In
1971, a Genocide Took Place, Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger Did Nothing intentionally.The lost h
Among
the many bizarre White House conversations between President Richard Nixon and
his national security adviser Henry Kissinger that Gary Bass cites in his
devastating account of America’s role in the creation of Bangladesh, a
particularly wrenching one took place in April 1971, a little over two weeks
into an onslaught by the Pakistani military upon its own citizens.
Sparking the Nixon-Kissinger exchange
was an indignant diplomat named Archer Blood, the U. S. consul general in
Dacca, the capital of Pakistan’s eastern half. For a fortnight, Blood had been
cabling Washington details, meticulously gathered by his staff, of massacres
and expulsions that had left the Bengali city “a ghost town.” Kissinger had
downplayed the details of these reports to the president, and made clear to his
aides that they should ignore the dispatches, even as three fourths of Dacca’s
population fled for their lives.
On April 6, disgusted by Washington’s
silence, Blood and his staff transmitted to their superiors in Washington a
collectively authored telegram registering official disagreement with American
policy: the “Blood telegram” of Bass’s title. It used the word “genocide” to
describe the killings in Bengal, which were targeting the Bengalis—and
specifically the Hindus among them—of East Pakistan. It was, Bass writes, “as
scorching a cable as could be imagined” and “probably the most blistering
denunciation of U. S. foreign policy ever sent by its own diplomats.” The
five-page cable catalogued the “moral bankruptcy” of America’s Pakistan policy
in failing to denounce the atrocities, in condoning the suppression of
democracy, and in continuing to support and to arm the fast-dissolving
country’s military leader.
Less than a week later, Nixon and
Kissinger met in the Oval Office to try to convince themselves of the
rightness of their dedication to that military leader, General Yahya Khan. He
was a Sandhurst-trained officer straight out of central casting, complete with
swagger stick, strut, and slick-backed hair. Nixon admired him and considered
him a friend. Kissinger privately judged him a moron, but saw in him a
supremely useful instrument to pursue America’s geopolitical interests. Now, as
Yahya pressed his American-equipped army into service against Pakistan’s
Bengali population, he was becoming an awkward problem for his Washington
backers. The contents of Blood’s denunciatory cable had spread fast, winning
supporters within the State Department and reaching the press and Democratic
leaders. (Blood had taken care to give the telegram a low classification—merely
“Confidential.”)
Infuriated by Blood’s insubordination
and anxious that his message could derail their Pakistan policy, Nixon and
Kissinger stiffened their commitment to Yahya. Biafra, Nixon suggested to
Kissinger, had been worse than what was happening in East Pakistan—but the
United States had not intervened there. Would it not be moral hypocrisy to
intervene in Bengal? Or was Biafra’s neglect justified because it had fewer
people? And for that matter, Nixon mused (maybe forgetting that his adviser’s
own family had fled Nazi Germany), could it be said that because “there weren’t
very many Jews in Germany” perhaps it was “therefore not immoral for Hitler to
kill them?”
Even the most morally impaired
politicians may sometimes strain toward ethical epiphanies. Through the fog of
his geopolitical ambition, Nixon could see that what was happening in East
Pakistan bore comparison with Biafra and the Holocaust. Unfortunately his
moment of clarity was fleeting. It is the usual, sad fate of most chroniclers
of political lives to chart the downward slope from moral perspective and
insight into the arid plain of expediency and “realism.” And so the Nixonian
moral flicker was quickly extinguished by Kissinger, ever a scourge to
inexpedient thoughts. There was no way the United States should put a squeeze
on Yahya, Kissinger urged: it would result in leftist extremists coming to rule
in Bengal, and weaken the fight against Soviet communism. And there were other,
still secret, strategic calculations having to do with China to be factored in.
Besides, he argued of intervention, “[i]t’s a disaster. No one else is doing
it.” Nixon was already convinced. “I think that if we get in the middle of all
this,” he said, “it’s a hell of a mistake.”
In fact, the United States had been
intervening squarely in the middle of Pakistan’s affairs from the early years
of that country’s inception, with Nixon himself a driver of the American
policy. As Eisenhower’s vice president, he visited Pakistan in 1953 and
returned convinced that Pakistan could aid America’s efforts to contain
communist expansionism. “Pakistan is a country I would like to do everything
for,” Nixon said on his return home. Less than six months later, the
administration entered into a military pact that over the next decade delivered
to Pakistan some $2 billion worth of gleaming American military equipment.
