The
Indian State that came into being after independence
bore the stamp of the anti-colonial struggle. It aimed
to promote egalitarian development, later re-christened
as the building of a "socialistic pattern of
society", and negate the hegemony of imperialism,
old and new. The development of the public sector
as a bulwark against metropolitan capital, and for
promoting self-reliance which was considered essential
for this purpose, the pursuit of a policy of non-alignment,
and the implementation of land reforms were the specific
avowed policies of the State. Whatever one may think
of the actual achievements of this dirigiste State,
this perspective which it had, which was a legacy
of the freedom struggle, and so different from the
perspective of the conventional metropolitan bourgeois
State, must not be lost sight of.
Michael Kalecki, the renowned economist, noted this
difference but explained it inadequately. He called
the post-colonial State in India and several other
third world countries an "intermediate regime"
which derived its specific character from the fact
that it was led not by the bourgeoisie but by the
petty-bourgeoisie. Implicit in his perception was
the belief that the bourgeoisie would always prefer
integration with imperialism and a rolling back of
the public sector. What he missed was that the bourgeoisie
itself, having been hemmed in by the colonial regime,
wanted, upon decolonization, to pursue a trajectory
of development that was relatively autonomous of metropolitan
capital and to use the State for that purpose. The
State's having the perspective noted above, though
not in every aspect to the bourgeoisie’s liking, was
therefore perfectly compatible with its being a bourgeois
State. In short, the post-colonial State, despite
being a bourgeois State and promoting capitalist development,
nonetheless had a specificity bequeathed to it by
the anti-colonial struggle whose product it was.
With the bourgeoisie abandoning its relatively autonomous
trajectory of development in favour of neo-liberalism,
it has become essential for it to alter the nature
of the Indian State. To an extent of course the same
State can be made to pursue a different policy, but
the full unleashing of the policy requires a change
in the perspective and orientation of the bourgeois
State, from being a dirigiste one, informed by egalitarian
objectives (no matter how elusive) and marked by a
distance from imperialism, to being one committed
to the interests of international finance capital
with which the Indian high bourgeoisie is enmeshed,
and integrated with imperialism. In short the switch
to neo-liberalism calls, from the bourgeoisie’s point
of view, for a change in the character of the Indian
bourgeois State.
This has actually been happening gradually, but within
the integument of the old State. Almost everything
the government has been doing, not just with regard
to the major issues of economic policy, but even such
apparently innocuous proposals like having Indian
bureaucrats trained in metropolitan universities,
or setting up “world class” universities with the
help of metropolitan institutions like Harvard and
Oxford, amounts to essaying such a change in the nature
of the Indian State. Nonetheless the integument of
the old State, the perspective which still remains
the “official” perspective of the State, acts as a
fetter. The Indian high bourgeoisie would like to
break out of that integument, or as journalese would
have it, "complete the reform process".
But this is far from easy, since apart from the high
bourgeoisie, its foreign backers, its captive media,
and a segment of the urban upper middle class that
for the time being has done well out of the “reforms”,
there are not too many takers for "neo-liberalism".
The agrarian crisis, the acute unemployment, the attack
on the conditions and rights of the workers, and all
of it capped now by a raging inflation that squeezes
the real incomes of the vast majority of the people,
implies that the political constituency for “reforms”,
always narrow, has shrunk to a minuscule size, and
is unlikely to increase in the foreseeable future
(especially in view also of the looming world capitalist
crisis). The transformation of the Indian State so
that it can be captured by this minority which can
then press on to “complete the reform process” to
further its own interests, appears a remote possibility
in the normal course of democratic politics. The only
way it can be done is through a coup d’ etat, that
brings about a certain change which for all future
governments becomes a fait accompli that they can
overturn only at extraordinary cost.
The Indo-US deal is a part of that change; and what
happened on July 22 was such a coup d’etat. The fact
that the parliament was subdued not with tanks but
with cash-for-votes does not make it any less a coup
d’etat; nor does the fact that it was carried out
not by a bunch of generals but by a bunch of bureaucrats
or ex-buraeucrats (which includes the Prime Minister),
and by persons whose life in politics, such as it
is, has never included any contact with ordinary people.
A small coterie of persons seized power that day through
dubious and illegitimate means, in order to bring
about a transformation in the nature of the State.
This is the definition of a coup d’etat and this is
precisely what happened. The transformation being
attempted, to recapitulate, is from a Nehruvian State
(if one can use that short-hand expression) to a neo-liberal
State integrated with imperialism.
True, the fact that the coup was effected though the
parliament itself has given it an apparent legitimacy,
so much so that the phenomenon itself has been missed
by many. And it has been submerged in a debate over
India’s energy needs, and the supposedly urgent requirement
for nuclear energy, which has been a red herring.
No cost-benefit analysis has ever been made to justify
reliance upon nuclear energy. There has been no official
document outlining the future energy scenario of the
country and making out a case for nuclear energy.
Nuclear energy gets no more than only passing mention
in the Approach Paper to the Eleventh Five Year Plan
prepared by the government’s highest planning body.
And in any case, even the official defence of the
Indo-US nuclear deal admits that no more than 8 percent
of our total energy requirements in twenty years’
time will be met from nuclear energy. So, the "milk-and-honey-and-energy-in
every home" scenario conjured up by the government
is just a red herring to deflect attention for the
coup d’ etat.
