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Is stopping Narendra Modi the West's new priority?

Makardhwaj

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'The West has always preferred a timid, half intelligent and a dependent India rather than a decisively independent and self-reliant one. A pliable Indian leadership suits the West best,' says Tarun Vijay.

On the eve of India's polls, it looks like the West has accepted the widespread Indian mood for change, but still wishes it has to deal with someone else but Narendra Modi.

The Economist magazine brazenly displaying a Western arrogance bordering on a coloured vision, suggests in its latest issue: 'If, more probably, victory goes to the Bharatiya Janata Party, its coalition partners should hold out for a prime minister other than Modi.'

The old colonial psyche that described us as heathens and pagans to be civilised through a hard dose of the gospel, still survives, it seems, in the editorial offices of some Western newspapers and magazines.

When the economy is down and the corruption is high, a nation needs a leader with clear majority and a massive mandate to take firm, hard decisions. It must make Western governments, dwindling under their own 'not so good economic conditions', happier and more assured.

Instead of bowing before the people's mandate and looking at an emerging, stronger democratic India as a guarantee for regional peace and power balance, the Western media and some hardcore Christian lobby groups in the United States have started their last ditch effort to stop Modi.

Though there are fears that forces inimical to India's rise might plot something sinister, nothing can stop Modi from taking oath as the new prime minister.

The Indian people have shown their transparently clear and decisive mood. It is an unprecedented event in India's post Independence history.

The West has always preferred to have a timid, half intelligent and a dependent India rather than a decisively independent and self-reliant one.

No matter whether the Congress was in power or the BJP. The Western preferences have been very clear: A pliable Indian leadership suits them best.

Modi belongs to an entirely different world they do not know how to connect with. Having developed a habit of reporting India with the help of so-called liberal, Left of Centre, Anglophile scholars, commentators and gossip providers in an English club ambience, the Western media and their highly accented Indian correspondents find it difficult to comprehend the new phenomenon.

They have never read anything first hand source material on the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh except the extreme Left's hate literature; their understanding of the Modi factor is limited to briefings by frequent fliers to Cambridge and the pre-opinionated India International Centre crowd.

How to deal with a new leadership that has studied in a village school in Gujarat and has completed the three-year rigorous RSS training? The ignorance and illiteracy regarding the new language has put fear in their minds -- we do not know this, so this must be a monstrous thing.

Modi is a son of the soil. He speaks English with an Indian accent, and not an Oxbridge one, which had been so familiar to the Western media, crowding and appreciating the Westernised neo-Nehru clan.

A half-baked knowledge of Indian history and a Churchilian outlook make them too uncomfortable dealing with a person who is best at speaking to Indians in their language and is moulded by the ideology they had despised so much.

This is a new vocabulary to them, a new introduction to the reality which is diametrically opposed to the half-Brit-Nehruvian model of behaviour they were familiar with.

That was the protocol, they could easily connect with -- looking at India the way a Viceroy looked at the natives -- a Ganesha terracotta to admire, ethnic pottery, folk something of Bastar and Jodhpur, sympathies with Maoists guerillas, talking supportively with Kashmiri separatists, no to Ayodhya and eyes wide shut at Hindu ethnic cleansing in the valley.

That was the sum total of their Indian affair. Anglicised masters of India's destiny. Dictating terms to talk or stay paused with Pakistan. Getting a baton to begin the Commonwealth Games from the Queen. A protocol of regularly turning at Buckingham Palace and 10, Downing Street; feeling humbled by the benevolent attitude.

It came to them so naturally that till the Atal Bihari Vajpayee regime, the Budget of India was presented in Parliament as per British clocks, to make the Lords in London comfortable and not for the comfort and the convenience of the Indian people. It was the BJP that changed the timing and started presenting the Budget when India was comfortable to hear it.

The BJP changed that and is set to change much more for India.

The fear is the colonial continuity of the supremacy of the Anglophile may end with the rise of Modi.

When India gained nuclear power under Vajpayee's Pokaran-II test, the West was first to frown upon us, isolate us from the mainstream and impose harsh sanctions against India.

In spite of that, India-US relations have remained a pillar of India's foreign policy. The presence of nearly four million professionals of Indian origin people in the US and the recognition of their contribution by the Barack Obama regime is a testimony to the strong bonds that exist between us. Obama's rise delighted common Indians as much as it brought a feeling of justice in Washington.

A future Indian government will have to move ahead without any historical baggage of rancour or animosity and hence it is important to know if the West is hearing or is willing to appreciate the new music of a happy dawn on the Indian horizon.

