We did it again last Thursday- for the seventh time India abstained on a UN vote that asked Russia to cease hostilities and vacate its invasion of Ukraine. It was, of course, not unexpected, because under Mr. Jaishankar fence sitting has become an essential ingredient of our foreign policy, thinly disguised as “national interest.” We are doing the same thing on China, Myanmar and Afghanistan but it is our position on Ukraine which makes me sick to my stomach.
Cutting through all that NATO and “sphere of influence” and “India’s strategic interest” jargon, even Mr. Jaishankar will admit that Russia is the aggressor in Ukraine: it was Russia which sent in its troops and tanks into Ukraine on the 24th February 2022, not the other way round. Ukraine responded militarily. So far, so good: two armies fighting each other, a complex historical background, absolutely no reason for India to take sides till this point, let NATO-Russia-Ukraine sort out a problem of their own making.
But then Russia changed the nature of the war: on the military backfoot, it started targeting towns, civilian infrastructure like hospitals, apartments, power stations, even schools, and continues to do so even today. This is in complete violation of Geneva conventions and international laws and conventions. It is no longer just fighting the Ukrainian army, it is systematically destroying a country, decimating its population and obliterating it from the map. It can do so with impunity because Ukraine does not have the military capability and hardware to strike within Russia, and its civilians are sitting ducks in a firing range.
The price which Ukraine is paying is humungous; according to the UNHCR at least 8000 Ukrainian civilians have died so far, but it concedes that this is a gross under estimation; (the Ukrainian Prosecutor for War Crimes puts the toll at 100,000); 18 million people are in dire need of humanitarian assistance , without homes, power, water and food; 14 million have been displaced internally; 5 million have had to flee the country. Russia is not fighting a war, it is waging genocide.
We don’t need to even go into the merits of the dispute to acknowledge that what Russia is doing is a war crime: fight the Ukrainian army by all means but why target civilians ? But Mr. Modi and Mr. Jaishankar are unable to see this dimension, or (more likely) are aware of it but cynically see it as an opportunity to further their political and economic objectives- compassion, morality, humanitarianism be damned. And the deepest cut is that they are dressing up their mercenary position as “neutrality !”
This is patent hogwash and dissembling, it is the kind of neutrality which has put us in the company of countries such as China, Iran and North Korea in the UN on this issue, a far cry from being the leader of a non-aligned movement. For, as Theodre Roosevelt once said: “To be neutral between right and wrong is to serve wrong.” And we will also do well to remember the wise words of Bishop Desmond Tutu:
” If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.” I am sure that Mr. Jaishankar will not have forgotten these words, notwithstanding his recently acquired pulpit skills.
MEA’s pathetic attempts at justifying this self seeking position is not only ridiculous, it is also contradictory. Here are samples of some of our statements at the UN to defend our abstentions:
- We believe in the importance of “respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of states.” [Really?]
- The international community should focus on “cessation of hostilities and on urgent humanitarian assistance.” [ This is exactly what we are not supporting]
- UN should “promote dialogue and diplomacy.” [ It’s trying to do that, without our support].
- “No solution can ever arrive at the cost of human lives.” [ Then why not condemn Russian attacks on civilians?]
Each one of the averments above is unexceptionable and encapsulates many universal principles. But we are not abiding by a single one of them in consistently refusing to condemn Russia’s attack on civilians and civilian infrastructure, even if we do not ask it to roll back its invasion. (Which also we should be doing). Our position is not only hypocritical, it is also indefensible in any civilised world order. It may also be unscrupulously avaricious.
For the fact is that we are profiting (if not profiteering) immensely from this war, and the longer it goes on the more we reduce our current account deficit. Our support ( there is no other word for it, no matter how we guild it) for Russia has enabled us to buy cheap Russian oil at less than half the pre-war prices. and considerably below the $60 cap set by the West. Consequently our oil imports from Russia have shot up to about 1.50 million barrels a day as against the earlier 68000 barrels. The Indian govt. is estimated to have reduced its oil import bill by about $ 3.50 billion so far. This, in simple terms, is the “national interest” Mr. Jaishankar goes about preaching to an increasingly disapproving global community. As if national interest is merely the sum of the money saved.
