nation developed. However, this rise should not be limited only to economic development. India, the world’s largest democracy and soon to be the world’s most populous nation is right to insist its voice should be heard on global affairs. This greater role in the international arena should include permanent membership of the UN Security Council and playing a key role in keeping world peace and the fight against international terrorism.
It is no secret India is about to turn a corner and enter the world stage. Modi is well positioned to steer India from a developing nation to a nation developed. However, this rise should not be limited only to economic development. India, the world’s largest democracy and soon to be the world’s most populous nation is right to insist its voice should be heard on global affairs. This greater role in the international arena should include permanent membership of the UN Security Council and playing a key role in keeping world peace and the fight against international terrorism.
To do this,
India must change its foreign policy on a number of fronts.
First, India
must recognize that affairs in today’s world are increasingly global. India is
not an island. India can — and should — become a diplomatic powerhouse as it
grows in economic significance. India has a role to play in forming
international policy, in the fight against terrorism, and in keeping world
peace, order and and good government.
I do not mean to
belittle India’s international contribution to date. India played a leading
role in the non-aligned movement, in the BRICS block, and in many other
international forums. It is the second largest contributor of peacekeeping
troops, having contributed 100,000 troops over the past 50 years — but all that
said and done, India’s role on the world stage cannot be said to have been that
of a leading actor. It was a supporting actor at best.
India now
deserves the spotlight. It has successfully conducted the largest democratic
election the world has ever seen, and it did so, without a single ‘hanging
chad’. India can proudly stand shoulder to shoulder with China and the US, as
one of the world’s captains. India must insist on reform of UN Security Council
(and reform of the NPT) so as to ensure it has all the rights and privileges
China and the US enjoy. This is a grand moment for India, a juncture in history
which it should not miss
Second, India
must farewell old alliances, and in particular its role in non-aligned
movement, if it plans to stand shoulder to shoulder with the world’s greatest
powers.
At the risk of
sounding like the boy in the Emperor’s New Clothes, I will say this plainly,
the non-aligned movement has long outlived its usefulness. I say this with no
disrespect to India’s leadership in the movement and pay no insult to Nehru’s
vision, but truth be told, the non-aligned movement was a product of the cold
war which should have expired at its culmination.
India does
itself no favours in being part of this club whose membership include/d the
likes of Zimbabwe’s Mugabe, Castro’s Cuba, Chavez’s Venezuela, Khameni’s Iran,
Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, Jong-Il’s North Korea, and Europe’s last dictatorship.
India of today must pick its friends more carefully.
While India
ought not forget its roots, it must look in the mirror and see has grown beyond
that. It has graduated that phase in its development and can now play in a
higher league. Every graduation comes with the pain of saying goodbye to old
friends. India under Modi’s stewardship, must choose pragmatism over
sentimentality; must look forward, and not back. This means diminishing India’s
role in the non-aligned movement. As the Hebrew saying goes: ‘rather be the
tail of a lion than the head of a fox’.
Third, an
opportunity now exists in the Middle East for India to demonstrate leadership
in global affairs, and earn its stripes for a permanent Security Council seat.
America’s influence in the Middle East is waning with Kerry’s disastrous
ceasefire attempt being the last in a series of bungles that left America’s
credibility in the Middle East in tatters. Kerry’s flirtation with Qatar and
Turkey (which killed any prospect of the Egyptian ceasefire succeeding — back
when the death toll was only 70). This is the latest in a series following the
USA’s lackluster performance Iraq, its weak commitment in Afghanistan, its
empty words of ‘red lines’ in Syria, its circular diplomacy with Iran, and its
betrayal of long term allies in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Israel — all coupled
with an incoherent Middle East policy defined by misunderstanding and arrogance.
For the rest of Obama’s term in office, he can do nothing of meaning in the
Middle East without powerful allies.
These allies are
not the UN, the EU and Russia. The Quartet has outlived its purpose and should
be retired. The UN has never been useful in doing anything more than issuing
words. It has not acted in neutraility and as such can play no productive role
going forward. The Europeans have their own house to keep in order — with the
rise of Islamic fundamentalism one one side and the revival of fascism on the
other — and is better spending its time on domestic issues. Naturally, it can
always contribute to peace by donate to a relief fund when called upon. Russia
is simply in no position to be at a table discussing war and peace.
Enter China and
India.
China has been
trying to play a more active role in the Middle East. It has sought entry into
the quartet, has sent a high level Special Envoy to the region and tried to
host a meeting between Israeli PM Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Abbas in
Beijing. India too should enter the foray, and along with China and the US back
a regionally-led solution.
The recent US
faux pas saw an unusual alliance formed by Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Israel, and the
Palestinian Authority (Recent developments against ISIS will only further
strengthen that alliance). A peace process led by this group, on the basis of
the Saudi plan, would have a far greater chance of success than any US led
initiative. Replacing the defunct quartet, the role of India, China and the US
could be to facilitate such an agreement, to raise funds for a peace dividend,
and to commit international peacekeeping troops.
But before India
can do so, it must put a stop to its knee-jerk anti-Israel vote in UN forums.
It treats a potential ally as foe and serves as a restrictive precedent for
India’s own response options against terror groups. India would be well advised
to follow the European model of abstention rather than vote against Israel
because of old habits of the Indian foreign office. In the long term, India
could play a far more productive role in resolving the conflict, if it can
first demonstrate a greater degree neutrality.
Fourthly, as
India has learned through painful lessons, terrorism by non-state actors poses
a greater risk to India’s security that conflict with its neighbors. In this
way, India is at least as vulnerable as the West. India, home to the world’s
third largest Islamic population has an interest in promoting a peaceful
interpretation of Islam, that does not fan the flames of violence and hatred. A
global problem like terrorism can only be addressed through a coordinated
global approach, be it in the battlefield of ideas, in the vaults of banks or
in combat. India would do well not to stand on the sidelines as these
discussions take place.
Finally, India
must choose its partners wisely and ensure that it has allied itself on the
right side of history. India must not be in a position where its resource
dependence affects its Middle East foreign policy. This may require, for
instance, the need to diversify its gas suppliers.
The bottom line
is this. While Modi campaigned on a domestic platform, he cannot afford to
leave the policy making at the foreign office unchecked, as India’s economic,
strategic and diplomatic futures are intertwined. It is high time for India to
step up and punch its weight in global affairs. To do so, it must first
withdraw its role from the non-aligned movement and seek to stand side by side
with China and the US in a tri-polar world. India can earn its diplomatic stripes
by playing an active role in Middle East peacemaking alongside the fight on
terror, but first, its must show its neutrality — through abstentions in
anti-Israel resolutions at the UN and by choosing the right set of partners in
the Middle East.
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*Eli Bernstein
is former president of the Australia-India Business Council in WA and blogs on
middle east policy for The Times of Israel. He writes this article in his
personal capacity.
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