Nixon would honor his commitment to Pakistan to the tawdry end of his public
life.
It is customary today for Washington
officials and foreign-policy experts to rue the fact that, despite many
billions of military and economic aid to Pakistan, the United States can do
little to shape that country’s policies. That was not the case in the Nixon
years. By the time Nixon became president, in 1969, Pakistan’s dependency on
American aid and military supplies was deep and appetitive. Six months before
Yahya Khan ordered his military onto the streets in East Pakistan, he had
visited Nixon to secure promises of more weaponry—jets and bombers, tanks and
armored vehicles. “We will try to be as helpful as we can,” Nixon assured the
general.
American solicitude for Pakistan’s
military regime would, in 1971, culminate in the support of the most violent
and disruptive year in South Asia’s history, leaving hundreds of thousands dead
and some ten million displaced—an upheaval even greater than the Partition of
1947, when the British scuttled out of India. The violence of 1971 transformed
and scarred the Indian subcontinent. The drawn-out bloody birth of Bangladesh
decimated the country’s intellectual and institutional capital as well as its
economy, and it has never fully recovered. It was India that had to intervene
to secure that birth, in a war that left Pakistan defeated and traumatized.
Pakistan’s leaders poured their country’s resources into a nuclear program and
into the military, which thereafter turned to insurgents and terrorists to
instigate proxy wars designed “to bleed India by a thousand cuts.”
Pervez Musharraf, a young officer in
the Pakistani army in 1971, would later recall his tears when hearing of his
country’s defeat—a humiliation that drove his subsequent career, leading him as
Pakistan’s military commander to instigate in 1999 a military operation against
India in the high mountains of Kargil, which nearly erupted into a nuclear
crisis. For India, the glow of triumph was short-lived. It had to confront a Pakistan
cut free from the moderating, syncretic religions of Bengal, and moving rapidly
to Islamicize in a bid to transform itself from a South Asian country into a
Middle Eastern one; and India’s relations with Bangladesh fast cooled. As for
the United States, it would henceforth be mistrusted by all in the region—by
India, by Bangladesh, and by Pakistan, too, which blamed its ally for the
breakup of the country.
"THE
MONTHS OF KILLING AND FLEEING WERE SUSTAINED BY SCHEMES RADIATING OUT FROM
WASHINGTON."
Across South Asia, memories of 1971
remain vivid, though what happened has not received sufficient attention in the
West. It was far more than merely a regional sideshow. The months of killing
and fleeing were sustained by schemes radiating out from Washington, and the
outcome had regional and even global effects. Yet what actually happened has
remained elusive. In the subcontinent itself, the accounts of the convulsion
have been partisan and heavily nationalist, fixed on the inevitability of
Pakistan’s breakup or of Bangladesh’s birth. The wider story of the
exigencies—at once global and personal—that engendered what Bass calls
“one of the worst moments of moral blindness in U. S. foreign policy” has
barely been understood or told.
America’s lack of interest in what
happened, Bass argues, is a direct result of Nixon’s and Kissinger’s
concentrated efforts to “whitewash” Bangladesh out of their legacy, scattering
“a farrago of distortions, half-truths, and outright lies about their policy
toward the Bengali atrocities.” It was part of Nixon’s post-Watergate efforts
to sanitize his reputation by stressing his foreign-policy achievements. That
required burying his role in the Bangladesh crisis. But now we have two
excellent and uncannily complementary books about the crucible of 1971. Bass, a
historian at Princeton, has written an account—learned, riveting, and
eviscerating—of the delusions and the deceptions of Nixon and Kissinger.
Steeped in the forensic skills of a professional academic historian, he also
possesses the imaginative energies of a classical moralist, and he tells the
story of the choices and the decisions that led to the slaughter in Bengal—“one
of the cardinal moral challenges of recent history”—appropriately as a moral
saga. Srinath Raghavan, a former Indian army officer who researches and teaches
in Delhi and in London, takes a more dispassionate approach. His superb
analysis of the global intricacies of 1971 uses that wider lens with great
precision to explain the breakup of Pakistan more convincingly than any
preceding account.
