March
14, 2003
India,
Pakistan in Diplomatic Maze Over Iraq
Just
a day before United States President George W. Bush delivered a
fresh diatribe against Iraq in his State of the Union address, India's
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee did something unexpected. He
appealed to the Great Powers to show "great restraint"
and "patience" in dealing with Iraq and make "all
efforts" to avoid a war and resolve the Iraq crisis through
"negotiations". Without naming the United States, he said:
"It is time the superpower showed some restraint and sought
United Nations mediation to resolve the dispute."
Vajpayee
also noted that a majority of European countries seem opposed to
war on Iraq. Nothing should be done to disturb the delicate balance
of forces in the Persian Gulf, he said, because war would "push
up the prices of petroleum products", and India receives the
bulk of its supply of these from that region. Most important, Vajpayee
somewhat grandiloquently said: "India has always believed that
war is no way to resolve disputes".
Vajpayee's
off-the-cuff remarks contrast with the generally wishy-washy position
which India's foreign ministry has outlined over the past few weeks
on the issue of weapons inspections in Iraq. Its official statement
limits itself to demanding that there should be no unilateral action
against Iraq; authorisation for a military attack from the UN Security
Council is imperative.
One
can only hope that Vajpayee's view is fully translated into a coherent
and firm policy and that India will make a diplomatically adequate
response to the new rift opening up between the US and Western European
states, particularly Germany and France. It is in India's national
interest – and certainly in the interests of its people – that there
is no war against Iraq, that the use of force does not get legitimised
in world affairs, and that multilateral structures like the UN are
defended against America's aggressive unilateralism.
However,
it is by no means certain that the Indian government, which is building
a "strategic partnership" with the US, and is highly vulnerable
to American pressure, will act in the national and international
interest. A war on Iraq could also further complicate relations
between India and Pakistan.
A
war on Iraq will have extremely damaging economic and political
effects on India, both directly and through the destabilisation
of the Middle East and India's immediate neighbourhood. The effects
will be all the graver if the United States launches a protracted
operation to effect a regime change in Baghdad. A convulsion in
the Middle East will affect the 3 million-plus Indian workers who
live in the Persian Gulf. The Indian government has very few defences
against these adverse consequences.
Five
categories of effects are relevant here:
- Direct
macroeconomic effects, through increased prices of crude oil,
India's single biggest import item
- Effects
on downstream industries and markets
- Indirect
medium-term economic impact of the likely turbulence in the Middle
East
- Political
impact of an unstable Middle East in the event of prolonged US
occupation of Iraq
- Strategic
impact of the war on India-Pakistan rivalry – if Islamabad joins
the war effort (which India is unlikely to)
Iraq is India's biggest oil
supplier and tops the list of its Persian Gulf petroleum sources,
including Saudi Arabia, Iran and Kuwait. India depends on imports
for 70 percent of its (rising) petroleum consumption. India has
had good political relations with Iraq. In recent years, India,
along with China, and to an extent Russia, took the lead in signing
oil-for-food agreements with Iraq. India has long advocated abolition
of such sanctions. India has provided (limited) food and medical
assistance to Iraq.
Iraq
in turn is one of the world's few governments which broadly supports
India's stand on Kashmir. For decades, the two governments have
had extensive trade and investment relations, including long-term
oil supply agreements. Before 1991, some of these used to be routed
through the former Soviet Union. Currently, there are complex barter
as well as direct oil purchase agreements between India and Iraq.
In 2000, Iraq leased two new oilfields to India's Oil and Natural
Gas Commission for further development.
Should there be a war against
Iraq, India will be immediately affected through a choking of relatively
steady and cheap oil supplies from Iraq, and a sharp rise in international
crude prices, which are widely expected to spurt by up to $10 a
barrel, from the present $30-32.
India's
oil import bill in the current year is running about 30 percent
higher than last year. The latest political troubles in Venezuela
have raised it further. The Indian government has ordered state-owned
oil companies to top up their stocks to the equivalent of about
40 days' requirements of petroleum products such as diesel, kerosene
and petrol, and 15 days' supply of crude. This is not a comfortable
cushion.
India
has no strategic oil reserves. Plans have been drawn up by Indian
Oil Corporation (India's only Fortune-500 company) to create
three or four storage facilities in collaboration with a German
company. But these have still to be approved by the government.
