June 11, 2007:
India, a regional superpower and the
worlds largest democracy (with a population of over a billion), lives in a very
rough neighborhood. India is surrounded by neighbors who are at war with
themselves. In addition to that, India has some seriously violent internal
dissidents of its own. As a result, India is changing its military and foreign
policies. Oh, for the days of the Cold War, when life was so much simpler.
Consider what India has to deal with. Pakistan is
fighting religious rebels and tribal separatists. In addition, there are
religious factions fighting each other. Pakistan also supports separatist
rebels in Kashmir, and religious terrorists throughout India. Pakistan denies
it is doing this, but not very convincingly. Moving clockwise, we come across
Nepal, which is undergoing a rebellion by Maoist communists. This would
normally be a minor matter for India, because Nepal is a rather small country
(26 million), but India also has a Maoist movement, which is causing major
problems in central and eastern India. The Nepalese and Indian Maoists have
cooperated with each other, and leftist Indian politicians are reluctant to
crack down too hard on the Maoists. Next we have Bangladesh, a Moslem nation
crippled by poverty and corruption, and with a growing Islamic radical
movement. A larger problem is the growing number of illegal migrants from
Bangladesh, crossing the border and settling down in remote areas of Indias northeast.
Moving along, we come to Burma (also called Myanmar), where four decades of
military dictatorship has produced poverty and several rebellions. Worse for
India, Burma tolerates Indian rebels setting up camps on their side of the
border. Finally, there is Sri Lanka, off the southern tip of India. There,
Tamils (from southern India) are rebelling against the native Sinhalese
majority. The Tamils were brought in by the British over a century ago, to work
the tea plantations. The Sinhalese were not into that kind of hard labor, and
the Tamils, as is usually the case with migrants, were. As the Tamils
prospered, the Sinhalese resented it, and the backlash created lots of hard
feelings and harsh treatment. Eventually it led to terrorism and armed rebellion.
In some weeks, fighting in Sri Lanka kills more people than in more visible hot
spots like Afghanistan.
Inside India, there are three major uprisings. In
Kashmir, there is the separatist movement fueled by Islamic terrorists from
Pakistan. In central India, there is the home grown Maoist movement, seeking
social justice for poor Indians, and political power for themselves. In the
northeast, tribal rebels seek independence from India, and the expulsion of
millions of illegal migrants from Bangladesh, and legal ones from the rest of
India.
In light of all this, India is changing a lot of
its Cold War policies. First, India is no longer non-aligned. It has become
quite close with Israel and the United States. What's remarkable about this is
that Iran is still eager to get cozy with India. However, Iran sees India as a
natural ally against the Arabs. The Arabs see India as a heathen (non-Moslem)
regional superpower that is deserving of all the Islamic terrorism that can be
thrown at it. China sees India as a potential regional rival. India sees a need
to find some more friends. While still buying lots of weapons from Russia,
India now has more economic ties with Europe and the United States. As with
anything else, if you want to see where this is all going, follow the money.
With India, the money is not only increasingly coming from America, Israel and
Europe, but it is going into a modernized armed forces. This includes special
operations and lots of electronics. It is a rough neighborhood, and one must be
prepared.