Bass and Raghavan each draw on an
impressive array of far-flung and hitherto untapped sources as they investigate
the strategic ambitions, the moral pressures, the judgments of risk, and the
sheer brutality of that pivotal year. They show how the most powerful democracy
in the world could become complicit in a mass slaughter, and how in turn
India—the world’s largest democracy but also one of its poorest and militarily
weakest—was pushed to intervene to stop the slaughter.
For Raghavan, the origins of the
Bangladesh crisis lie in the peculiarities of Pakistan and the intricacies of
its politics. It is one of Raghavan’s consistent and convincing arguments that,
contrary to retrospective nationalist narratives, there was nothing inevitable
about the fact that Pakistan would break violently in half less than a quarter
of a century after its creation.
Certainly,
from its inception there was something forced about the Pakistan idea. InMuslim Zion,
a remarkable book published earlier this year, the Oxford historian Faisal
Devji has persuasively interpreted Jinnah’s view of Pakistan as an anti-territorial,
universalistic conception of the nation. Summoning Pakistan into existence was
an act of pure will that required the rejection of history, soil, and
culture—all the usual grounds on which to claim nationhood, and which for
Jinnah subverted the unity he claimed for India’s Muslims. Thus to Jinnah, the
founder of the Pakistani state, it mattered little that the nation he ended up
with consisted of two culturally disparate territories separated by a thousand
miles. It meant that, in Pakistan, as Devji puts it, the “state has from the
very beginning been deeply suspicious of ‘provincialism,’ the culture and
characteristics of those who actually constituted the majority of its citizens,
preferring instead to unite them under Islam as a universal idea having little
to do with anything given to a people either by history or geography.”
Provincialism, in the sense of
regional belonging, was of course inherent in Pakistan. Its peoples were
assembled from different regional cultures, even if the state and national idea
could not abide that fact. Yet contrary to Jinnah’s fears, strong provincial
identities might well have been accommodated within a federal and democratic
frame. Pakistan’s leaders need only have looked next door to the example of
India—a country whose founders on the whole saw that a nation’s internal
diversity might also be its distinctive strength.
In Pakistan, however, the fear of
provincialism, or of what we might more usefully call ethnic pluralism,
implanted a dual resistance to federalism and to democracy, and created a
fundamental oddity in the distribution of political power. Government control
was in the grip of the Punjabi elite in the west, but the majority of the
country’s population was in the east—one main reason for the elite’s aversion
to democracy, which it managed to avoid for the first two decades of the
country’s existence.
Pressures for democratic elections
built during the late 1960s, stoked by the fires of student radicalism across
the world. The military regime, led by General Ayub Khan, the founder of
Pakistan’s dynasty of generals and a firm ally of the United States, was
confronted in East Pakistan by the Awami League, a middle-class party led by
the professorial-looking, pipe-smoking Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. The values of the
Awami League were stolid rather than radical, but the student movement in the
east was pressing for greater Bengali autonomy. Amid youth protests and general
strikes, Ayub Khan was replaced by Yahya Khan, who was equipped (as Raghavan
has it) “with an uncluttered—some would say vacant—mind.” Yahya hoped that he
could fudge military rule into a passable constitutional version, and agreed to
elections for a national assembly empowered to make a new constitution for
Pakistan.
Just weeks before the elections,
though, one of the Bay of Bengal’s seasonal cyclones ripped across the eastern
province, killing hundreds of thousands. (State Department estimates were of
500,000 dead.) The response of the Yahya government was inert. The general
turned up to inspect the destruction in full military regalia, reeking of
alcohol, and promptly fled back to West Pakistan, leaving it to international
agencies to provide assistance. Bass quotes an American diplomat serving in
Dacca at the time: “The cyclone was the real reason for the final break”
between the two provinces. An exaggeration, no doubt: but when East Pakistan
went to the polls three weeks later, Mujib’s Awami League was swept to an
overall majority in the national parliament. The result was an unprecedented shift
eastward of the balance of political power.
