In the Indian Union, is Satyameva Jayte?

Does truth always win?   Garga Chatterjee   BJP, the party of Indian Union Prime Minister Narendra Modi, recently held what it called its National Executive meeting. Here, Narendra Modi was lauded for a ‘peaceful’ solution to the Doklam stand-off over a China controlled Bhutanese claimed territory on which the Indian Union has no claims. It is important to look at how well BJP has been able to sell it as a ‘success’ according to its chest beating Hindi-Hindu-Hindustan male ideology to its core constituency and beyond, the beyond being non-Hindi upper-caste males.   Wrong side of history New Delhi wanted a face saving exit to a situation that was increasingly untenable. New Delhi hoped to manage the possible negative fallout of a climb down by using a domestic media management blitz, including claims about a rise in Delhi’s geopolitical status post ‘disengagement’. The shelf life of an Indo-China impasse is short, neither is that shelf life laden with political dividends, given that China is not a ‘Muslim country’ and hence, the ‘emotive’ appeal of such a stand-off is marginal in present day Indian nationalist discourse.   For its part, Beijing wanted to end this too without yielding much. China hosted the annual BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) grouping summit in Xiamen, the old southeastern Chinese city. The BRICS idea, a grouping that rules over half of the world population, like SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) is a forum China takes immense interest in, as it advances its clout in international forums that privilege the global South and not the white world.   New Delhi, with its ‘natural’ alliance now being aligned along with Washington and Tel Aviv, is clearly on the wrong side of history and geography and probably is the most unwilling member of the BRICS idea. But Indian Union Prime Minister Narendra Modi could have not gone to the BRICS summit and that would have done some damage to China’s aspiration to being the superpower that can bring the major stake-holders of the non-white world together. Thus, the deal happened. Narendra Modi attended the BRICS summit. Naturally, the settlement happened on the basis of the actual imbalance of power that exists between Beijing and New Delhi.   Indian Union’s Ministry of External Affairs has claimed in its press statement that “expeditious disengagement of border personnel at the face-off site at Doklam has been agreed to and is on-going.” This wording did not specify whether it was a mutual disengagement, that is, whether troops from both sides were ‘disengaging’ and what was the nature of ‘disengagement’.   Beijing stated that it was the Indian troops that were doing the disengagement. Beijing’s foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying clarified that the ‘disengagement’ was neither equal, nor mutual.   According to this, disengagement meant withdrawal of Indian troops and the verification of that withdrawal was done by China whose troops remain in the area. China’s statement has no reference to any stopping of road building exercises in the disputed region, which started the impasse in the first place. In short, Beijing remains there, New Delhi doesn’t.   As for road building, Beijing states, ‘we will take into consideration all relevant factors, including the weather, to make relevant construction plan in accordance with the situation on the ground.’ Terming the issue as ‘sensitive’, then Union Defence and Finance minister Arun Jaitley said ‘there is no need to make multiple statements’. That’s a way of saying that New Delhi will not protest Beijing’s claims made by its foreign ministry’s official spokesperson. This, in diplomatic circles, is a sign of looking away without acknowledging a truth that is mutually known. A question arises from the above sets of claims and facts – why cannot the Indian Union report the reality completely objectively to its citizens?   Axioms of state ideology The deep state of the Indian Union has a certain narrative about its foreign relations, especially those involving armed confrontations. Citizens of India grow up with this set of axioms. The text books, the state media, and much of even the private media and the state funded academia are engaged not only in reinforcing these axioms but actively creating newer forms of this narrative as new events unfold. What are some of these axioms? They can be summed up as follows.   Indian Union always minds its own business and does not poke its nose into other people’s business – it is others who do so and that is the start of all problems. Indian union reacts super forcefully but reacts only when perturbed first. Indian Union is surrounded by those who hate it because the haters are just bad and hateful people and the right kind of Indian citizens are not – the counter hate from the Indian Union is reaction, not action. Indian Union is confronting enemies who are cowards and only engage Delhi is unfair fights because in fair fights, tricolor will rule big time. On all border related issues, Indian Union is a victim and it’s version of claims on territory are the only true claims – all other facts on the ground are wrong or motivated by entities that are enemies of Mother India. And finally, though the Indian Union is technically a democratic republic, where power lies with the people and all institutions are subservient to people’s power, the Army cannot be questioned and its version of things is always right. Objectivity is near treason in that case – ‘our Army’, not ‘the Army’.   All of the above mentioned axioms of state ideology are obviously ludicrous unless one is happy to disengage all faculties of sovereign thought for oneself. Thus, one has to look at the recent Doklam/Donglang impasse between the Indian Union and the People’ Republic of China to figure out for oneself what is being fed to citizens of India in light of the axioms above.   What is shocking is that much of Delhi based media and the thought ecology that is created by it which permeates to a great extent to relatively more independent and non-Delhi-toeing non-Hindi-English media too who are generally too poor to do independent fact assessments.   There, reality becomes irrelevant, Ministry of Defence and English prime time talk shows become a proxy for facts on the ground. The result is a sense of cohesion among the media hooked class premised on opposition to some entity, in this case Beijing. When truth is the casualty in the aspiration to cohesion, the results are typically disastrous. The scheme is ironic too, in a republic whose primary official Sanskrit slogan is Satyameva Jayte (Truth always wins).