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April
14, 2001
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National
Interest
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Reality
check from Tehran
Get
it right: entire Muslim world hasnt ganged up on us
IN
the Reagan era, bookshops on liberal campuses in the US used to
sell a map of the world as it was supposedly viewed by their intellectually
challenged president. It was really quite simple. A few swathes
of pastels told you who were friends or foes. South Asia was, quite
predictably, dismissed as Injuns. The only complexity was the Islamic
world, because it had to be painted in two distinct hues: our Muslims,
their Muslims. Our Muslims obviously were
the Saudis, Kuwaitis and the other pro-Western Gulf states. Their
Muslims were Iran and Iraq.
Very
funny, isnt it? But how would it work if we were to ask an
Indian schoolchild to paint a similarly simplistic map of the world?
Which colour will he paint the Islamic world in? Friendly or hostile?
And if he does call it hostile, will he make any distinction between
their Muslims and ours,
friends, foes or neutrals?
Why
just schoolchildren, ask any adult Indian that question and the
answer would underline a most dangerous national consensus, that
somehow all Muslim nations the world over are hostile to India.
That the OIC is one tightly knit body leading this pan-Islamic charge
against India and that it is this combined might of a hundred crore
Muslims the world over that we are up against. Also, that because
Pakistan officially treats us as its enemy and swears by the ummah,
somehow every other Muslim in the world inevitably thinks so.
As
Vajpayees visit to Iran reaffirmed this week, nothing could
be farther from truth. Listen, first, to what the Iranians said.
Not only did they go out of their way to make subtle yet critical
references to Pakistan, they even distanced themselves firmly from
the Taliban-type fundamentalism. President Khatami, in fact, made
an entirely unsolicited reference to growing terrorism,
violence, rebellion and narcotics trafficking in Afghanistan
and added that he was deeply regretful that such crimes
are committed in the name of Islam. He condemned the
destruction at Bamiyan a little bit later, but the most significant
nuance is that he regretted the use of Islam, not merely in connection
with the destruction of the Buddha statues but in the overall context
of talibanisation. The Pakistanis, certainly, wont have liked
it. But the lesson for us is that all Muslim countries and, by implication,
all Muslims around the world do not think alike. Their respective
worldviews are governed by their own national interests, ideologies
and historical and cultural linkages.
Throughout
the history of mankind, religious monotheism has never implied monolithic
politics. Christian states have fought more wars against fellow
Christian states than with others. The same is even truer for Islam.
The notion of the cast-iron unity of the Islamic world is a reality
only in the minds of the lunatics in Nagpur and others of the tribe.
It is a hopeless myth and its perpetuation in our national mindset
is extremely dangerous.
You
do not have to be a scholar to see how divided the Islamic world
is. First of all, Islamic societies of the east (Indonesia, Malaysia)
think very differently from the rest. The African Islamic countries,
particularly the Francophone ones, have their own peculiar concerns,
so much so that some of them have taken the lead in establishing
flourishing relations even with Israel. Finally, the Middle East
is so violently divided, any thought of it standing by any faraway
Islamic cause unitedly is utterly ludicrous.
The more practical GCC nations are driven by their commercial interests.
The Saudis are fighting for ideological supremacy in the world of
the faithful with Iran. Both Iraq and Iran, militarily the strongest
Islamic states, are still officially at war and, in some way or
the other, have been so for 13 centuries now. Where does this leave
Pakistans fantasies of a pan-Islamic encirclement of India
and our masochistic notion of the ummah targeting us as the common
enemy? In fact, if you look closely at the Islamic world, the only
country such as it is that may be fully in sync with
the Pakistanis is talibanised Afghanistan. This is where the popular
Pakistani fantasy of defence-in-depth or what is derided, even by
their own liberal intellectuals, as the PIA Pakistan-Iran-Afgha-
nistan) alliance, today stands.
Vajpayee
is conscious of this and mark, therefore, the manner in which he
has kept his message out of the religious, Islamic world paradigm,
latching instead on to Khatamis call (to the western world)
for a dialogue among civilisations. It would have been dangerous
to hark on the Persian-Indian links that precede Islam. While dealing
with Iran you cannot sidestep Islam. But the civilisational framework
is a clever one. It would not only fox the Pakistanis but also help
us look at a leading Islamic nation in historical terms, as a distinct,
old nation-state rather than merely a fortress of fundamentalist
Shia Islam.
Once
you move beyond the religious straitjacket you look at the convergence
or clash of interests in more realistic terms. That has been our
emerging equation with Iran for the past six years or so, ever since
Narasimha Rao and his then special envoy, Atal Bihari Vajpayee,
sought Iran out as an ally at the UN Human Rights Convention in
Geneva. It was also no surprise that with his nation still nursing
the wounds of Babri, Rao got Rafsanjani to visit India and declare
at Lucknows Imambara that he had full faith in Indias
secularism and the ability of its constitutional system to safeguard
its Muslims.
THE
real danger in dividing up the world in blocks is that it closes
your mind to any creative new solutions or approaches. If the Islamic
world is united as the ummah, and hates you, what is the point of
going out to engage with its constituents? Funnily, it is the one
area of our worldview where public opinion is years behind even
the policy making establishment. In the socialist past we had a
problem. We thought the louder we shouted in support of the Palestinian
cause, the more the Islamic bloc would love us. We failed to see
that even then so many Arab countries, including, and notably, Jordan,
were cutting deals with the West and burying the hatchet with Israel
in the Palestinians back. In any case, our allegedly
formidable leverage on the Palestinian cause was a mere delusion
in our own minds and nobody took us seriously. It is only since
Rao that we began moving away from this, shook hands with Israel
and attempted to relate to some Islamic states as if they were nations
in their own individual right with their own respective vested interests
and insecurities. The distance we have travelled vis-a-vis Iran
today is a reward for that.
Forget
Reagan for a moment and see how the US, and the West, have sorted
out the pan-Islamic threat. They have won over the GCC states with
relentless engagement and by using democracy as an unstated blackmail
with the ruling royals. Play ball with us or, who knows, when somebody
would unleash democracy movements in your sheikhdoms, is the message.
Iran and Iraq, on the other hand, are being openly attacked with
democracy and told to democratise, or else.
Democratisation, ironically, is the weapon with which they hope
to attack these more egalitarian dictatorships. For Egypt, there
is a different formula altogether. Mubarak is a stooge and a dictator
who is fully underwritten by Uncle Sam for his support to the cause
of an Arab-Israeli rapprochement. What threats does that leave in
the Muslim world for the West and its interests, including Israel?
A declining Saddam, a weakening Iran and a minor thug called Osama
bin Laden.
Would
they have been able to come so far if they too, like so many of
us, had viewed and feared the Islamic world as a monolith that feels,
thinks and acts as one? And, if this was so, would Khatami then
have stood beside Vajpayee, condemning the Taliban for misusing
Islam to justify their fundamentalist terror, drug-running and violence?
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