India makes it clear it’s not interested in a western alliance

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India makes it clear it’s not interested in a western alliance

A meeting Wednesday between India’s Narendra Modi and China’s Xi Jinping in Kazan, Russia was the first in five years, and will likely be viewed with dismay in Washington, Ottawa and other western capitals.

While it probably doesn’t mark the beginning of a new Beijing-New Delhi axis, it does seem to signal that India is not about to sign on to an anti-Beijing western alliance either, despite the best efforts of the U.S. and some other countries to persuade it to do so.

“Would the U.S. be disappointed? I imagine,” said Sanjay Ruparelia, a close observer of the Modi government who teaches at Toronto Metropolitan University. “I don’t think publicly they would express it, but privately.”

Ruparelia said U.S. relations with India have always been complicated, and that complexity has always required the U.S. to split the relationship into silos.

“On the one hand, ties have grown despite many disagreements, and quite serious ones. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, most importantly,” he said.

“But you know, we’ve seen in the last year a new agreement on critical emerging technologies. You’ve seen growing defence and security partnerships. [U.S.] President Biden was reportedly the third leader in history to have his Indian counterpart at his own private residence. And that was this year — after the FBI foiled the plot  to allegedly kill Mr. (Gurpatwant Singh) Pannun.”

Most recently, the U.S. signed a deal to sell India Predator drones, the primary weapons used by the U.S. in its own campaigns of extraterritorial killing targeting such groups as al-Qaeda and Islamic State.

“And I’m not surprised by that,” said Ruparelia. “I mean, the U.S. is the great power and they practice realpolitik more than any other power in the world.”

Ruparelia said that while he takes the RCMP’s statement that they have evidence linking agents of the Indian government to homicides and other acts of violence in Canada “seriously,” the U.S. government clearly has “compartmentalized the issue” in order to continue working with India.

Murder claims may take a back seat to larger issues

There are multiple factors at work in Modi’s decision to seek rapprochement with China. But the tensions with the West over India’s alleged program of assassinating dissidents in Canada and the U.S. could not have helped to sell him on the idea of ditching India’s traditional non-alignment and jumping into an alliance with the countries that have accused him.

At the same time, the geopolitical stakes between nations as large and powerful as the U.S., India, China and Russia all but ensure that the assassination allegations will end up taking a back seat to other, bigger considerations.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, host of this year’s BRICS summit, will be delighted with the meeting between Xi and Modi in Russia and may seek to take some of the credit.

Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a press conference at BRICS Summit in Kazan, Russia, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024.
Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a press conference at BRICS Summit in Kazan, Russia, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. (Maxim Shipenkov/Associated Press)

Putin was careful to seat himself between the Indian and Chinese leaders, offering a visual symbol of his role as facilitator of their coming-together, said Prof. Ho-fung Hung of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

“This kind of photo-op meeting, in which Putin is showing up side by side with all these world leaders, is a win for Putin because it’s a kind of defiance of the U.S. attempt to isolate Russia,” he said. “Putin can show to people back home that actually [he has] friends, and Russia has friends, despite all these U.S. efforts. So the U.S. is failing in isolating Russia.”

Burying the clubs and hatchets

A brutal medieval battle fought at dangerously high altitude in June 2020 marked the lowest point in India-China relations in many years.

Twenty Indian and four Chinese soldiers were reported killed in a melee with clubs and axes over disputed territory high in the Himalayan district of Ladakh.

Both sides respected the letter of their agreement to keep guns out of their border dispute, although the peaceful spirit of that agreement was forgotten in brutal hand-to-hand fighting.

Since then there have been more incidents, including a similar brawl in December 2022 in Arunachal Pradesh, another mountainous stretch of the border more than 1,200 kilometres to the East.

An Indian army soldier keeps guard on top of his vehicle as their convoy moves on the Srinagar- Ladakh highway at Gagangeer, northeast of Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir, Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2020. India said Monday its soldiers thwarted “provocative” movements by China’s military near a disputed border in the Ladakh region months into the rival nations’ deadliest standoff in decades. China's military said it was taking “necessary actions in response," without giving details.
An Indian army soldier keeps guard on top of his vehicle as their convoy moves on the Srinagar-Ladakh highway at Gagangeer, northeast of Srinagar in Indian-controlled Kashmir, on Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2020. (Mukhtar Khan/Associated Press)

The Chinese have paraded Indian prisoners before cameras, infuriating India and provoking street demonstrations.

