Joe Shearer
INT'L MOD
- Apr 19, 2009
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This narrowing of the Indian nation's interaction with political entities in Bangladesh was a blunder. However disinclined or lukewarm might be the internal reaction to the BNP and to Khaleda Zia, in principle, and on the formal level, there is no excuse, none whatsoever, to show such a biased approach.It is now widely recognised that India’s foreign policy towards Bangladesh, with its focus on backing the Sheikh Hasina-led Awami League party, has been less than successful. Most analysts have focussed on India’s backing of the flawed 2024 election results, as Narendra Modi became the first international leader to congratulate Hasina, paving the way for others to acknowledge the results of the election. It must be noted that, unlike the 2018 (also widely criticised) elections, the Indian ambassador met with the principal opposition party – the Bangladesh National Party (BNP) in 2023. But this one meeting with the BNP, the only one in a decade, also indicates how limited Indian engagement had become.
The blunder was not in isolation. Neglecting the legitimate rights of a down-stream nation is callous, and, given that there was a framework drawn up for attending to riparian and river-sharing issues, neglecting that framework and allowing it to fall into disuse is practically criminal neglect OF INDIA'S INTERESTS, and an open incitation to Bangladesh to feel irritated and neglected.The narrow range of official interaction, except between Modi and Hasina, is reflected in other aspects as well. The first major treaty signed between India and Bangladesh was the 1972 Treaty of Peace and Friendship. One of its key outcomes was the Joint River Commission, which is supposed to meet around four times a year. Its last meeting was in August 2022, after a gap of 12 years. Bangladesh shares 54 transboundary rivers with India, and river cooperation impacts almost all aspects of the political economy of a riverine country like Bangladesh. India, apparently, could not care less.
The rivers problem is not simple. when India built a barrage at Farakka, it was under the mistaken impression that this would help in flushing out the Bhagirathi channel, and reviving the port facilities and seaward access of the Calcutta Port.
The fact is that the Calcutta Port silted up rapidly due to reasons other than the supposed diminution of the Bhagirathi water flow. That channel, the Bhagirathi Channel, had been the main channel once upon a time, up until the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar, after which, due to tectonic movement, the Padma became the main channel.
The old Bhagirathi Channel, represented by the present channel upto the Kidderpore basin, and then through the Adi Ganga (also known as the Gobindapur Creek and Tolly's Canal), to the sea, through a confluence with the Matla River (or, as an alternative, by way of Sandeshkhali. Subsequent well-intentioned but ignorant interventions resulted in the destruction of this channel in its upper reaches, where it struck out from the Kidderpore Basin and became the Adi Ganga.
That route of the Bhagirathi, from Kidderpore to the Matla, was the main seaward access route to the trading stations of Bandel, Hooghly-Chinsurah, Chandannagar, and Serampore. The point is that it did not depend exclusively on the upstream flow of the Ganga and its tributaries before the borders of Bengal; the strong Damodar-Rupnarayan river system annually pours a huge quantity of water into the Bhagirathi-Hooghly. Once the dams, five of them, were built on that river system, the disastrous monsoon flooding stopped, but so did the flushing out of the lower reaches of the Bhagirathi.
A narrative directly showing the failure of regular diplomacy, excessive dependency on intelligence 'cowboy' tactics and a loss of resourcefulness in the face of failure.If such official cooperation was considered unnecessary, it is little surprise that India has said nothing about the political prisoners ‘disappeared’ by the Hasina government, some of whom are only appearing after eight years. The extended attack on Muhammad Yunus, which was perceived by many as Hasina’s personal vendetta against someone who was often seen as more credible than her, drew not a word from India. And now that Yunus is the head of the interim administration, the Indian government is left with few links, and can only resort to a combination of threats and bluster – that too outsourced to retired diplomats and security officials on the news channels.
An open secret. However much our bhakt members deny it.The list of failures is long and bitter, and begs the question of how India got it so wrong. This is why it was appropriate that India’s National Security Adviser (NSA), Ajit Doval, received Hasina when she arrived in India. Other than our diplomatic corps, the one person most responsible for gathering information and briefing the government on how to act on foreign relations is the NSA, and thus he shares much of the responsibility for this turn of events.
IMHO, a combination of reason #2 and reason #3.There are three possible explanations for why the Indian government misread the situation so catastrophically. It could be that the intelligence gathering skills of our agencies in Bangladesh is remarkably poor. Or it could be that the intelligence agencies were instructed badly, and while their information was good, it was not processed properly. Or, lastly and least likely, that the NSA credibly informed the government of the intelligence and was overruled. In other words, either the NSA oversees an incompetent operation, or he is incompetent himself, or he commands no authority in the government.
What can I say?Unfortunately, the Indian public is not likely to find out what went wrong. This is because of the peculiarity of having built a formidable office and mechanism to deal with national security issues, but no real oversight. The Modi government elevated the NSA to cabinet minister rank in 2019, and we have a powerful National Security Advisory Board – a deputy NSA is now the foreign secretary, but most Indians will be surprised to note that there is no legal definition of “national security” in India. Although we have had a National Security Act since 1980 – to facilitate preventive detention – we never bothered to define the term.
What can ANYONE say?
In that gaping legal void, an increasingly powerful national security architecture has great licence but little accountability. Unlike most democratic countries, India’s parliament has no oversight of intelligence matters – unlike say the House Select Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in the United States. Given the sensitivity of intelligence information, it is wise not to have public hearings, but surely a committee of MPs, which includes the opposition, should have a chance to ask why such failures are happening.
No comment.Incidentally, this is not the first failure on Doval’s watch. As the government’s lead on border talks with China, the NSA bears primary responsibility for allowing India to be surprised by Chinese actions on the LAC. He is also the person who should be answering questions about allegations that a government agency may have murdered, and attempted to murder in North America, Sikhs with Canadian or American citizenship.
Instead, all we have is silence, and an Indian public increasingly worried about how we keep seeming to get it wrong, time and again, as if we had no intelligence at all.
None possible.