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Stalin 'dealt with' Netaji on London’s request

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Sources claim that Subhas Chandra Bose’s ‘aircraft landed safely in a Manchurian airbase’ and that Soviet troops flew him to Moscow.


MADHAV NALAPAT New Delhi | 11th Apr 2015
The disclosure that members of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's family were snooped upon for two decades has given rise to the conclusion that Government of India was worried about the family coming across evidence that he was alive, or later about the circumstances of his death. In fact, according to sources in Delhi, "The fear was that the family may discover what actually happened to Netaji." And what was this? In this context, experts dealing in matters of state express surprise at the refusal of the NDA government to release any more data than previous Congress governments on the officially declared death on 18 August 1945 of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, allegedly in an aircraft crash in Taipei. While there are nearly 200 relevant documents in the possession of the Central authorities and the West Bengal government, two of the 41 documents asked for by various individuals and authorities have been released for public viewing. However, no visible effort seems to have been made to ferret out the response of British authorities to news of Bose's escape from Tokyo.

Sources familiar with the facts within India and Russia, claim privately that "the reason for such a refusal to disclose more information was not to protect the national interest, as much as it was to protect the reputation of high officials and politicians, who connived at a cover-up designed to protect the reputation of the British and Soviet governments in office at the time from public anger in India, besides global public opinion". According to these sources, "the situation (vis-a-vis) Netaji Subhas Bose was resolved in a conclusive way by Stalin", the inference being obvious when judged in the context of the fact that the leader of the Indian National Army was never seen or heard from after the date of the alleged "air crash".

Taiwanese authorities have stated to this correspondent that to the best of their information, there exist no records of any crash at the airbase in question, on the date specified as being the final day of the life of Netaji Subhas Bose. Instead, they say that witnesses to the flight confirmed that the aircraft took off in a normal fashion and was bound for an airfield in Manchuria which on that date (18 August 1945) was under the occupation of Soviet forces, which had invaded the territory in force after Emperor Hirohito of Japan announced the surrender of Japan on 15 August 1945, in order to spare his people further pain after the obliteration of Nagasaki and Hiroshima a short while previously by the dropping of atomic bombs.

Sources based in Russia (erstwhile Soviet Union) claim that "the aircraft landed safely in a Manchurian airbase" and that the former president of the Congress party was "taken custody of by Soviet troops and security personnel" and "flown to Moscow". According to them, Bose was taken away to a gulag within 17 months of internment in a security prison in Moscow, and passed away 11 years later. They add that the Soviet leaders, who came after Stalin, kept the circumstances of Netaji Subhas Bose's capture and passing secret "out of a desire to ensure good relations with India".

Only an examination of records in London and Moscow on the basis of an official request by the Narendra Modi government would reveal the truth, or otherwise, of this assertion (assuming that these be accurate and not doctored in a cover-up bid). But the same sources claim that Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin was asked by UK Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin through Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov to "ensure that Bose never returned to India and was never heard from again". According to them, "because of Bose's policy of collaboration with Germany under Hitler and Japan under Tojo, the Soviet dictator saw him as an enemy" and therefore presumably did not need much persuasion in carrying out the British request.

There are reports of the then ambassador of India to the USSR, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, having a meeting with Netaji Subhas Bose in a prison near Moscow soon after taking charge at the embassy in 1949. However, till his death, the scholar, who subsequently became President of India (in 1962), refused to comment on such reports. Interestingly, both Netaji's close associate Lt Col Habibur Rehman, as well as his widow Emilie, refused, to the close of their respective lives, to assent to the repeated requests of Government of India that he had died in an air crash and to affirm that the ashes brought back to India were Netaji's. Interestingly, although DNA matchings of these ashes could confirm whether they indeed were those of the disappeared leader, thus far this does not seem to have been attempted.

What is clear is that if Subhas Bose had returned to India, rather than either been killed in an air crash or gone permanently missing, he would have easily been the most popular leader in the country, and could quite possibly have displaced Mahatma Gandhi's favourite, Jawaharlal Nehru, from the effective leadership of the Congress party and consequently the Prime Ministership. Given the fact that Netaji attracted both Muslims and Hindus to his fold in like manner, there is a high probability that a Bose-led Congress could have checkmated the plans of both Whitehall as well as M.A. Jinnah to partition India. The INA was a completely secular force, with patriots from all communities joining out of admiration for Netaji. Certainly, his return to the political arena would have upset the plans of the British, who saw Bose as a formidable foe of their empire and indeed, the entire system of governance they had constructed over the centuries in India, a system retained almost in its entirety by Jawaharlal Nehru and his successors, and which continues to this day, making India in effect an administrative dictatorship, which holds periodic elections, bringing to office those wielding such authoritarian powers.

