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India and the Kennedy years

Dash

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WASHINGTON: The United States mourned the death and celebrated the life on Friday of arguably its most charismatic President who was cut down by an assassin's bullet 50 years ago in the prime of his life — at a time he had elevated US-India ties to heights that were never achieved before and did not approach till recent years.

Largely unsung and all by forgotten in New Delhi, John F Kennedy, or simply JFK to generations, came to India's help when it was receiving a drubbing from China in 1962, funnelling billions of dollars of aid to New Delhi in the years before and after. But for the cussedness of the Indian establishment then in thrall of "non-alignment," Kennedy wanted to forge an even closer relationship with a county he adored.

He also detailed to India two of America's most brilliant minds — Chester Bowles and John Kenneth Galbraith — who as ambassadors ensured that ties with New Delhi received top billing in Washington. Both had direct access to Kennedy and Nehru, as did Indian ambassadors in Washington. Kennedy, who would have been 96 if he were alive, once called the Indian deputy chief of mission to the White House to deliver a message.

Indeed, while much of India remembers and recoils at the American bullying during the Nixon Presidency with the nuclear carrier USS Enterprise in the midst of the 1971 Indo-Pak war, less well recalled is the same aircraft carrier was dispatched to the Bay of Bengal during the Sino-Indian conflict ''to steady Indian nerves,'' according to diplomatic historian Dennis Kux.

There was little recall of all this — much less the massive developmental aid that began in the Kennedy years — in the Indian diplomatic community or the New Delhi commentariat this week as a whole generation of Americans pined and ached over the ''swinging sixties'' - a decade that not only promised to put the Cold War in deep freeze but also take on rampant racism and sexism. All that was disrupted and delayed for years with the bullet Lee Harvey Oswald fired into Kennedy's head in Dallas; also dislocated was a Kennedy drive for a closer embrace of India after it had been lacerated by China and led down by the Soviet Union during that conflict.

In his study of the Kennedy years in the context of India, Kux writes about Kennedy's great regard and affection for India starting from his days as a Senator when he took the initiative to sponsor a resolution urging more economic aid for India, ''although his personal contact with Nehru was less than sparkling.'' The Prime Minister showed little interest in talking with the young Massachusetts representative when he visited in India in 1951, says Kux, writing that ''Nehru's preachy neutralism put Kennedy off somewhat.'' But he respected the prime minister as one of the great political leaders of the 20th century and praised the ''soaring idealism of Nehru'' in his first state of the union address in 1961.

But it was in the economic and developmental sphere that Kennedy really stepped on it, committing nearly $1 billion annually (a massive amount those days and one that made India the largest recipient of US aid) to an often ungrateful basket case whose defense minister frequently twitted Washington at the U.N. Even Nehru was gratified by the gesture, and in a letter to Kennedy, thanked him effusively, writing: ''Our task, great as it is, has been made light by the goodwill and generous assistance tht has come to us from the United States. To the people of the United States, and more especially to you, Mr President, we feel deeply grateful.''

Among the signature US projects in India -- besides food aid -- that emerged from the Kennedy years was the Tarapur nuclear plant; IIT Kanpur, styled after MIT; the Nagarjun Sagar Dam in Andhra Pradesh; and the Premier automobile factory in Mumbai.



India and the Kennedy years: How Washington and New Delhi came close to a clinch - The Times of India

Largely unsung and all by forgotten in New Delhi, John F Kennedy, or simply JFK to generations, came to India's help when it was receiving a drubbing from China in 1962, funnelling billions of dollars of aid to New Delhi in the years before and after. But for the cussedness of the Indian establishment then in thrall of "non-alignment," Kennedy wanted to forge an even closer relationship with a county he adored.

what could have been the reason?
 
. .
WASHINGTON: The United States mourned the death and celebrated the life on Friday of arguably its most charismatic President who was cut down by an assassin's bullet 50 years ago in the prime of his life — at a time he had elevated US-India ties to heights that were never achieved before and did not approach till recent years.

Largely unsung and all by forgotten in New Delhi, John F Kennedy, or simply JFK to generations, came to India's help when it was receiving a drubbing from China in 1962, funnelling billions of dollars of aid to New Delhi in the years before and after. But for the cussedness of the Indian establishment then in thrall of "non-alignment," Kennedy wanted to forge an even closer relationship with a county he adored.

He also detailed to India two of America's most brilliant minds — Chester Bowles and John Kenneth Galbraith — who as ambassadors ensured that ties with New Delhi received top billing in Washington. Both had direct access to Kennedy and Nehru, as did Indian ambassadors in Washington. Kennedy, who would have been 96 if he were alive, once called the Indian deputy chief of mission to the White House to deliver a message.

Indeed, while much of India remembers and recoils at the American bullying during the Nixon Presidency with the nuclear carrier USS Enterprise in the midst of the 1971 Indo-Pak war, less well recalled is the same aircraft carrier was dispatched to the Bay of Bengal during the Sino-Indian conflict ''to steady Indian nerves,'' according to diplomatic historian Dennis Kux.

There was little recall of all this — much less the massive developmental aid that began in the Kennedy years — in the Indian diplomatic community or the New Delhi commentariat this week as a whole generation of Americans pined and ached over the ''swinging sixties'' - a decade that not only promised to put the Cold War in deep freeze but also take on rampant racism and sexism. All that was disrupted and delayed for years with the bullet Lee Harvey Oswald fired into Kennedy's head in Dallas; also dislocated was a Kennedy drive for a closer embrace of India after it had been lacerated by China and led down by the Soviet Union during that conflict.