Yahya
was stunned. Desperate to contain what he feared would be demands for
independence, he turned to the victor of the elections in the west, the
populist Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, intending to play him off against Mujib. Bhutto
rose to the opportunity with a Jinnah-like argument: Mujib might represent the
Bengali majority, but since Punjab and Sindh were “bastions of power in
Pakistan,” Bhutto was himself the “sole representative of the people of West
Pakistan,” and so a power-sharing deal between the two leaders would have to be
struck. Mujib and his youthful enragéswould have none of it.
Over the next several months, as
Pakistanis struggled to figure out what democracy might mean for the habitual
allocation of power in their country, the situation was fluid. As Raghavan
argues, the political breakdown between Yahya and Mujib did not necessarily
entail the breakup of Pakistan. For a start, the United States might have
supported the democratic verdict of Pakistan’s first free elections. But it did
not. Yahya delayed calling the national assembly, promising to convene it on
March 25, while he and Bhutto feigned negotiations with Mujib. Washington’s
regional experts warned Nixon and Kissinger that, if Yahya did not accept the
electoral results and used force, violent secession in the east was likely. The
cables streaming in from the Dacca consulate, meanwhile, gave early indications
of a military buildup in advance of the March 25 deadline. Troops were being
airlifted into Dacca on flights disguised as civilian by Pakistan International
Airlines. A military crackdown, Archer Blood and his staff predicted,
would end in a “bloodbath.” They urged their government to threaten a stop to
economic aid. (A World Bank paper from 1971, cited by Raghavan, underlined
America’s considerable economic hold over Pakistan, and the policy leverage
this gave Washington.)
But Kissinger, evincing a concern for
the inviolability of national sovereignty not usually associated with his
policies, declared to the White House staff that it was not for the United
States to tell another state how to run its business. He advised his president
that “the best posture was to remain inactive and do nothing that Yahya might
find objectionable.” A little firmness, the argument went, would bring the
Bengalis back into line. Nixon himself believed Yahya to be a “responsible
leader” and the best bet against the secession of East Pakistan. The White
House refused to warn Yahya against the use of force.
Yahya,
reassured, appointed as governor of East Pakistan Lieutenant General Tikka
Khan, a brutal commander known as the “Butcher of Baluchistan” for his
suppression of an uprising there the previous year. Toward
the end of March, Yahya and Bhutto arrived in Dacca under heavy armed
protection, ostensibly to negotiate with Mujib. In fact Yahya and Tikka Khan
were devising a military plan against their own people. By March 25, street
protests in Dacca and elsewhere were into their third week. That day Yahya
departed for Karachi, leaving orders for Operation Searchlight to begin the
same night, assured that he had the backing of the one power that could have
stopped him.
Yahya and Tikka Khan had chosen their
targets with precision. Mujib and the Awami League leadership were arrested,
while troop columns led by U. S.-made M-24 tanks and armored carriers fanned
out across the university area and into Dacca’s densely packed old city, where
many Hindus lived. Professors, intellectuals, and students were massacred, as
were thousands of middle-class and poor Hindus. Across the city, gunfire and
artillery explosions were heard all that night and into the next day. Yahya
went on national radio to announce the imposition of martial law. Outbound
communications from the province were shut down, newspaper buildings were
attacked, and foreign journalists were rounded up and expelled. The Voice of
America news bulletins simply repeated Pakistani government press briefings.
But real news of the killings was getting out, as it tends to do.
Blood, a conscientious career
diplomat whom Bass describes as “unreservedly square,” considered it his duty
to keep his superiors informed. The American consulate in Dacca possessed a
secret wireless transmitter, which Blood and his staff used to send cables to
the State Department. They tried to count the dead (whom they noted were mainly
Hindu) on the streets; they reported evidence of bombing by the air force and
of tank and artillery shelling. Neither Bass nor Raghavan dwell on the
atrocities themselves, but the scale and the horror of the killings, rapes, and
expulsions are unmistakable. Some in Pakistan’s military were themselves
shocked by their own depravity. Lieutenant General Niazi, who succeeded Tikka
Khan as military commander in East Pakistan, and would later distance himself
from his military’s “scorched-earth policy,” remembered “a display of stark
cruelty, more merciless than the massacres ... by [Genghis] Khan ... or at
Jallianwala Bagh by the British General Dyer.” Even Nixon in his memoirs noted
the “almost unbelievable cruelty” of the fighting in East Pakistan. On April 6,
after witnessing it and documenting it for a fortnight, Blood and his staff
sent their cable.