It is not just trade and industry, the strategic partnership of India, Japan and the US is more significant in the contemporary geo-political situation.

The Economist and other voices of Modi-fear emanating from the influential US media can't have come at a more inappropriate time.

In Washington, Capitol Hill tried to give some signals of a changed mood, though delayed. The US ambassador to India, Nancy Powell, has resigned, fueling speculation that perhaps a more acceptable face would be sent to Delhi as a new envoy. But Congressional noises right at the time of elections in India have exposed the real faces of some US politicians against the rise of a new Indian leadership.

On April 4, the US Senate's Human Rights Commission had an unusually timed hearing on religious freedom in India that was meant just to criticise Modi and suggest, quite shockingly, strengthening of religious minority courts.

The timing of such an outrageous hearing alarmed some Hindu groups and Representatives. US Congresspersons Tulsi Gabbard and Brad Sherman raised serious concerns about the timing of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission hearing on religious freedom in India.

Both US Representatives, who are members of the commission, suggested that the hearing may have been timed with the upcoming Indian democratic election and urged committee members not to attempt to influence it.

'Any attempt by the United States to have an effect on the Indian elections will backfire,' Congressman Sherman said, while questioning the panelists.

The Hindu American Foundation specifically criticised House Resolution 417 as Hinduphobic and highly prejudicial, and expressed particular concern over the resolution's call to empower religious minority courts to conduct trials and hear appeals -- a suggestion the HAF contended threatens to undermine the secular Indian judicial system.

They want an India with American priorities but Indians are making an India of their dreams. That is their priority? It hasn't to be an American choice, but an Indian destiny. And it will be.

India's rise is an unstoppable fact that the West also accepts it. It will be a tragedy if the largest democracy, so deeply appreciative and in harmony with Western democratic values, feels compelled to look the other way.

Is stopping Modi the West's new priority? - Rediff.com India News
 
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Absloutely right.They are dealing with an entire class leadership this time.
 
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That's true lots of anti-bjp article in western media one of them almost even called for NATO invasion of India to stop nuclear weapons falling into the hands of Hindu Talibans and compared BJP with TTP

What?o_O:blink::blink::blink::blink:
 
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That's true lots of anti-bjp article is being posted in western media since last week one of them almost even called for NATO invasion of India to stop nuclear weapons falling into the hands of Hindu Talibans and compared BJP with TTP :rofl:

As if BJP is coming first time in power??

& Ya, pls pls let the war begin!!! :D
 
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A turd of fear mongering, paranoid piece of a BS article!! IMHO, there hasnt been one 'pliable' Indian PM amicable to fostering "western interests" in India.
This Tarun Vijay guy is just being a mouthpiece for the BJP, like there are others for other political parties. All 'last minute' hyperbole created to turn undecided voters to vote for their political parties!!
taken with a grain of salt..
 
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A turd of fear mongering, paranoid piece of a BS article!! IMHO, there hasnt been one 'pliable' Indian PM amicable to fostering "western interests" in India.
This Tarun Vijay guy is just being a mouthpiece for the BJP, like there are others for other political parties. All 'last minute' hyperbole created to turn undecided voters to vote for their political parties!!
taken with a grain of salt..


And tell me what has he said wrong? Have you opened articles in the Telegraph, NYT, Firstpost, Guardian etc?

All of them are dephiling Modi as if he is Hitler incarnate despite the fact that even UK MPs have honoured our supreme court's decision.

Mr. Vijay is saying somethign sensible that people are not able to digest. First, law cleared the man and now secoolar corrupt traitors are finding it difficult to frame him.
 
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That's true lots of anti-bjp article is being posted in western media since last week one of them almost even called for NATO invasion of India to stop nuclear weapons falling into the hands of Hindu Talibans and compared BJP with TTP :rofl:
:lol: forgetting that it was BJP in the 1st place that got India the entry into the nuclear club
 
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I'll be honest....if not for this forum....would never of heard of him. We got bigger fish to fry.....sorry.
 
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I'll be honest....if not for this forum....would never of heard of him. We got bigger fish to fry.....sorry.

Nancy Powell also has same opinion but what happened.........She got herself into frying pan.
 
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That's true lots of anti-bjp article is being posted in western media since last week one of them almost even called for NATO invasion of India to stop nuclear weapons falling into the hands of Hindu Talibans and compared BJP with TTP :rofl:

Really. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:
 
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The West and Modi

The attitude of the West towards Narendra Modi reflects a deep political dilemma. Used to dealing with pliable dictators in the Middle-East and weak, corrupt governments in the Indian subcontinent, the West for the first time faces the prospect of a democratically elected leader – Modi – who is neither pliable nor corrupt.