China’s aggressive behaviour on India’s borders gave the Biden administration an opening that it seized to try to persuade India to sign up to a U.S.-led Indo-Pacific alliance aimed at countering China and Chinese expansionism.

Washington pointed to the parallels between India’s experience and that of the Philippines, Vietnam, and other countries subject to extreme territorial claims by China that are often pushed using hardball methods

For a while, it seemed to work. India signed up to a new “security dialogue” called the Quad, which united it with the U.S., Japan and Australia. But it soon became evident that India had little interest in moving past the dialogue stage.

‘Mutual trust, mutual respect’

This week, India and China announced that their border disputes were on the way to being settled, opening the door for Xi and Modi to meet in person.

“We are holding a formal meeting after five years,” said Modi. “We believe that the India-China relationship is very important, not only for our people but also for global peace, stability and progress. We welcome the consensus reached on the issues that have arisen over the last four years on the border.

“Mutual trust, mutual respect and mutual sensitivity should remain the basis of our relations.”

Not so fast, said Ruparelia, who is writing a book on India-China relations.

“India hasn’t resolved the border dispute,” he said. “What they’ve agreed to do is to resume national patrols on either side of the dispute. In India, the media has been sort of euphoric, at least the pro-Modi media, but there haven’t been any details yet.

“And the biggest outstanding question is whether the status quo ante has been restored because China crossed the line of control and then occupied a lot of territory that India claimed at its own. It’s not clear whether they’ve retreated back to the line before the incursion in 2020.”

Still, the resolution to the border dispute suggests that China is willing to be more conciliatory with India than with other neighbours, in return for India remaining true to its non-aligned traditions and refusing to join any meaningful alliance against Beijing.

“India right now is in a very good position because everybody is calling India,” said Hung. “The U.S. definitely will be concerned about India getting too close with China.”

But India can afford to cause heartburn in Washington, he said, and the Modi government probably knows it has little reason to fear real consequences over the alleged Pannun assassination plot.

“I think that India has the upper hand in this relation now,” he said. “The U.S. really doesn’t have much leverage over India about all this.”

A man in a black suit, wearing a black turban.
Gurpatwant Singh Pannun is a dual Canadian-American citizen who has been organizing non-binding referendums for Sikhs to vote for the creation of an independent homeland named Khalistan. (CBC)

The U.S. federal indictment against Indian drug trafficker Nikhil Gupta at the end of last year brought into public view tensions that had already been building between Washington and New Delhi for months behind the scenes.

For the first time, it became clear that the U.S. was not merely backing the Trudeau government’s claim that it has evidence linking Indian agents to the killing of Canadian Sikh separatist leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar — it also had an alleged Indian government-sponsored murder plot on its own soil.

Pannun is the leader of a worldwide effort to organize referendums in the Sikh diaspora on the future of Punjab, pushing the idea of a Sikh homeland called Khalistan carved out of present-day India.

U.S. officials say they have a clear trail of electronic footprints leading back to the New Delhi headquarters of India’s intelligence service, the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).

U.S. officials had little choice but to act on that evidence, even if it meant upsetting the budding relationship with India.

U.S. President Joe Biden, center, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and other G20 leaders arrive to pay their tributes at the Rajghat, a Mahatma Gandhi memorial, in New Delhi, India, Sunday, Sept. 10, 2023.
U.S. President Joe Biden, center, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and other G20 leaders arrive to pay their tributes at the Rajghat, a Mahatma Gandhi memorial, in New Delhi, India on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2023. (Kenny Holston/AP)

It soon emerged that President Joe Biden had himself raised the issue with Narendra Modi at the G20 Summit in New Delhi last year. Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan has been tasked with managing the diplomatic aspects of a case the administration clearly wishes did not exist, but also cannot ignore.

Sullivan has met in recent months with both his Indian counterpart Ajit Doval, and with Modi himself, but has had to use some of that face-time to press India to investigate its own officials in the Pannun murder plot.