Illustration by Ashley Mackenzie
Meanwhile, improbably, the indian
government was actively considering its options for intervention. Bass and
Raghavan provide the first authoritative accounts of the debates among Indian
decision-makers, as they weighed the pressures and risks of action to stop the
violence. Making deft use of limited Indian sources (both draw on the papers of
P. N. Haksar, a cerebral London School of Economics–trained diplomat whose
calculated leftism made him Indira Gandhi’s favorite adviser), Bass and
Raghavan delve into how a democratic state decides to intervene—in this case a
poor and militarily weak democratic state, with little international support,
having to act against a neighbor backed by the world’s most powerful state. And
they come to somewhat different conclusions.
Retrospective
Indian narratives have tended to overplay the clear intentions and the
decisiveness of Indian policy. The commander-in-chief of the Indian army,
General Sam Manekshaw, gave currency to the story that Indira Gandhi was
impatient for immediate action. He recounted being summoned to a Cabinet
meeting at which she demanded that the army make a move; he
claimed that he had to restrain her, on grounds of military underpreparedness.
Bass,
persuaded by this and other accounts, portrays Indira Gandhi as deciding early
for war, following from the beginning of April a path of escalation. But
Raghavan significantly complicates this view, detecting a more gradual Indian
drift to intervention. According to Raghavan, Indira Gandhi invited Manekshaw
to attend a Cabinet meeting not because she wanted to issue instructions for war,
but so that her colleagues could hear directly from him just how far from being
battle-ready the Indian military actually was. It is true that some key Indian
thinkers, such as K. Subrahmanyam, a senior bureaucrat and respected military
strategist (and father of the incoming Indian ambassador to Washington), argued
strongly for early military action. But Gandhi relied on the more circumspect
views of P. N. Haksar and of her military.
For Indira Gandhi, still finding her
political stride, it was her first big international crisis. Embroiled in
internal struggles for control over her own party, and facing secessionist
movements in India, she was wary of being seen as interfering in the internal
matters of another country, not least because the possibility of East
Pakistan’s secession might encourage breakaways in India. She was skeptical as
to whether other states would recognize an independent Bangladesh and felt that
any armed action by India would draw international disapproval. And she and her
advisers feared that involvement in the crisis would leave India vulnerable.
The Indians were aware that Pakistan’s American weaponry gave it an edge over
India, and that if India concentrated its forces on East Pakistan it would be
dangerously exposed on the western front. There was anxiety, too, that the
Chinese might use the opportunity to intervene on Pakistan’s side.
The prudential case against Indian
intervention, then, was strong. Ruling out war mobilization, Gandhi preferred
to give covert support for the Awami League’s guerrilla movement, the Mukti
Bahini (Liberation Army). But relations between Indian military trainers and
the Bengali fighters were tetchy: New Delhi doubted the competence of the
Bengali forces and was uncomfortable with the Awami League’s desire for
political control over recruitments.
Yet Indian political opinion and
public sentiment were moving ahead of their hesitant government, stirred by
reports of atrocities and by the surge of refugees into India. Already in May,
Indian officials were recording daily arrivals from East Pakistan of more than
100,000 people. By July, the number was seven million, and by the end of the
year the estimate was a staggering ten million. To reach India, the refugees
trekked through thick forests and, as the monsoons broke, torrential rains.
They ended up in squalid camps run by desperately under-resourced Indian
administrators. The economic cost was considerable. Raghavan cites Indian
estimates of some $576 million for maintaining eight million refugees for
six months, of which only $20 million in international relief had reached India
by late September. Virtually overnight, the refugee flow transformed the
demography of India’s poor northeastern states. The small state of Tripura,
with a population of 1.5 million, suddenly had to accommodate 900,000 refugees;
and villages of five thousand grew to shanty encampments of 300,000.