Western media often hews slavishly (but with dexterous sophistry) to official Western foreign policy. That policy is often self-interested, disruptive and intrusive. It has propped up brutal Arab dictators, bankrolled a terrorist state like Pakistan and destablised countries ranging from Syria to Ukraine.

The US and its allies in Europe were delighted to work for ten years with a government like the United Progressive Alliance (UPA). A prime minister without real power like Manmohan Singh and a de facto leader like Sonia Gandhi with limited accountability but absolute power created a fertile geopolitical arena for Washington.

The liberal power elite in Delhi was similarly co-opted. The Americans know how easily journalists, academics, think-tankers and NGOs fall for sponsored foreign seminars, gifts, donations and other rewards.

In return the Indian liberal, intellectual elite – much of it neither really liberal nor really intellectual – was compromised.

Modi provokes a hostile reaction in both these constituencies – Western governments and media on the one hand and their co-opted Indian quasi-elite on the other.

The vitriolic, at times vicious, attacks on Modi in the Western media are a product of the real fear that a Modi government will upend the fraudulent elite power structure in Delhi with geopolitical consequences well beyond India’s borders.

Modi will be tough on Pakistan, pragmatic with China and cooperative with Japan. He will deal with the West on India’s – not the West’s – terms.

Grandees like Amartya Sen and his fellow-travellers in India and the West blanch at the very thought. Their idea of India is not most Indians’ idea of India. It is a lesson they may learn the hard way on May 16.

* * *

As I wrote in my book, The New Clash of Civilizations: How the Contest Between America, China, India and Islam Will Shape Our Century,America’s history provides many clues to its current dilemma over dealing with India’s likely new political leadership.

The United States was founded by working-class families escaping religious persecution from newly-Protestant England 425 years ago. These English settlers (Britain as a nation did not yet exist) massacred indigenous Indians, appropriated their land and shipped in slave labour from Africa to work the cotton fields.

The US won independence in 1776 and as it grew more powerful, it invaded Mexico and by 1848 had annexed what are today California, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming and New Mexico. By the 1890s, it had colonized the Philippines and built a silent empire arching from the Pacific to the Atlantic.

After the Second World War it invaded Korea, Vietnam and Grenada, and propped up dictators and puppet-monarchs in Latin America and the Middle-East (including the early Saddam Hussein and the sybaritic Shah of Iran). It made a pact with the sheikhs of the post-Ottoman Middle-East to deny Arab citizens voting rights in return for US military protection, ostensibly against Israel but in reality against popular democratic movements in their own countries.

In 1932, the US and Britain established Saudi Arabia—custodian of the holy mosques in Mecca and Medina and a part of the Ottoman Empire since 1818—as an independent Islamic kingdom under the Wahhabi Al Saud dynasty.

Over the next thirty years, a pro-West military dictator or sheikh was installed in virtually every Arab country. Caught in a pincer between Anglo-Saxon politicians and Arab sheikhs, the Arab citizen had no democracy, few freedoms but, thanks to oil, reasonable prosperity.

The US continues to follow a foreign policy of ruthless self-interest in Asia to secure its geopolitical goals. But America is a declining power. By 2045, it will not only be relegated to the status of the world’s third largest economy (after China and India), but it will also, for the first time in its history, become a non-white-majority country.

African-Americans, Latinos and Asians comprise nearly 30 per cent of America’s population today. By 2045, that figure will rise to 51 per cent. The implications of this demographic shift will resonate across social, ethnic, economic and cultural faultlines.

As India’s own demographic dividend kicks in, the new government’s bargaining power with a declining US will grow—if South Block gets its strategy right.

That strategy involves deepening India’s economic and diplomatic engagement with East Asia, Africa and Latin America, influencing the course of the post-US Af-Pak world and creating a secure environment in the Indian Ocean to the south and the central Asiatic republics to the north.

Can a putative Modi government achieve these objectives? The West and sections of its media would appear to hope not. Strong Indian leadership is anathema to its historical agenda which favours a geopolitically accommodative status quo.

That status quo is about to be demolished by an outsider. Modi will not give Western governments – or its media – the deference they have long taken for granted in the incestuous power warrens of Lutyens’ Delhi

The West and Modi by Head On : Minhaz Merchant's blog-The Times Of India
 
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