India has responded by claiming that rogue operatives were behind the conspiracy, setting up a commission of inquiry that traveled to Washington this month to report on its findings, and even placing one official under arrest. 

Forced into such actions by the strength of electronic evidence in Washington’s hands, Modi has simultaneously been sending signals he is not interested in ostracizing either China or Russia. He visited Putin in a dacha outside Moscow in early July, to the annoyance of the U.S. State Department.

Russia ties run deeper

“It’s not the India-China relationship that the U.S. needs to be concerned about most, because India is also friendly with Russia,” said Hung.

India’s new agreement with China doesn’t resolve all issues between the two countries, including India’s fears about rising Chinese influence in countries that New Delhi has long considered part of its sphere of influence, such as Sri Lanka and Nepal.

India has few such structural impediments to its relationship with Moscow, said Hung.

“There’s evidence showing that actually India is also helping Russia in its war effort in one way or another.”

The allegations of murder plots against dissidents in Canada and the U.S. have highlighted one of the benefits of diplomacy with authoritarian regimes such as Russia and China: they don’t care how you treat your dissidents and they don’t give you lectures on human rights.

Two men walk on a road lined with trees.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi walk during their meeting at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence near Moscow, Russia on July 8, 2024. (Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via Reuters)

That understanding will likely temper U.S. pressure on India over the alleged assassination plots, in the same way that Washington has muted its criticism of India’s relationship with America’s rivals.

“There was the hope and expectation, I think, in some quarters in Washington that India will come on side more in the sense of therefore being more antagonistic towards China and Russia,” said Ruparelia.

“But India relies on Russia for more than two-thirds of its arms. Their artillery is very much dependent on Russia. India has always been concerned about growing ties between Russia and China. They’ve just had this border clash. So the U.S. would understand that.

“Even on the flashpoint of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, where India has been refining Russian oil and the U.S. probably is not happy about that, but at the same time, they have an interest in it because it helps keep the price of oil down, and therefore deals with inflationary pressures. So there’s a whole series of factors at work.”

Within all of that great power manoeuvring, the assassination plots do not loom very large. India knows that, and knows it occupies an enviable diplomatic position at the moment as the non-aligned player everyone wants on their team. And the experts say those geopolitical considerations are likely to trump all others

Published at Fri, 25 Oct 2024 08:00:00 +0000

This UN force is struggling to help keep the peace in southern Lebanon. So why is it still there?

As Lt. Col Jordan Hertzberg watches black smoke rise beyond a ridge moments after Israeli artillery fires into southern Lebanon, he tells CBC News that he believes Israel’s offensive could have been avoided, if the UN peacekeepers stationed along the 120 kilometres border were doing their job. 

“If they had been enforcing the mandate, we would not have a war today,” said Hertzberg who is originally from Montreal.

“When we find bases, Hezbollah bases, 50 metres, and 75 metres from a UN base, what is your observation? You have to be blind and deaf not to be aware of that.”

When Israel and Hezbollah ended their war in 2006 by agreeing to a UN-proposed ceasefire, the resolution included the enlargement of the UN peacekeeping force that had already been stationed in southern Lebanon for decades.

But as war has broken out again, the 10,000 plus UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) has not only been unable to quell the conflict, it has also found itself in the middle of it. The peacekeepers are being attacked by Israel, which is accusing them of just being in the way.  

UNIFIL’s mandate is to help enforce UN Resolution 1701 that was adopted in 2006. That includes aiding the Lebanese armed forces in clearing the area south of the Litani river in Lebanon of “any armed personnel, assets and weapons.” This area is about 30 kilometres south of the Blue Line, which was set by the UN in 2000 to confirm the withdrawal of Israeli forces.

But UNIFIL says that without co-operation from the Lebanese government or its armed forces, it’s challenging to fulfil that mandate. Meanwhile, others have criticized UNIFIL’s efforts and some observers are questioning whether it does or can play any kind of peacekeeping role in the region and whether its mandate should be renewed.

The Israel Defence Forces says it has found stashes of ammunition and rockets, along with bunkers dug into the ground close to where UNIFIL is stationed. 