Particularly alarming to Indian
leaders was the realization that most of the refugees—more than 80 percent of
them—were Bengali Hindus. Government leaders worked hard to suppress this fact,
fearing that it would introduce an incendiary religious dimension to the crisis
and spread uncontainable conflict across the subcontinent. It was also becoming
apparent to the Indians that Pakistan was pursuing a policy of forced
expulsions, with no intention to take back its own citizens. In mid-May, Indira
Gandhi decided to tour the refugee areas to see the situation herself. One of
her closest advisors, P. N. Dhar, recalled that she “was so overwhelmed by the
scale of human misery that she could hardly speak.” On her return to Delhi, she
had decided: “We cannot let Pakistan continue this holocaust.”
What India could do to stop the
killing was doubly constrained. Its leaders were well aware of their country’s
limited economic and military capabilities; what they did not know was that
they were part of a geopolitical shadow play.
Nixon’s and Kissinger’s secret
pursuit of détente with China had fastened on Pakistan as the channel to China,
and, as Bass puts it, in that calculus “the Bengalis became collateral damage
for realigning the global balance of power.” Nixon and Kissinger deemed Yahya
essential for their China plans. In May, despite evidence of the continuing
carnage in East Pakistan, Kissinger pressed Robert McNamara, the president of
the World Bank, to provide sufficient international economic aid to Pakistan
for another six months—the time he reckoned Yahya needed to be kept in place to
secure Kissinger his meetings with Zhou Enlai and to steer the China policy to
success. Geostrategic success in one place was to become Kissinger’s alibi for
humanitarian failure in another place. But in truth the China breakthrough
extenuates nothing: as Bass and Raghavan each make clear, Pakistan was not the
only route available to the Americans to pursue their China goals. The United
States could have restrained Pakistan’s military actions while still securing
the China opening.
In July, when Kissinger made his
secret trip to China, he traveled through Islamabad. On July 15, Nixon
announced on national television that he would visit China. The news was heard
with shock in New Delhi, where it raised the threat that China might intervene
to support Pakistan. Kissinger himself entertained the possibility that the
Chinese would come in—weaving what Raghavan terms “a fantastical web of
strategic linkages between the South Asian crisis and America’s wider
interests.” For Nixon and Kissinger, it became above all a reputational matter:
they had to show the Chinese that they would support their Pakistani ally
through any crisis. Kissinger, on his return from China, told Nixon: “The cloak
and dagger exercise in Pakistan arranging the trip was fascinating. Yahya
hasn’t had such fun since the last Hindu massacre!”
By late August, the Indians had
decided to escalate their involvement, stepping up their covert support to the
Mukti Bahini, the Bengali freedom fighters, thereby hoping to weaken Pakistani
control of the province and to force a negotiated settlement. As a hedge
against the potential fallout from such covert policy, Indira Gandhi struck a
Peace and Friendship Treaty with the Soviet Union, and then embarked on a
two-week international campaign to advocate India’s case in Western capitals.
International public opinion had in fact rallied to the cause—most audibly
through the Concert for Bangladesh held in Madison Square Garden in August,
part of a “globalization of conscience” that Raghavan sees as important in
shaping the crisis.
On her return from her whirlwind
tour, Gandhi sanctioned orders for Indian troops to launch offensive operations
inside Pakistani territory, and in the last week of November, she gave General
Manekshaw the signal for a full-scale attack on Pakistan. The operation was set
for December 4; but Yahya, following his own impeccable timing, had himself
decided to attack on the western front. Pakistani air force strikes were
launched on the night of December 3. The war that followed was swift and
decisive, ending in victory for India.
Kissinger
and his aides—drawing on faulty CIA intelligence—were convinced that the
Indians wanted to destroy Pakistan. They therefore felt justified in expanding
military support to Pakistan: illicitly supplying jet aircraft, sending the
Seventh Fleet led by the USS Enterprise into the Bay of Bengal to intimidate the
Indians, and passing secret messages urging the Chinese to mass troops on their
Indian border. It was a view of India’s intentions that comported with Nixon’s
and Kissinger’s picture of India’s leaders as cunning and ambitious adventurers
who, relying on Soviet support, were bent on an all-out military campaign to
dismember Pakistan, to expel the American presence from South Asia, and to
sabotage U. S. interests across the world. “We can’t let these goddamn,
sanctimonious Indians get away with this. They’ve pissed on us on Vietnam for
five years, Henry,” Nixon told his adviser.