Indeed the herring is even redder than this. The issues
at the centre of the debate have concerned not just
energy requirements of the country but the specific
provisions of the Indo-US nuclear deal. The esotericism
of this debate has made people so obsessed with minutiae,
with identifying as it were the individual trees,
that they have missed the wood for the trees. The
point at issue is not the terms of a particular agreement
but the emerging closeness of the relationship with
imperialism. If the country signs thirty-five agreements
with the US, even if each taken by itself is unexceptionable,
what still remains of significance is the signing
of thirty-five agreements, which taken together constitute
a new relationship. The Indo-US nuclear deal therefore
has to be seen not in isolation but together with
the Hyde Act, the defence agreement signed earlier,
the joint military exercises with the US, the vote
on Iran referring its case to the Security Council,
the foot-dragging over the Indo-Iran gas pipeline,
the new-found closeness with Israel and such other
developments. Discussions on the specific terms of
the deal, though important in themselves, deflect
attention, if carried beyond a point, from this context,
and hence constitute an even redder herring. The deal
in short is the denouement of a process, and not a
lone issue to be looked at in isolation. By focusing
on the lone issue, the coup d’ etat could be carried
out silently and effectively.
It is significant that the US administration played
a major role in pushing the deal and hence effecting
this denouement which constitutes an attempt at a
decisive transformation of the Indian State. Numerous
official spokesmen from the US administration, and
“academics”, not to mention hoary old Henry Kissinger,
came to tell us how good the Indo-US nuclear deal
was. They were not doing it as a diverting pastime;
they were sent directly or indirectly by the US administration,
which in turn was doing so not out of altruism or
a sudden overriding concern over India's energy needs,
but to facilitate a "strategic relationship",
which is nothing else but a closer integration of
the Indian State with US imperialism through a transformation
in its nature.
But all these imperialist pressures would not have
worked without a prior process of destruction of politics
which neo-liberalism has unleashed. The fact that
so many members of parliament could succumb to such
sordid blandishments is symptomatic of the fact that
politics is no longer about issues, that political
differences over issues have receded to the background.
This has been deliberately inculcated; appeals have
been made to sink political differences for the sake
of "development". In a curious dialectic,
appeals to “rise above politics” for the sake of "development",
only end up making the political class "sink
below politics". For if both A and B have so
"risen above politics" that differences
between them have disappeared, that ideology for them
has become a dirty word, that they can be substituted
for one another without any noticeable effect, and
that, for this very reason, they will be substituted,
come the next election, by a suffering electorate,
then the temptation for them to amass a fortune and
then "cut and run" is powerful. Such a process
of destruction of politics, of the banishment of ideology
from the political arena as being "anti-development",
has been going on for some time in India, as an inevitable
accompaniment of neo-liberalism (for then the neo-liberal
agenda, pushed by a coterie of bureaucrats and ex-bureaucrats,
can survive changes in government). The ground for
the coup d’ etat has been prepared by this process
of "destruction of politics".
But even the process of destruction of politics is
not enough. To take advantage of it, the coterie pushing
for the "completion of the reform process"
must use the instrument of a political party. In the
present instance that political party was the Congress
Party. How India’s largest and oldest political party
could allow itself to be used by a coterie that at
best only nominally belongs to it, to push through
an agenda of transforming the Indian State into one
that is integrated with U.S. imperialism, when both
Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi were famously chary
of its machinations, is a matter for future research.
But the change in the attitude of the Congress has
been of decisive importance.
The coterie of bureaucrats and ex-bureaucrats behind
the coup, while owing the seats of power it occupies
to the support of the Left, has been hostile to the
Left from the very beginning of the UPA-Left arrangement.
In fact it might have attempted its coup d’ etat much
earlier, using pretty much the same methods as it
has done now to “complete the reform agenda”. But
it was deterred by the fact that the Congress Party
was not with it. The change in the stance of the Congress
is what has ultimately tilted the scale.
For this very reason, however, friends and well-wishers
of the Left who are critical of the Left’s withdrawal
of support from the UPA government on the grounds
that by doing so it has left the field open for the
neo-liberals, are way off the mark. The clear shift
in the stance of the Congress, ostensibly on the nuclear
deal but in fact over the issue of strategic relationship
with US imperialism (since one cannot accuse the Congress
leadership of missing the wood for the trees) left
the Left with little choice. Any continuation of support
by it to the UPA after this change of stance would
have amounted to capitulation. The Left would then
have lost the capacity to fight "the completion
of reforms" both inside the governing arrangement
as well as outside on the streets.
Now it not only retains the latter weapon but can
use it all the more effectively because its credibility
stands enhanced owing to its lack of ideological compromise.
Many, including the perpetrators of the coup d’ etat,
fondly believe that henceforth, with the Left out
of the way, they can push through the "reform"
agenda with ease. Nothing could be further from the
truth. Gone are the days when hegemony could be acquired
through a coup d’ etat. To believe that the Indian
State can be integrated with imperialism against the
wishes of the people, to serve the interests of classes
which, no matter how powerful, constitute a tiny minority
of the population, and that this arrangement can be
sustained (as it has to be) through a suitable abrogation
of democracy, is the typical illusion of the putschists.
August 4, 2008. |