London would clearly have had ample incentive to prevent Subhas Bose from returning as a hero to India, and could be expected to act energetically to prevent such a possibility. Papers in London show that the increasing disaffection in the (British) Indian military was the most potent cause of the 1946 decision by Whitehall to partition and thereafter leave India, whereas official historians give 100% credit for the British withdrawal to the freedom struggle led by the Congress party. As for Bose, "where he erred was to assume that Stalin would welcome him because of his opposition to British rule in India". However, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose "forgot that the UK and the USSR were allies against the very individuals (Hitler and Tojo) that Bose had befriended and taken assistance from" for four years during a war to the finish for both sides. According to them, Nehru "was far more acceptable to the Communist Party of India and to the USSR, than Bose". Both would certainly have preferred the former to the latter as the future Prime Minister of an independent India.

Interestingly, the "official" line on the death of Subhas Bose was best enunciated in the Shah Nawaz Khan report. The former INA officer was given the task soon after remitting office as a Deputy Minister in the Nehru government. After the report, he was repeatedly made a minister, this time with full Cabinet rank, besides other ministerial-level posts in successive Congress governments.

Whether Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose died in the Taihoku crash or survived the flight and was made a prisoner by Joseph Stalin and finally "dealt with" such that he disappeared from view (either by execution or by transfer to a Siberian gulag where conditions roved fatal) can be known only after documents on the subject get released by Delhi, London and Moscow. Experts say that there is no justification for keeping secret papers dating seven decades back, as the impact of such material on current regimes and situations would be minimal. The BJP promised during the 2014 Lok Sabha campaign to release the Netaji papers, and there is still some anticipation that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will fulfil this pledge, especially because all the dramatis personae — Stalin, Attlee, Molotov, Bevin and others — are long gone, and therefore beyond harm at the disclosures.



Stalin 'dealt with' Netaji on London’s request
 
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One cannot help but marvel at the diabolic plan of the colonial power to plant a couple of wily greedy lawyers to carve up the country between themselves. It is possible to understand their compulsions, maybe even the frustrations of a major partner of the allied forces, flush with pride of victory in WWII, having to bear the embarrassment of retreating from India with the shadow of Subhas Bose looming large on the eastern border. For the same reason, I have no issue with Stalin if indeed he was responsible for Bose's final disappearance. But while it is easy for me to understand, and accept, however grudgingly, the action of colonial rulers and foreigners, I seethe with anger at betrayal by my own people. 60 odd years later, the incarnation of devil is still being worshipped as a God and foolish people are still trying to keep the dynasty in the seat of power. Was the socialist tilt in policy a product of conscious consideration, or a need to be in good terms with the Soviet Government to keep out dirty secrets? How different it could all have been!



Both Nehru and M.K.Gandhi were agents of the British. Both these people ensured that the British continued to rule India through their highly ineffective movements against the British. Whenever these lame movements would gather enough steam to topple the British, Gandhi would stop them under one pretext or the other. Gandhi and Nehru being agents of the British is far bigger secret than Nehru's complicity in Netaji's murder.


Quite plausible scenario as analysed by Madhav Nalapat. Seen from a British perspective, Nehru was the best choice for PM. Neither Netaji or Sardar Patel suited them. Mao Tse-tung even believed that Nehru was a British plant. The malicious and vicious witch hunt against Narendra Modi by pseudosecs and presstitutes may also have been encouraged and orchestrated by foreign powers inimical to a Netaji or Sardar type independent minded leader. The promotion of Arvind Kejriwal and AAP may also be part of this agenda.
 
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Somehow, the rumors on her being a honey trap seem blooody damn plausible!

she was indeed a honey trap, and I don't know this could be wrong.. but not just Rajiv gandhi but for many other prominent leaders too. Cleopatra of India.
 
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And when these Gandhis , nehru and jinnas took the credit for freedom our real hero who single handedly chased out the empire rotten in jail just because Gandhi's favourite Nehru will be thrown out of Indian politics ?

Now you know why Congress dint give a shot about Hindustan and our ideology but went ahead and looted our wealth , remained in power with DIVIDE AND RULE policy . Which once led to the partition of my country . :angry:

Am fuming ! If bose was there there would never been Pakistan or Bangladesh or any trust deficits between Hindus and Muslims like it is today. It's high time our minorities which peg at 300 millions Muslims alone must understand that Keeping them Poor and Uneducated is in the best interest of these secular parties .

Congress walo Bachhhh Ma kii ch:hitwall::butcher::cray:

Wait for presstitutes (add O if you want) will say congress did what is best for India to survive or to get freedom .
Shame on Gandhi when he said Muslims should have separate land but Hindus must live with Muslims . This is treason nothing less than that. Bloody hell
 
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And all the while Nehru was screwing Mountbatten's Lady. There have even been reports in Indian media (covered in this Forum too) that Nehru was at the same time doing it to the Lord also, he having become gay during his illustrious Navy career!!!
 
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And all the while Nehru was screwing Mountbatten's Lady. There have even been reports in Indian media (covered in this Forum too) that Nehru was at the same time doing it to the Lord also, he having become gay during his illustrious Navy career!!!

Pyar karnewaale, pyar hi karenge.
Jalnewaale chahe, jal jal marenge.
 
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BYLINE
M.J. AKBAR
www.sunday-guardian.com/profile/m-j-akbar

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Veteran journalist M.J Akbar is the founder of The Sunday Guardian.