During a trip to the border area in the northwest of Israel on Thursday, Hertzberg accused the UN peacekeeping mission of turning a blind eye, which allowed Hezabollah to deeply entrench itself in the south of Lebanon, and enabled it to launch rockets into northern Israel throughout the past year.

WATCH | IDF officer says UN troops in Lebanon haven’t kept Hezbollah in check: 

IDF officer says UN troops in Lebanon failing to keep Hezbollah in check

2 days ago

Duration 0:54

Lt.-Col Jordan Hertzberg of the Israel Defence Forces said in an interview with CBC’s Briar Stewart that Israeli forces had found Hezbollah fortifications, missiles and shells ‘under the nose’ of UN peacekeepers based near the Lebanon-Israel border whose mandate is to support the Lebanese army in securing the border region.

“UNIFIL has proven ineffective in carrying out its mission for decades now, and absent significant changes, there is little hope it can play a relevant role in securing the Israel-Lebanon frontier,” read a recent analysis by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

“Should the force continue to under perform, Washington should once again seriously consider vetoing its mandate, ending the deployment, and starting anew.”

The analysis placed blame on the Lebanese government and armed forces for both collaborating with Hezbollah while also obstructing UNIFIL’s access to areas they want to inspect. The analysis also blames UNIFIL itself, saying it “often demurs from effectively monitoring areas that might generate tension” and “pulls punches in its reporting.”

Israeli PM urges UNIFIL to ‘get out of harm’s way’ 

UNIFIL has accused Israel of repeatedly targeting its positions, an accusation Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has denied.

Earlier this month, he repeated a call for UNIFIL to withdraw from combat zones and said the military did its utmost to avoid harming peacekeeping personnel while striking Hezbollah fighters.

“But the best way to assure the safety of UNIFIL personnel is for UNIFIL to heed Israel’s request and to temporarily get out of harm’s way.”

He has also accused the UN force of “providing a human shield” for Hezbollah.

WATCH | Fighting continues along Israel-Lebanon border: 

Fighting continues along Israel-Lebanon border

1 day ago

Duration 0:50

U.S. officials continue to call for a halt to fighting between Israel and militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah, but heavy Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon continue. The UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, known as UNIFIL, said last week that it had come under several “deliberate” attacks by Israeli forces and that efforts to help civilians in villages in the war zone were being hampered by Israeli shelling.

Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Eugene Kontorovich, a professor at George Mason University Scalia Law School and a scholar at the Jerusalem-based Kohelet Policy Forum, said he doesn’t believe they serve a useful purpose.

And when its current mandate expires in August 2025, he says there is no rational basis for reauthorizing it, which would save the U.S. the money it contributes to help support UNIFIL’s annual $550 million budget.

“It’s not a surprise that they’re failing,” he told CBC News in an interview. “But despite their failure, they continue to be reauthorized. Their failure is considered something that should be rewarded and seen as indispensable, despite not doing their job.” 

Yet some observers, who have also been critical of UNIFIL, still see a role for the peacekeeping mission in the region.

“I think UNIFIL has been not very effective by any objective standards,” said Mukesh Kapila, a former UN official and current emeritus professor of global health and humanitarian affairs at the University of Manchester.

Kapila also said some Israelis do not see the peacekeepers as neutral or impartial because some of the participating countries have hostile relations with Israel. But he still says the peacekeepers should stay.

“When the war ends, you would have to pick up the pieces, you’re going to have to have some form of a peacekeeping force,” he said. “And it’s much easier to build on a peacekeeping force that exists than to start all over.

Two UN peacekeepers in blue hats stand on a watchtower flying the blue UN flag.
UNIFIL members stand on an observation point along the UN’s Blue Line on the border between Lebanon and Israel, near the southern Lebanese town of Marwahin on Oct. 12, 2023. Though some international observers have been critical of UNIFIL, they still see a place for the peacekeeping mission in the region. (Christina Assi/AFP/Getty Images)

UN resolution failed to end conflict

Although UN Resolution 1701 may have ended the war between Israel and Hezbollah, conflict between the two has remained. 

