(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Vol. XXXIV
No.
46
November
14,
2010
Obama
Visit: New Dance Moves, Little Substance
Prabir Purkayastha
THE
Obama visit has completely wowed the Indian media. 24 hour TV channels
have
spent at last 12 hours on the Obama visit – the other 12 hours of
course going
for ads, the reason why TV channels exist in the first place. Nothing
has been
left out – from dance moves to his and Michelle's good looks. When we
tot up
the positives and not the 10-12 billion dollar deals India
signed that will produce 50,000 jobs in the US,
there seems to be very little for India bar the atmospherics.
Let
us take the one item that has driven the media and the foreign policy
experts
into ecstasy – the US
support for a permanent Security Council seat. Here president Obama was
very
careful in his choice of words. He said in his address to the
parliament,
“Indeed, the just and sustainable international order that America
seeks
includes a United Nations that is efficient, effective, credible and
legitimate. That is why I can say today—in the years ahead, I look
forward to a
reformed UN Security Council that includes India
as a permanent member.” No
mention that the US will back India for a permanent membership of the
Security
Council, just that the US looks forward to a reformed UN Security
Council that
will have India as a permanent member. Incidentally, this is roughly
what
William Burns had said in a press conference before Obama's visit,“Given India’s rise and its significance, we
believe that India
will be a central part of any consideration of a reformed Security
Council.”
This was widely seen by the same media as a negative on India's
Security
Council ambitions. With slight retooling of the words, the same is now
cause for euphoria!
However,
if this sounds churlish, let us grant what the Indian media is reading
into his
speech -- that this is indeed the US supporting India's claim for a
permanent
security council seat. So the question, how long will it take to reform
the US
Security Council to which Obama has linked India's
permanent membership? Or
what is it that we will have to do in return?
The
reality is that UN reforms are nowhere on the horizon. Even if it does
come in
the next decade or so, the reforms that the US is
backing ispermanent members to be
expanded but without
the veto that the P5 currently enjoy. This means a three-tier UN
Security
Council, with only the P5 holding veto powers. Others, India, Brazil,
South Africa, Japan and Germany are the names doing
the
rounds will be permanent members but without the veto; and then as the
third
tier, elected temporary members with their current two year term.
PLAYING BALL
WITH THE US
On
the other question, what India
will have to do in return, the answer is already contained in the joint
statement.
One of the not-so-hidden condition for the US
support for a permanent seat in the Security Council is that India play ball with the US on Iran in its current two
year term.
The Indian side seems already to have signed on to the Iran
sanctions
quite enthusiastically. The joint statement states, “Both leaders
underscored
that all states have an obligation to comply with and implement UN
Security
Council resolutions, including UN sanctions regimes.” On sanctions
against Iran, India
had been quite lukewarmearlier and had
agreed that Iran
has a right to the fuel cycle underthe
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Iran
issue is the key test for India's
independent foreign policy. Already, Brazil
and Turkey have
shown that
they believe that direct engagement with Iran
would be far more fruitful than the sanctions regime that the US is
pressing
on the world. Here, India
seems to have now signed on to the US agenda. This will also
mean India
giving up
access to cheaper Iranian gas and oil.
The
other key point for India
in his visit is the assurance on high technology.The
US
said a number of times that it
will remove three entities – DRDO, ISRO and Bharat Dynamics Ltd (a
public
sector entity created for space and missiles). The entity that still
remains
under ban is of course the Atomic Energy Commission and all the
entities under
it.
India
was not talking about a removal of ban on these four Indian entities
but access
to what are known as “dual use” technologies. This is what Manmohan
Singh had
assured the Indian parliament that India was getting under the
India
US nuclear deal. On this, there is this vague statement in Obama's
speech, “And
we’ll work to reform our controls on exports.” Dual use technology is
unlikely
to be on offer, this vague promise notwithstanding. This is where the India
side kept
remarkably quiet, pretending that removal from the entities list is the
same as
access to dual use technology, which is barred under the current
controls on
exports. Again, on this issue, the Indian media was remarkably
co-operative. It
did not ask what exactly was the US offering. It was quite
happy in
peddling the belief that this is what India was really asking all
along.