If: The chasm between dead and missing
The British were implacably hostile to Bose. The Congress was amenable; Subhas Bose was not.

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ntelligence agencies keep their secrets well because they are intelligent as well as secretive. Governments keep files classified for three or five decades because they wait till both the principal personae and the issues are dead. On a very, very few occasions, documents boomerang. They wake up the dead. Subhas Chandra Bose has become the ghost at Macbeth's banquet, a haunting reminder that power was once purchased at a price.

From the moment news filtered through the war haze that the plane carrying Bose, charismatic leader of the Indian National Army, had crashed in Taipei on 18 August 1945, his fate has been wrapped in alternative narratives best described in two words: "dead" and "disappeared". The first was the preferred conclusion of the establishment; the second was the view of the people of India. If we want to understand why there was such a dramatic conflict over interpretation of an event, we must appreciate what the establishment of 1945 represented.

The crash took place just three days after Japan surrendered, and the United Nations [which was the formal name of the Allies led by America, Soviet Union and Britain] could formally claim victory over the Axis powers, led by Germany, Japan and Italy. India, under the British Raj, was an Ally, but a bit diluted, since Gandhi withdrew Congress support to the war effort on the grounds that the people of India had not been consulted. But the legitimate government of India, the British Raj, took the Indian armed services, along with forces of the princely states, to war. The Indian Army fought in Africa against the Germans, and in south-east Asia against Japan. Its formal opposition notwithstanding, Congress did not try to sabotage the British war effort by instigating any revolt in the armed forces. The man who did so was Bose, who had broken from Gandhi and Congress in 1939.

Bose had captured the imagination of Indians, particularly the young, with his extraordinary escape from Calcutta in 1941, his romantic, dangerous land journey from Bengal to Berlin via Afghanistan and Central Asia, his landmark meetings with Axis supremos, his secret submarine trip to Japan, and then his unprecedented mobilisation of fighting units from Indian Army officers and soldiers held as prisoners-of-war by Japan. Nothing enraged the British, still haunted by memories of 1857, more than this "mutiny". But this was more than sentiment. The Raj knew that it rested on the loyalty of the British Indian Army. If this loyalty cracked, the Raj would not hold. And without India the empire would disintegrate.

The Bose impact was evident in the naval mutiny in Bombay just after the war. That began the countdown. Bose and his INA may have lost the war, but they had won a much larger victory worth its own golden chapter. Bose was the martial hero that India had not seen for a century. There were spontaneous mass uprisings when in 1946 the British put INA officers on trial for treason. For Indians, they were martyrs, not traitors.

The British prepared to leave India, but they still had plans for the India they would leave behind. An interesting collusion of political forces had one objective in common: the absence of Bose.

The British were implacably hostile to Bose. The Congress was amenable; Bose was not. The Muslim League did not want Bose, because the inspirational manner in which Bose soldered Hindu-Muslim-Sikh unity in INA was an obvious template for the India he wanted. Bose criticised Jinnah and the possibility of Pakistan bitterly in his radio broadcasts from south east Asia. With Bose in India, partition would have had a passionate opponent. Congress did not want Bose back for obvious reasons: he would be a claimant for power that the party, and its leader, Jawaharlal Nehru wanted for themselves.

Why would Nehru have continued surveillance on the Bose family if he was certain that Bose was dead? Why did Nehru panic on a visit to Japan in 1957, as documents prove?

If Bose survived, then where was he taken, and when and where exactly did he die? We do not know the truth. All we have is the official explanation that truth will impair relations with friendly nations. One such nation is certainly Britain, since IB under Nehru collaborated with Britain's intelligence agency against Bose. The whisper is that the second nation was Stalin's Soviet Union, a British ally in 1945. Stalin was, apparently, sold the pup that Bose was an unrepentant fascist. However, we cannot be certain until we know more from the still secret files.

The political calculus is simpler. Bose was eight years younger than Nehru; he had time on his side. He, or his party, would have won power in Bengal and Orissa by 1952. Bose would have magnetised an opposition alliance at the national level, whittled Congress in 1957 and routed it in the 1962 general elections. Would China have then attacked India? We cannot say. What is indisputable is that free India's history would have been a different story.
 
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There are many points which has to be keep in mind regarding the events during Second world war.

Balance of power has changed now and thats why all these issues are being open in front of the people.
 
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What Stalin did, he did as a dictator and what he thought good for his country. But what Nehru-Gandhi family did is betrayal.
 
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she was indeed a honey trap, and I don't know this could be wrong.. but not just Rajiv gandhi but for many other prominent leaders too. Cleopatra of India.

Come on , Dont use such terms.

Today's picture.

The President, Shri Pranab Mukherjee, the Vice President, Shri Mohd. Hamid Ansari, the Union Home Minister, Shri Rajnath Singh, the former Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh and other dignitaries paid tributes to Babasaheb Dr. B.R. Ambedkar on the occasion of his birth anniversary, at Parliament House, in New Delhi on April 14, 2015.
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