Even Bass argues that Gandhi and her
advisers were “coldly calculating strategists,” but Raghavan stresses the
tentativeness of Indian intentions and ambitions. There was no grand plan at
the outset either to capture Dacca or to create an independent state. The
decision for a maximal thrust in the east, to Dacca, was not taken until
December 11, a few days before the war’s end. It was made against the
background of proposed resolutions in the United Nations calling for a
cease-fire and the threat of American naval intervention, as well as American
pressure on the Soviets to restrain India.
Freedom's Battle,
Gary Bass’s earlier book, traced the origins of humanitarian intervention back
to the early nineteenth century, contiguous with the emergence of a sphere of
national states, and showed the concern with foreign suffering to be an
enduring impulse in the West’s history. In The Blood
Telegram—his
title, quite specific in reference, conveniently serves also as a metaphor for
all the atrocity news that the world regularly sends us—Bass brings that long
history into the contemporary world.
“At the advent of an Asian era in
world politics,” Bass writes, “the future of human rights will increasingly
depend on the ideologies, institutions, and cultures of ascendant Asian great
powers like China and India.” It is a striking assertion, possibly prescient in
a world where the old great powers—America, Britain, France—continue to
subscribe to the banner of human rights but are increasingly unwilling to bear
the economic or military costs of defending those rights. It is also not a
reassuring one: in these straitened times, we may look to China to help
revitalize the world economy, but on human rights, China will revitalize
nothing. It is, in fact, among the most powerful enemies of the human-rights agenda
in the world today.
India’s sense of its own role is
ambivalent. It is commonplace in Washington and other Western capitals to
lament India’s reluctance to contribute to the provision of global public
goods. Yet as these two books help us to see, that is not the full story. India
has long aspired to play a role in shaping international norms. Dismissed as
sanctimonious by the old powers, India can also claim some efficacy. Certainly
1971 is part of a longer story of Indian interventions in international
politics. From pushing the issue of South African apartheid into U. N. debates
in the 1940s, to peacekeeping in the Congo in the early 1960s, to Bangladesh,
India’s leaders have regularly committed the country’s limited resources to
help shape international norms and rules—even as India has itself often shown
what Bass calls “breathtaking hypocrisy” when it comes to the rights of many of
its own citizens.
The story of 1971 is no cameo in the
history of interventionism. In human scale, in its negotiation of uncertainty
and risk, it ranks among the most notable humanitarian interventions in modern
times. While Bass’s book is a stinging verdict on America’s role, Raghavan’s
carries important warnings to Indian decision-makers about the costs of
circumspection and delay. Raghavan argues that a swift and early intervention
might well have been effective: helping save innumerable lives and much
suffering, it would have left Bangladesh less battered and more able to rebuild
as a democratic state.
South Asia’s dense cultural ecology
and fragile natural habitat, and the political tensions that thereby arise from
its sharp ethnic and communitarian dissonances, will long keep it a space of
potential humanitarian crisis, whether natural or man-made. India will be the default
steward for such crises, and a likely destination for flows of refugees. Making
assessments of human catastrophes, and judgments about interventions to
alleviate them, will therefore remain an important responsibility for Indian
policymakers. They will need all the historical learning they can get.
In his earlier book, Bass described
India’s actions in 1971 as “more or less humanitarian intervention,” and in his
new book, he writes that India’s policy in 1971 “was motivated by a mix of
lofty principle and brutal realpolitik.” Interventions are and always will be
“more or less” and mixed in character—despite the puritanical fascination with
motives and intentions that often characterizes advocates of interventionism.
If humanitarian interventions are to have a future, we will need to shift from
concern over the goodness of intentions to a focus on consequences: whether
intervention could or would actually save lives and improve life chances, even
if one allows for the inevitable unintended outcomes. This will require what
Bass has wisely called a “morality of prudence.” Such an understanding will in
turn need to be built on a deeper knowledge of the history of these wrenching
historical circumstances, and Gary Bass and Srinath Raghavan have given us two
indispensable studies of one of the most sordid and important instances of
horror and help.
Sunil
Khilnani is Avantha Professor and director of the India Institute at King’s
College London and the author of The Idea of India(Farrar,
Straus and Giroux).
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