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The Hocus Pocus about Quad and AUKUS
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Saeed Naqvi | 26 Sep, 2021
Robert Blackwill, US ambassador at the time of anti-terror fireworks
over Afghanistan, had established a tradition of seating guests at lunch
around a circular table, where he grandly held forth, initiating a
discussion. "Imagine I am Henry Kissinger" would be one of his opening
gambits. An idea was tossed up. A discussion followed. The one who spoke
the most, ate the least, because all plates were removed in one swoop.
On
one such occasion, before soup was served, the ambassador announced
with considerable satisfaction that Pakistan's President Musharraf had
decided to join the global war on terror as the frontline state.
Seated
to my right the late Pranab Mukherjee, was agitated. He whispered his
anger to me. It was uncanny. What he whispered was exactly the question
shaping up in my mind. I raised my hand: "You are aware that New Delhi
had complained consistently about cross-border terrorism from Pakistan
particularly since 1989." Pranab Da (as Mukherjee was affectionately
addressed) completed my question in his typical arrangement of words:
"It is most worrying no doubt -- you now have Pakistan as the frontline
state in your war against terror?" pause. "They perpetrate terror
against this county."
Blackwill spoke volumes in two brief sentences:
"Musharraf
has joined us in our global war on terror. What you are talking about
is your old regional quarrel." Juxtapose this with the Quad-AUKUS
equation.
Atal Bihari Vajpayee, as Prime Minister, had hosted
President Bill Clinton for full five days in January 2000, just the
previous year. Clinton spent just five hours in Islamabad, mostly
chastising Musharraf for disrupting regional peace since Kargil. New
Delhi was in seventh heaven. Terms of endearment with Washington had
radically altered.
In a little over a year, had George W Bush,
reversed that equation? Pakistan was incorporated into the global war on
terror even as New Delhi cried foul. Pakistan was in the 'A' team
against terror; we were not.
Likewise, there is this idea of Quad
in which New Delhi is such an enthusiastic participant. Australians and
the Japanese did, frequently, vent their scepticism, invested as they
were in the Chinese economy. After the American debacle in Kabul,
however, Tokyo's misgivings on Quad were all over the Japanese media.
The haemorrhage had to be forestalled.
With the suddenness of
revelation came the announcement of AUKUS (Australia, UK, US), the
powerful military alliance in Indo-Pacific of which India alas, is not a
partner. So New Delhi is trying to pack content into an abruptly
devalued Quad. Did Prime Minister Narendra Modi's photograph with
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on the margins of the UNGA,
flatter New Delhi? Pardon my complexes, does not a leader wearing AUKUS
plus Quad badges dwarf the one with a frayed Quad pinned to the lapel? I
would not go as far as the wag who takes the uncharitable view that the
US takes India for granted exactly as secular political parties regard
the Muslim vote: where else can they go?
AUKUS must have been in
the works for some time but it was sprung upon the world when the US
felt the earth move from beneath its feet in Kabul. The furious response
from France only disguises anger in the EU which is talking of security
outside NATO. That AUKUS is a purely Anglophone grouping should not be a
surprise. Games have been played before to keep some clubs racially
segregated.
For instance, when the collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991 placed a question mark on the need for NATO, Margaret Thatcher,
then on a trip to Helsinki, was asked by a reporter: Now that the Soviet
threat has gone, what was the justification for Britain's nuclear
deterrent?
Thatcher shot back, "We still have a problem in the
Middle East." Thereafter, along with George Bush the senior, she began
to put together "a coalition of the willing" ostensibly to oust Saddam
Hussain from Kuwait. Saddam-in-Kuwait was the ignition point, not the
larger perspective against which Operation Desert Storm of 1991 was
designed.
Anglophone dominance of the world order since World War
II, faced a challenge. Soviet collapse had brought about a
reunification of Germany. This at a time when the Japanese economy was
booming. It was easy to raise the spectre of AXIS, without actually
mentioning the 'A' word.
France, always ready with its own
compass to navigate world affairs, initially dragged its feet on the
coalition led by US and UK. President Francoise Mitterrand was among the
last to join the "coalition of the willing". It was the biggest
military coalition since 1945 -- a grouping of 39 countries. Given their
obsession, Pundits may be interested to know that Pakistan was part of
that coalition.
As one who covered the story from Baghdad, I am
possibly the only Indian witness who can confirm that the show was run
exclusively by US and Britain. There were two separate press briefings,
for the US and British media by their respective spokesmen. French
journalists, like the lonesome me, were on the outside. It may be added
in parenthesis, that the British media on this occasion were the poor
cousins. From the terrace of the Al Rashied hotel, Peter Arnett of the
CNN inaugurated what came to be known as the global media. The war was
brought live into the world's drawing rooms. John Simpson of the BBC, by
comparison, cut a sorry figure, walking around with a satellite
telephone. It was only after being beaten by the CNN during Operation
Desert Storm that the BBC World Service TV was launched.
To
revert to AUKUS, yes, the French fury is understandable. Not only was a
$90 billion submarine order being stolen, but an Anglophone dominated
world order was being perpetuated. This is what infuriated President
Emmanuel Macron. It just so happens that the turn of events has also
provided Macron with an occasion to fall back on a de Gaulle style
nationalism just when his ratings are plummeting and all manner of
candidates are tossing their hats in the ring for the next elections.
(Saeed
Naqvi is a senior commentator on political and diplomatic issues. The
views expressed are personal. He can be reached on
saeednaqvi@hotmail.com)
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