Joe Shearer
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2009
- Messages
- 27,493
- Reaction score
- 162
- Country
- Location
What appears to be the rise of hardline hindutva rhetoric vis-a-vis strategic posture is only the latest manifestation of a deep seated frustration of the Indian society and political-bureaucratic-military centres of power, a frustration that has been nearly 30 years in the making. What has changed, particularly after 26/11 is the the pubic appetite for this frustration, and the inexoric need to find a solution to this deadlock. BJP offered a solution, or pretended to, and people bought it, hook line and sinker.
The political-bureaucratic -military class for a long time had no real solutions, other than prostrate and call for talks, no matter what Pakistan did or was perceived to be doing and getting away with scott free. Manmohan Singh as PM prostrating and whining that India has no option but to talk, right after Mumbai and other supposed provocations. When you are unable to offer solutions, no matter how pragmatic you are and no matter how many good intentions you might have, your thinking and philosophy will be replaced by another that offers or pretends to offer solutions. Thats exactly what is happening, at the civilian level and upwards to the political-military circles.
The perception (right or wrong) was that the only party gaining from Indian military-political strategic sanity was Pakistan and its professed unpredictability, and that Indian sanity was delivering a raw deal for India. It was natural it would be under pressure to be upended, by a more hawkish doctrine.
For all intents and purposes, we are following Pakistan's footsteps. Pakistan, wittingly or not, was responsible for this change in thinking within India.
At first blush, I can only agree on the nature of the appetite. On the other hand, a possible reading of the need being anorexic is tempting, though not entirely devoid of malice. Your control over your spell-checker seems to be as drifting as you have deemed the military-bureaucratic policy towards Pakistan to be.
On a serious note, @Oscar spelt out the unfolding scenario with his customary relentless rationality. I am interpreting his remarks freely hereafter; any false notes are entirely my own misreading of his very subtle political dissection.
He depicts a former heterogeneoous situation on the one side, with rational and progressive forces in a minority muffled by a fearful majority, concealing its fear as bravely as it could, in the face of mighty odds, but with a further concealed element of extreme and suicidal intent awaiting an opportunity to do harm, thoughtless of the consequences to their own nation of such harm. On the other side, he pointed to what you have spoken of with such scathing contempt, a sane and rational - and stable - entity not given to mad adventures. He, however, has no contempt for it; instead, there is a slight, scarcely detectable wistful note. Having a sane opponent is no bad thing, not at all.
He then points to the replacement of a predictable Indian sanity by an unpredictable propensity to lash out, but also points out that the lashing out is singularly ineffective; it merely serves to give the concealed element an excuse to come out of hiding and to brandish its savagery before a panic-stricken multitude ready to believe that the end of the world is nigh. What the BJP's braggadocio brings out is the worst of the Pakistani state, the lunatic fringe. The strutting about looking, sounding and dressing warlike has no effect except to justify to every insecure individual on the other side their apocalyptic vision.
Where will this end?
On a final, pessimistic note, you do realise that the earlier situation has not changed, not one little bit: you have made the matter simple and clear by saying
For all intents and purposes, we are following Pakistan's footsteps. Pakistan, wittingly or not, was responsible for this change in thinking within India.
So what has changed? What Pakistan's establishment did pushed our buttons then; what they are doing is pushing our buttons now.
Last edited: