NAM in a tripolar world

Return of Cold War era

  • Cold War is breaking out again. The United States has identified both China and Russia as adversaries, whose leaders, Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, are strong and determined to stand up to a faltering Donald Trump, who is desperately clinging on to doctrines of ultra nationalism and nuclear hegemony.
  • Putin has just announced that Russia has invincible doomsday machines like an underwater drone armed with a nuclear warhead powerful enough to sweep away coastal facilities, aircraft carriers and a hypersonic vehicle impossible to intercept as it flies in a cloud of plasma like a meteorite.
  • Cuba is in the dog house again and the axis of evil has emerged once again under Iran’s leadership. This time it is a three-cornered Cold War, without any corner having committed countries to act together as military allies.
  • Potential allies are hedging, with no viable grouping to protect the interests of the weak and the poor.

 

What is the role of NAM now?

  • If the Cold War is here in a new form, can a reincarnation of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) be far behind?
  • NAM is anathema today even to those who helped shape it and revelled in it for years. India was one of its leaders.
  • India had a stake in its integrity and India toiled tirelessly to keep it on the middle road, not to be hijacked by Cuba to the left or Singapore to the right.
  • We fought to keep Egypt within it when every Arab country wanted it to be ousted in 1979 after the Camp David agreements.
  • Indira Gandhi risked a bear hug from Fidel Castro as she took the NAM gavel to save it from the uncertain leadership of Iraq.
  • Had it not been for India, NAM would have been wound up at a ministerial meeting in Ghana in 1991 soon after the collapse of the Berlin Wall. It was characterised as the last gasp of the old style radicals.
  • India argued vehemently against those who felt that NAM had outlived its utility. Since the essence of nonalignment was freedom of thought and action, India insisted that it was valid whether there was one bloc or no bloc.
  • Even while building alliances with others, we availed of the NAM umbrella to promote our national strategies when it suited us. The very lack of homogeneity and unity in NAM enhanced its utility for us.
  • One forum where we effectively used the NAM constituency was the Working Group on UN Reform, where we blocked an effort by the U.S. and others to add Germany and Japan as permanent members and close the doors for further expansion.

 

NAM 2.0 : A failed effort

  • An effort was made in 2012 to craft a ‘Nonalignment 2.0’ in the context of the new global situation, India’s growing importance and the rivalry between the U.S. and China.
  • The report moved the concept of nonalignment away from its origins. It reiterated that India needed to move quickly to extend its global role and influence.
  • But the authors said India’s big challenge would be to aim at not just being powerful but to set new standards for what the powerful must do.
  • India’s legitimacy in the world will come from its ability to stand for the highest human and universal values and at the global level. India must remain true to its aspiration of creating a new and alternative universality.
  • In a situation where the world is no longer bifurcated between two dominant powers, nonalignment today will require managing complicated coalitions and opportunities in an environment that is not structurally settled.
  • The policy of strategic autonomy recommended that India should not take sides in the rivalry between China and the U.S. The report emphasised that for its strategic and foreign policy to be successful, India must sustain domestic economic growth, social inclusion and democracy.

 

Where we stand today

  • Into the second half of his term, Mr. Modi’s balance sheet shows an altogether different scenario. As a close defence partner of the U.S. and a member of the “Quadrilateral”, India is right in the U.S. camp.
  • As the baton of the orchestra passed into the hands of a wayward conductor, the new symphony in India-U.S. relations promised in 2016 has not quite materialised.
  • Both China and Russia, which have been identified as adversaries in the U.S. world view, have their problems with India.
  • Doklam and the Maldives have shown that China is in no mood for a compromise. In fact, China has attributed the increase of its defence budget to the formation of the Quadrilateral, which is being seen as a direct threat to China.
  • An obvious way is to revive NAM by breathing new life into it and making it fit to deal with the new norm. But it has baggage, which may be difficult to unload.
  • A movement conceived in the context of a bipolar world may not suit a tripolar world, which could become a multipolar world. A partnership of near equals like IBSA (India, Brazil and South Africa) with similar interests without any ideological conflict is probably the best model to follow.
  • Something on the lines of the G-15 organised by India and like-minded countries some years ago could be put together with the objective of dealing with the kind of issues identified by Mr. Modi at Davos — climate change, terrorism and protectionism.
  • The members may have links with the U.S., China and Russia, but should be able to work together without the undue influence of the three.
  • Given the present impasse in international relations with little leeway for game-changing initiatives, India will do well to move away from being a camp follower of one of the emerging poles to create our own fourth pole.

 

Source:

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-opinion/a-new-nam-for-the-new-norm/article22988542.ece

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