In his study of the Kennedy years in the context of India, Kux writes about Kennedy's great regard and affection for India starting from his days as a Senator when he took the initiative to sponsor a resolution urging more economic aid for India, ''although his personal contact with Nehru was less than sparkling.'' The Prime Minister showed little interest in talking with the young Massachusetts representative when he visited in India in 1951, says Kux, writing that ''Nehru's preachy neutralism put Kennedy off somewhat.'' But he respected the prime minister as one of the great political leaders of the 20th century and praised the ''soaring idealism of Nehru'' in his first state of the union address in 1961.

But it was in the economic and developmental sphere that Kennedy really stepped on it, committing nearly $1 billion annually (a massive amount those days and one that made India the largest recipient of US aid) to an often ungrateful basket case whose defense minister frequently twitted Washington at the U.N. Even Nehru was gratified by the gesture, and in a letter to Kennedy, thanked him effusively, writing: ''Our task, great as it is, has been made light by the goodwill and generous assistance tht has come to us from the United States. To the people of the United States, and more especially to you, Mr President, we feel deeply grateful.''

Among the signature US projects in India -- besides food aid -- that emerged from the Kennedy years was the Tarapur nuclear plant; IIT Kanpur, styled after MIT; the Nagarjun Sagar Dam in Andhra Pradesh; and the Premier automobile factory in Mumbai.



India and the Kennedy years: How Washington and New Delhi came close to a clinch - The Times of India



what could have been the reason?

All of that is not completely correct. The Kennedy years in Washington was then viewed as a beautiful but largely mythical Camelot.

Similarly JFK had his moment of glory in India too. The metaphor of Camelot has little meaning in India but he got invested with a typically Indian version----he made it to the "Kitschy Calendars" that were so common at that time as a figure whos popularity only followed Gandhi, Nehru, and the pantheon of Indian Gods. That was no mean achievement, to become a "Calendar Poster Boy" in India !!

But his legacy in India (as well as to the US and the world) was very mixed. It must not be forgotten that he lived in the Cold War Era and he was also a Cold Warrior at heart; may not be as much as the typical Cold Warriors of the time. He undoubtedly had a softer corner for India; but that had to do with a view-point that the US embraced very quickly at that time---of being a victim to Chinese aggression and expansionism. Also; while Nehru perpetually exasperated the Americans endlessly with his constant flirtation with Socialism; they believed (justifiably) that Nehru would never stoop to setting up a Soviet system and that he was as Western in his views as nearly any Englishman of that times. So both sides left each other confused and bewildered at times but also impressed in a romantic kind of way. Then add in the other major players of that time in his Administration----the redoubtable "Brothers Dulles"; arch-typical "Cold Warriors" whose formidable shadows loomed large over US Policy of that time; even more than JFK's. And of course; there was the "nearly Loony" J.Edgar Hoover whose paranoia made him see a Communist hanging from every branch and below every stone! It must be conceded here that JEH had much less to do with US FP than the "Brothers Dulles". These guys had far more influence in Wash.D.C. and Capitol Hill than JFK ever could. And they were not friends of India!

On the other hand JFK's hand-picked envoys to India; Chester Bowles and John Kenneth Galbraith were truly friends of India as were most later envoys to India. Little wonder; that a completely frustrated "Tricky Dick" Nixon complained to Kissinger that US Ambassadors to India fell in love with India or words to that effect!! Even Jackie Kennedy had a particular soft corner for India (Nehru can be be credited with having turned on the charm offensive also).
And most of all; a Country that can show-case the Taj Mahal as a symbol of undying love has some cards up its diplomatic sleeves......I can say that a just a visit to the Taj has had a significant role in many diplomatic palavers that India has conducted!!!!!!!!!!!!

So it was a mixed relationship that India had with USA in that era of JFK; but the good feelings that formed part of it continued even in the Johnson era.
Can India ever forget the PL-480 Program which kept the 'wolf away from India's larder' and then later US assistance to India's "Green Revolution" ably led by a Technocrat like Norman Borlaug?

@Joe Shearer; maybe you can express your views too!
 
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So Indians must hate the zionists as they killed him, they made you lose billions of billions dollars at least

JFK hated Ben Gourion and wanted to send observers in Israel about the nuclear plants, but he was prevented from it by the zionists each time.

He was also in favor of the return of the hundreds of thousands of palestinians deported by the zionist regime
 
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So Indians must hate the zionists as they killed him, they made you lose billions of billions dollars at least

JFK hated Ben Gourion and wanted to send observers in Israel about the nuclear plants, but he was prevented from it by the zionists each time.

He was also in favor of the return of the hundreds of thousands of palestinians deported by the zionist regime

abhi iske muh se jhaag nikal rha hoga...
 
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So Indians must hate the zionists as they killed him, they made you lose billions of billions dollars at least

JFK hated Ben Gourion and wanted to send observers in Israel about the nuclear plants, but he was prevented from it by the zionists each time.

He was also in favor of the return of the hundreds of thousands of palestinians deported by the zionist regime

What billions of dollars? That was a weird intervention. Bizarre, almost.
 
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What billions of dollars? That was a weird intervention. Bizarre, almost.
They killed Kennedy and the collaboration with India with it

India would be developped as Kennedy loved India
 
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