Nuclear | Swadeshi |
Women
Nationalism Is
Cornerstone of BJP's Foreign Policy
By Dr. Saradindu Mukherji
Nationalism and
national interest have been the characteristic features of the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). But then the BJP has looked upon
the entire world as one family.
The espousal of
bona fide national interest, especially its commitment to
cultural nationalism, has often colored other views of the BJP
as a party believing in jingoism. But nationalism has a
different connotation in the Indian context. It is certainly far
removed from what Monroe, Palmerstone, Bismarck and Tanaka did
for their countries.
As for the BJP's
supreme concern for territorial integrity, it stands committed
to the national pledge to make China vacate the territories it
occupied during the 1962 war. At the time of the Chinese
invasion, Indian Communists supported the Chinese, and Nehru
could not do much.
Similarly, unlike
all others, the Bharatiya Jan Sangh. which transformed into the
BJP in 1977, had opposed the transfer of Berubari to East
Pakistan, and more recently the transfer of Tin Bigha to
Bangladesh. When a portion of Kachch was handed to Pakistan in
1965, Deendayal Upadhaya led a demonstration against Pakistan
and A. Vajpayee taunted the government for practicing what he
called international "bhoodan."
Sticking to that
line, the BJS criticized the government on returning Haji Pir to
Pakistan at Tashkhent. Again treading a lonely turf, the BJS
accused Indira Gandhi of a "sellout"on the Simla accord with
Pakistan on Kashmir, arguing that India could have had the Line
of Control converted into an international boundary.
That takes us to
one of the biggest challenges India's foreign policymakers face
-- how to resolve the Kashmir problem. The BJP has maintained
from the beginning that the root of the problem lies with the
Nehru-Mountbatten original sin of granting article 370 and then
internationalizing the issue by placing it before the United
Nations.
Once in a while,
India's rulers, as Prime Minister Rao did some time ago, may
suddenly call for an end to Pakistan's illegal occupation of
part of Kashmir. But that has turned out to be empty rhetoric in
the absence of a consistent and coherent policy for Jammu and
Kashmir.
Against that, the
BJP has presented the policymakers with a comprehensive plan.
Since the Jan Sangh days, it has been seeking Jammu and
Kashmir's total integration with India. Its founder, Syama
Prasad Mookherji, realizing the fatal flaw in the government's
approach, led a sustained mass movement, then paid the ultimate
price when he died in Sheikh Abdullah's jail.
While there is
some haziness about the BJP's official line on the applicability
of "hot pursuit" regarding the terrorist bases in Pakistan,
several of the party's top leaders have publicly urged the
international community to brand Pakistan a terrorist state and
take punitive measures against it.
But any such
projection of Pakistan would depend on the government's ability
to publicize the nature, extent and ideology behind the ethnic
cleansing of the entire Hindu-Sikh population from the Kashmir
Valley, and the transformation of citizens into refugees.
In the absence of
any such drive on the part of South Block, especially in its
failure to make the best possible use of various international
forums such as the sessions of the U.N. Human Rights Commission
at Geneva, the Indian stand is weakened. The exigencies of
domestic politics dictate against such a suicidal policy.
Moreover, the
government's effort to secure most-favored-nation status from
Pakistan in trade and the fascination of a substantial section
of India's population for increasing cultural-sporting ties with
Pakistan neutralize the BJP effort to popularize and pursue a
strong line against the Pakistan-sponsored jehad.
The BJP has
identified Islamic fundamentalism as the greatest threat to the
world, the antithesis of democracy. But what remains unclear is
whether the party accepts the thesis of Harvard's Prof. Samuel
Huntington which holds that ethnicity will replace ideology as a
source of international conflicts in the post-communist world.
India has only
lately established diplomatic relations with Israel, yet the BJS/BJP
had long demanded such a step. All the other parties had opposed
it, keeping in mind the domestic vote and subservience to the
Islamic "ummah."
Without being
anti-Arab, it is possible to be just toward Israel. After all,
Israel has never done anything against India.
The BJP has always
stood for close, friendly relations with neighboring countries
and has pleaded the case of Hindus, Sikhs, Christians and
Buddhists in Pakistan and Bangladesh. The founding of the BJS in
1950 by S.P. Mookerji was largely caused by the merciless
persecution of Hindus in East Pakistan and the inept handling of
their case by the Indian government.
The BJP has made
the vital distinction between refugees who are victims of
religious persecution and are coming to India for shelter,
safety and security, and illegal Muslim infiltrators.
Vajpayee, as
Minister for External Affairs in 1977-79, liberalized
visa-passport regulations for Pakistani Muslims visiting India,
thus helping to increase people-to-people contact.
This unilateral
concession was supposed to lead to the establishment of friendly
relations with Pakistan. But whether the hapless minorities of
Pakistan, Bangladesh benefited in any way, or their sense of
security or dignity increased, remains doubtful.
However, the BJP
has opposed the forced repatriation of Chakma Buddhists to
Bangladesh. About the Sri Lankan Tamils, it has pleaded for a
political settlement, not independence. It has persistently
opposed foreign intervention in the island.
Also, it wants to
establish a new international economic order that would not go
against the material interests of the developing nations. While
pleading for a North-South dialogue, it also wants South-South
cooperation.
The party's "swadeshi,"
or economic self-reliance, is also of great significance.
Opposed to the unrestricted entry of multinationals, it does not
encourage swadeshi Luddites, as the renegotiated deal for the
Enron power project amply proves.
On the nuclear
bomb issue, the party's stand has been consistent and clear. It
has always maintained that India should have the bomb.
In the centenary
anniversary year of Netaji Subhash Bose, it is relevant to
recall that as India's "first Foreign Minister" he displayed an
ideal blend of national interest, ideology and pragmatism.
Somehow, only the BJP appears to have imbibed his main
principles.
It is the image of
the BJP as a party rooted in the traditions of Bharat, its
principled stand on national and international affairs and a
firm refusal to compromise with any humiliation to the nation
that has made it so popular with large sections of nonresident
Indians.
In the absence of
any expansionist and chauvinistic streak in its foreign policy,
it would be a travesty of truth to characterize it as a
fundamentalist Hindu party.