India's Tryst with Destiny
India could
offer the world a signal electoral drama next spring, with geopolitical
repercussions for the whole Eurasian rimland. Narendra Modi, the charismatic
chief minister of Gujarat in northwestern India, will likely run for prime
minister against Rahul Gandhi, the great-grandson of the political forefather
of India's modern republic, Jawaharlal Nehru.
Modi, though considerably older than Gandhi,
represents an efficient, new style politics that is nationalistic and
unapologetically abrasive, and thus comfortable with civilizational tension.
The youthful Gandhi, through his name, embodies an old-style politics that,
while portrayed as corrupt and complacent, is also universalist. Modi has many
enemies yet promises to shake things up in a country with vast potential but
stuck in the economic and institutional doldrums. Gandhi, who has far less
experience and is half-Italian, is actually the less-disruptive, more
conservative choice. His mother, Sonia Gandhi, is the real authority within the
Congress party. If Congress wins in 2014, his rise to the premiership is not
expected to change the balance of power within his party.
Modi presently represents the Hindu nationalist
BJP, or Bharatiya Janata Party (Indian People's Party). But even within the BJP
he is seen as edgy and controversial. The very word "Modi" in India
connotes the shocking events of February 2002 in Gujarat, when Modi, it is
alleged, played a critical role as a Hindu chief minister in a pogrom that
killed 2,000 Muslims, led to 400 rapes of Muslim women, and left 200,000
homeless. Modi has never officially apologized or offered a detailed
explanation for those events. And yet throughout four terms as chief minister
he has demonstrated a financial probity and a machine-like bureaucratic
dynamism that has made Gujarat a leader within India for economic development,
so much so that Muslims along with many others have flocked to Modi's Gujarat
in search of jobs.
Modi is a hypnotic orator who, as one corporate
executive after another has said, offers the best model of governance in a
country rife with corruption and red tape. His actions in February 2002 have
led him to be compared with Adolf Hitler, while his obsession with management
details have led him to be compared with Lee Kuan Yew. Of course, Modi is
neither. He is a new kind of hybrid politician: both media-savvy and manifestly
ambitious. He is the first authentically charismatic Indian politician since
Indira Gandhi -- the late grandmother of his opponent in next spring's
election.
Rahul Gandhi is an empty vessel compared to
Modi. Gandhi, despite being educated at elite schools, is close to ultimate
power only because of his family name and connections, not because he is
particularly brilliant. Compared to Modi, who rose on his own from truly humble
beginnings, there is simply little original one can say about Gandhi. The mere
election of his Congress Party next spring, it is alleged by some, will cement
nepotism and corruption. The status quo will simply have a better chance to
survive with the fourth generation of the founding political family, whereas
Modi offers more of a break with the past, for better or for worse.
In fact, this upcoming election will reveal how
India suffers from a profound leadership vacuum: the only selection appears to
be between someone tainted by inter-communal mass violence and someone who has
essentially inherited his position by way of his
Just as the political system could offer a stark
choice to Indian voters, India, too, is
at a crossroads. Just consider the geopolitical environment:
This will be the first general election in a
decade to take place at a time of slower economic growth. It will be the first
election since nearby Sri Lanka has
ended its civil war and has been demonstrably leaning toward China, thereby
threatening the balance of power in South Asia. Meanwhile, American troops will
be drawing down in large numbers in Afghanistan -- a
place that throughout history has functionally been part of the Subcontinent. A
rapprochement may loom between Iran and the United States.
Bangladesh on India's northeastern border is in quasi-chaos, as is Nepal on
India's northern frontier. Myanmar, also bordering India in the east, may be
slowly disintegrating into religious and ethnic regions. China is in the early
stages of a tumultuous economic and social transition. Japan is more
nationalistic than in decades and is poised to become a natural ally of India
balancing against China. Finally, there is Pakistan, India's
fundamental nemesis, which, though in the hands of a relatively capable and
experienced prime minister, is institutionally and strategically ever more
fragile. Indeed, the Greater Subcontinent is in flux, and in this turbulent
political landscape, India's new prime minister in 2014 will have increasingly
less room for miscalculations. Both innovation and maturity will be required.
Gandhi will likely play it safe and may confuse
conciliations with strategy. His father, Rajiv, was assassinated by Tamil
extremists, and, according to a Wikileaks cable, Rahul believes the growth of
radicalized Hindu groups is a greater threat to India than Islamic extremists.
Remember that the Congress Party (at least compared to the BJP) relies on
Muslims and other minorities for its power base. Moderation, therefore, is
central to Rahul's identity. He will likely rely on his advisers and the elite
foreign policy bureaucracy for direction. In pursuing economic reform, he will
be hampered by Congress' populist, pseudo-socialist governing philosophy and
historical identity, forged in the independence struggle against the British.
Modi, on the other hand, will attempt to be his
own man -- a force of nature overriding the bureaucracy and the New Delhi
nomenklatura. He will likely be pro-business with an ideological passion,
wanting to eviscerate as much red tape as possible from the debilitating Indian
system. For the sake of further developing lucrative bilateral trade he will be
pro-China, even as he will be pro-military and move closer to Japan and Australia in order
to balance against China. He will want to move closer to Iran in order to
provocatively balance against Pakistan (without ruling out meaningful
negotiations with the latter). And while Modi currently cannot enter the United
States because of human rights concerns stemming from the events of February
2002, it is easy to see him unapologetically court the United States as a
strategic ally -- something the Indian political establishment has been
unofficially willing to do, while wanting to deny it all the same. In sum, Modi
will try to craft a more naked, assertive, power-oriented foreign policy to go
hand-in-hand with his business-friendly agenda.
If Modi succeeds, he will move India boldly out
of the post-colonial Nehruvian era defined by an elite class friendly to
socialism and indifferent to bureaucracy, however less and less so. But Modi is
not likely to succeed: running India from New Delhi is not like running Gujarat
from Gandhinagar. India is simply a vast assemblage of far-flung states with
their own power structures and regional identities. The Indian system -- an
upshot of India's geography -- is not friendly to dynamic change-agents with
centralizing, dictatorial tendencies like Modi.
More likely is that whoever is elected will be
defined by crises that impinge on India from Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
China, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, combined with the usual drumroll of internal
unrest. For reforming such a teeming, unruly, and diverse country like India is
hard: Modi will certainly try; Gandhi might not even do that.
Robert D. Kaplan is Chief
Geopolitical Analyst at Stratfor, a
geopolitical analysis firm, and author of the bestselling book The Revenge of Geography.
Reprinted with permission. Michael Nayebi-Oskoui is a Stratfor analyst.
Here's a wiki link on the country of India: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India
Here's a wiki link on the country of India: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India
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