But we are not even being given a fair share of this opportune largesse. At these rates of purchase the domestic prices of petrol, diesel and gas should have come down by at least 40% but we continue to pay for petrol and diesel at roughly Rs.100 per liter, and the gas cylinder still costs us Rs.1150 or thereabouts. All the windfall profits are being pocketed by the govt. and private refiners, who are even exporting the finished product to other countries! ( About 60% of the country’s refining capacity is with the private players like the Ambanis). It is difficult to see any “national interest” in this institutionalised hypocrisy when the common citizen does not benefit from this policy in any way. The profits are simply blood money, as a Ukrainian Minister had said some time back. By shoring up Russian revenues, India is also helping to prolong the war and the sufferings of the Ukrainian people.
The diplomatic dimension of this chicanery on India’s image is equally damaging, as Shashi Tharoor pointed out in an interview with Karan Thapar on 27th February. Firstly, we are demonstrating tothe world at large that we lack the courage of our convictions in refusing to call out Russia, (if not for the military engagement, at least for the attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure). Secondly, we fail to see the inherent contradiction in siding with a Russia which has now become “a junior partner of China, our main adversary.” And finally, according to Tharoor, we “have locked ourselves into a corner which is less and less favourable for our strategic posture.”
This is bound to adversely impact our international stature in the long run, even if the picture looks rosy- saffron?- in the short term. We shall lose credibility, reliability and influence. The Lowly Institute Power Index 2023- the capacity of a country to shape its external environment- gives us a score of only 36.3 out of 100 (China, by comparison, is more than double this at 75.3). Our fence sitting and equivocation on the Russia-Ukraine issue shall, in all likelihood, further lower this rating in the days to come. And, as Shashi Tharoor pointed out in the interview, the first signs of this may already be evident in the recently concluded meetings of G20 Finance Ministers and Foreign Ministers. Our stewardship of the G20 has been dented right at the start of our Presidency by the failure to adopt a joint communique in either of these meetings. The reason? The majority of members wanted to condemn Russia’s aggression, to go by the wording of the Bali resolution of last year, but we failed to persuade Russia and China.. We did not even want to use the word “war” to describe what is happening on Ukrainian territory, and instead insisted on the term “crisis” ! At one point the French Minister even threatened to walk out ! This is unprecedented and has to be seen as India’s failure, especially in the context of our Vishwaguru aspirations to play mediator in the conflict. It may also be the first portent of the fact that other countries may be running out of patience with our dissembling and double dealing. They are giving us a long rope presently because of other geo-political/economic considerations, but those can change any time. The strength of that rope can be tested any time, say by a belligerent China on our northern borders, and we may then find ourselves isolated.
It does not pay to be too clever by half. And you can’t sit on the fence for ever.
The author retired from the IAS in December 2010. A keen environmentalist and trekker he has published a book on high altitude trekking in the Himachal Himalayas: THE TRAILS LESS TRAVELLED.
His second book- SPECTRE OF CHOOR DHAR is a collection of short stories based in Himachal and was published in July 2019. His third book was released in August 2020: POLYTICKS, DEMOCKRAZY AND MUMBO JUMBO is a compilation of satirical and humorous articles on the state of our nation. His fourth book was published on 6th July 2021. Titled INDIA: THE WASTED YEARS , the book is a chronicle of missed opportunities in the last nine years. Shukla’s fifth book – THE DEPUTY COMMISSIONER’S DOG AND OTHER COLLEAGUES- was released on 12th September 2023. It portrays the lighter side of life in the IAS and in Himachal. He writes for various publications and websites on the environment, governance and social issues. He divides his time between Delhi and his cottage in a small village above Shimla. He blogs at http://avayshukla.blogspot.in/ |