Hezbollah is still in the area, now with an expanded arsenal that experts estimate to be at least 130,000 rockets. 

“[Hezbollah] extensively expanded its its capability in the south,” said Assaf Orion, a retired Israeli brigadier general and defence strategist who co-authored the report on UNIFIL for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

“Those weapons shooting at Israel from south Lebanon shouldn’t have ever been there.”

WATCH | France, Italy condemn Israeli attacks on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon: 

France, Italy condemn Israeli attacks on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon

14 days ago

Duration 3:33

Two Indonesian peacekeepers were injured on Friday after two explosions near a watchtower in southern Lebanon, UNIFIL said. This followed two earlier injuries of peacekeepers after Israeli soldiers fired on UN positions on Wednesday and Thursday. France, Italy and UN Secretary General António Guterres have condemned the attacks. The Israeli military said it is conducting a review of the incident.

Last month, days after Israel is believed to have launched its attack on pagers owned by Hezbollah, Lebanese caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati said the government was ready to implement the resolution and send in a beefed up Lebanese army force that will “carry out its full duties,” in co-ordination with UN peacekeepers. 

Vanessa Newby, an assistant professor at Leiden University with regional expertise on peacekeeping in south Lebanon, said one of the problems was that many within the Shia population were supportive of Hezbollah, making it difficult for an international force to try to impose such a resolution.

Two men stand on rubble holding a banner with Arabic printing that reads : 'Despite the displacement we will be victorious.'
Hezbollah supporters stand on the rubble of a building hit by Israeli airstrikes holding an Arabic banner that reads: ‘Despite the displacement we will be victorious,’ in Tyre, south Lebanon on Wednesday. Support for the militant group within Lebanon’s Shia population has made it difficult for peacekeepers to carry out their mandate, according to observers. (Mohammed Zaatari/The Associated Press)

Without resources from the Lebanese armed forces or Lebanese government to back it up, “how can an international force actually achieve that goal,” Newby asked.

“I don’t want to sort of sing the praises of UNIFIL, but I think they kind of really do get blamed for everything that they’re not actually in control of.”

UNIFIL connects IDF, Lebanese army

Kandice Ardiel, the deputy spokesperson for UNIFIL, told CBC News that they have reported suspicious activity, including tunnels being built near the border, to the UN Security Council and the Lebanese government in recent years. 

“We need facilitation from the Lebanese army. That was not forthcoming in these cases,” she said during a Zoom interview from Beirut. “So we weren’t able to investigate some of these suspicious locations that we had seen and that we had wanted to investigate.”

Two men in army fatigues stand behind a barbed wire fence.
Lebanese army soldiers stand behind a barbed wire fence demarcating the Blue Line drawn by the UN along the border near the village of Kfar Shuba in southern Lebanon in June 2023. The Lebanese government has said it will deploy soldiers to end Hezbollah’s presence in southern Lebanon. (Mahmoud Zayyat/AFP/Getty Images)

Ardiel, who grew up in Ontario, said UNIFIL hasn’t been asked to “disarm Hezbollah” or “forcefully push back some of the Israeli incursions.”

Instead, she says their role is to support the parties to implement UN Resolution 1701.

Newby says UNIFIL’s biggest role has been to shine an international spotlight on the region and ultimately prevent accidental outbreaks of violence that could have led to another confrontation between Hezbollah and the IDF.

She says they’ve managed to create a more stable environment by establishing a relationship between the IDF and the Lebanese armed forces through a series of meetings called the Tripartite Meetings. 

At these meetings, the two negotiate micro security agreements along the Blue Line. Newby says this has helped prevent any potential incidents, or shootings of people who may inadvertently cross over.

“It reduces uncertainty, reduces the escalations you sometimes get,” she said.

WATCH | How will latest conflict with Israel shape Lebanon’s future?: 

​​What the latest conflict could mean for Lebanon’s future

9 days ago

Duration 6:19

Even before Israel and Hezbollah began exchanging fire in their latest conflict, Lebanon was on shaky ground, with some calling it a failed state. CBC’s Margaret Evans examines the complex factors behind the country’s eroding stability.

Published at Tue, 17 Sep 2024 18:38:40 +0000

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