The
nature of the strategic partnership was also elaborated in the joint
statement
between the two leaders. It talked about how “The transformation in
India-US defence
cooperation in recent years has strengthened mutual understanding on regional
peace and stability” (emphasis added). Clearly, the US
sees only a regional role for India
in this strategic partnership. The statement also gave a pat on the
back to India
for
agreeing to buy what experts claim is at least $5 billion of military
hardware
with more to follow. This is on top of $4 billion arms India has already purchased from the US in
the last
two years.
The
offer to make India
a member of the NSG, and other technology restriction regimes is a
double edged
weapon. While it allows India
a voice in this scheme of technology denials to certain countries, it
will also
force India
to accept what others want. The only area that India
has an interest is in membership
of the NSG. Here India
had already agreed to abide by the NSG decisions but without having a
voice in
the discussions. In all others – Missile Technology Control regime,
Wassanaar
arrangement, Australia
regime – India
gains very little. These technology control regimes are the descendants
of the
Cocom regime aimed originally at the socialist block and then converted
to be
used against countries that were out of favour with the US.
The US
draws up the
list for all these and all others follow the lists – this is how these
technology control regimes work today. It is far more in US interests
that India
becomes a
party to these regimes.
LONG ATMOSPHERICS
SHORT COMMITMENTS
If
we look at what India
has
gained, it appears to be only on two issues – a statement that Obama is
looking
forward to UN Security Council giving India
a seatand the other removing three
Indian companies from the banned entities list, while promising to
review the
export controls regime for India.
Very long on atmospherics but quite short on what was committed.
What
did the US
gain out of the Obama visit? Well, to be fair to Obama, he made no
bones about
why he was coming to India.
He
said upfront that he was coming to India to prise open the
Indian
market. The gamut of agreements signed or promised run to 10-12 billion
dollars
-- 5 billion of military hardware and 7 billion dollars for other
contracts.
That, according to Obama, translates to 50,000 US jobs. On agriculture,
the US support for
corporate dominance over India's agriculture
was visible in his speech and in the joint statement – from seeds (read
Monsanto) to the supply chain cycle (read Wal Mart). The seed bill
before the parliament
contains various provisions that are in favour of MNCs such as Monsanto
and
against the interest of the farmers. On Iran,
India has more or
less
agreed to toe the US
line.
While
Obama “chided” India
on Burma, India
was content to keep quiet on Israel's
brutal
siege of Gaza and the illegal
occupation
of Palestine.
Neither
did the talk about nuclear weapons and disarmament in the joint
statement
percolate to a mention of Israel's
nuclear arsenal.
On
the nuclear issue, the joint statement talked about India
ratifying the convention on
supplementary compensation (CSC) and a “level playing field” for US
companies.
What the US really
means is
that since the nuclear suppliers from Russia
and France
are state-owned, they do not need a guarantee against liability, but US
companies do. A level playing field therefore means no liability for
the US
suppliers.
This is what they are trying to achieve through CSC, which exempts
suppliers
from liability. While in India,
the Indian law will hold, it is uncertain what would happen if such
cases go to
international arbitration. Here, India's signing up with CSC
could
very well mean Indian claims being disallowed in international fora. India
has not
done itself any favour in rushing into sign the CSC to please Obama.
Apart
from what was mentioned, equally important was what was not mentioned.
As good
hosts, India seem to have forgotten about asking the US side on David
Headley
and the US side not sharing even after the Mumbai attack the
information it had
on Headley. Neither were hard questions asked on US commitments on
cutting CO2
emissions. Instead, the US
side got away with general warm and fuzzy statements on steps to be
taken on
climate change without specifying what the US
was proposing to do on meeting the Kyoto
protocol requirements let alone the need for a sharper cut in emissions
for the
next commitment period. This sharpens the suspicion that the Copenhagen
Accord
was a get-out-of-jail card for the US in the Copenhagen Summit.
Americans
seem to have figured out the Indian psyche. Give Indians an ego boost,
tell
them how important they are and they will forget the hard reality.
Obama's
speech was indeed a virtuoso performance – it hit the right
notes,
stroked the right egos. What he delivered concretely remains unclear.
After the
dust settles and the atmospherics disappear, the hard reality will hit
-- that
he has carried back a number of goodies for the US
while handing over a few
coloured trinkets to the Indians.