The storages will take three and a half years to build.
High
oil prices will not only raise the general cost-base of the Indian
economy (in which petroleum consumption has been rising far more
rapidly than GDP), but also erode the country's currently high ($70
billion-plus) foreign exchange reserves. This is liable to create
macroeconomic imbalances and aggravate the crisis of public finances
and the state's aggregate fiscal deficit. This deficit already exceeds
10 percent of GDP. Ultimately, macroeconomic imbalances will slow
down growth. With a worsening fiscal deficit, the government will
further lower its capital expenditure (an important booster of private
sector growth), and cut back essential public services, raising
unemployment and poverty ratios.
High
crude oil prices will have a strong impact on a number of sectors:
e.g. power generation (especially for agricultural irrigation),
fertilisers and petrochemicals. Indian agriculture, especially foodgrains
production, has just had a record bad year, thanks to a severe drought.
High energy prices for irrigation pumpsets will cripple recovery,
raise food prices and create social unrest.
If
the US's reported plans to bring about a full-scale "regime
change" in Iraq and set up a model "Middle Eastern democracy"
materialise, American troops are likely to remain in the region
for 18 months or longer. The longer the US presence, the higher
the chances of oil prices remaining at peak levels for long periods.
Politically
and diplomatically, a strong unilateral push on Iraq by the US,
which receives token support from (a reluctant?) UN Security Council
will further weaken multilateralism and consensual decision-making
in the world community. It will legitimise the use of military force
as the preferred method of conflict resolution. This will harm global
governance – to the detriment of, among other states, India.
War
on Iraq will generate generalised turbulence in the Middle East,
further inflaming the crisis in Israel-Palestine. Such turbulence,
involving violence, will have a broad-based
impact on the Gulf region, where 3.1 million Indian workers are
located. Their annual remittances to India exceed all flows of foreign
direct investment put together.
Whether
and how far India can resist US pressure to "cooperate"
with the war effort remains unclear. In the 1991 war, India originally
refused to condemn Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and to join the US-led
war coalition. However, under pressure, India soon allowed US warplanes
to refuel on its soil. Later, India also tried to win a share of
the contracts for rebuilding Kuwait's economy.
In
the last war, India had to evacuate to safety hundreds of thousands
of its nationals from the region, especially Kuwait, in what is
said to be history's biggest airlift. Currently, there
are large numbers of Indians in especially vulnerable parts of the
Gulf: 1.4 million in Saudi Arabia, a million in the UAE, and 350,000
in Kuwait.
In
the event of a prolonged US occupation of Iraq, Washington is expected
to break the back of OPEC. Should that happen, all the great oil
producers of the Middle East would be badly affected. This will
result in a general recession in the region, with joblessness – and
lower remittances to India.
An
Iraq war also spells upheavals in India's immediate neighbourhood,
especially in Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan. It is likely to strengthen
the forces of ethnic-religious fundamentalism and reinforce regional
rivalries. Iran's President Mohammad Khatami, on a recent visit
to India, expressed that concern while opposing unilateral action
against Iraq.
India
is likely to stay neutral in the event of a US-led war on Iraq,
but will qualify its position if there is strong multilateral support
for military action, with a specific new UN resolution authorising
the use of force.
The
Pakistan government seems more inclined than earlier to join a US-led
war coalition. Islamabad is under a fair amount of pressure to do
so and may also want to support the US militarily. Its latest statement
says a "heavy responsibility" rests on the shoulders of
the Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, to ensure implementation of
UN resolutions. This runs contrary to the popular sentiment. There
is growing unrest in Pakistan on a possible war on Iraq.
If
Pakistan does join the US-led war effort, there will be a change
in the triangular India-Pakistan-US relationship – in favour of Islamabad.
As of now, both India and Pakistan feel frustrated that they cannot
win adequate backing from Washington for their respective agendas
to marginalise each other.
If
Pakistan moves close to the US as a war ally, it will capitalise
on that proximity to drive a hard bargain with India and adopt a
tougher posture. This could create new tensions between the two
nuclear rivals which have just witnessed a 10-months-long military
standoff at the border and whose relations have plummeted to an
all-time low.
Praful Bidwai
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