GMR row: India freezes aid to Maldives, ties under stress

Ray

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Re: What's happening in Maldives ?

Bad Judgement

KP Nayar

Salman Khurshid has discovered within a month in his new job that some things have not changed in India's external affairs in nearly twenty years. When P.V. Narasimha Rao promoted Khurshid within a few days of the latter's 40th birthday in 1993 from deputy minister for commerce to minister of state for external affairs, one of his first tasks was to read out the Riot Act to the Maldives. Last month, he found himself engaged in the same brief almost two decades after his first such encounter.

Rao's government was tipped off then that the Maldivians were secretly cosying up to Pakistan. India's neighbourhood was already unfriendly: not far from the Maldives, the wily Ranasinghe Premadasa, who ruled Colombo, was deeply distrustful of India so soon after Rajiv Gandhi's assassination, and, to both India's east and west, the demolition of the Babri Masjid a few months earlier had made the environment tense and unpredictable.

The president of the Maldives for three decades, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, had cultivated the reputation that he was a friend of India, but he was steadily allowing an undercurrent of Islamization to take root in his island nation of atolls with money from Arab Gulf states flowing in for building mosques vastly out of proportion with his country's small population and for other religious activities.

India summoned Gayoom's foreign minister, Fathulla Jameel, to New Delhi where he was handed over to Khurshid one evening. Jameel was then Asia's longest serving foreign minister (he stayed in that office eventually for 27 years), and South Block knew he could read the writing on a South Asian wall. Getting India's junior foreign minister to speak to him was itself a message to the Maldives when protocol required Khurshid's boss, Dinesh Singh, the external affairs minister to engage his counterpart from Male.

The entire operation was somewhat cloak and dagger. There was no public announcement of Jameel's arrival and his visit was handled in South Block largely by its Pakistan division and not the one handling the Maldives. The young Khurshid acquitted himself well and Male did not cross the proverbial lakshman rekha with Islamabad as subsequent events testified.

But unlike two decades ago, there is no certainty that India can now force the Maldives to fall in line on the latest irritant in their bilateral relations over the problem of the Male airport contract. No amount of spin can save India's face if that happens and New Delhi loses Male forever because of bad judgement in South Block on the current stand-off.

For one thing, the Rao government's unpublicized, but clinically targeted, confrontation with Male was over an issue of national interest and security. India's latest fight with the Maldives is over a deal with a private contractor, however much New Delhi might whitewash it as a matter of supreme national concern. In fact, the grapevine in New Delhi and Thiruvananthapuram is full of innuendoes that Arvind Kejriwal has enough material on the 'East-India-Company-type approach' by some Indian businesses in the Maldives that will produce another of his bombshells, even if it may occur only closer to the next Lok Sabha elections for maximum effect.
In any case, having sullied its hands in the till on a succession of corruption-tainted corporate deals in recent years, the United Progressive Alliance government has no credibility left when it speaks for Indian businesses abroad. In part, that explains the attitude in Male to New Delhi's demands on behalf of the GMR Group, whose airport contract has been cancelled. But there is also a larger dimension to the episode that points to a colossal foreign policy failure within the UPA government that is largely self- inflicted. It is a drift, which, if unchecked — and it may already be too late — can have ramifications that South Block cannot afford either in the country's neighbourhood or on any larger geographic scale.

In recent times, there has been a steady stream of instances when the ministry of external affairs forgot a golden rule in diplomacy that reaction to any development overseas has to be measured, proportionate and calculated to produce the maximum impact.

Earlier this year, the ministry had egg on its face when it disproportionately became engaged in a Calcutta couple's child custody dispute in Norway that turned out to be a case of marital discord combined with health problems of one of the parents. It is no one's suggestion that such consular issues should be neglected. But, for the minister for external affairs of a country that aspires to be a global power to personally get involved in such matters instead of leaving them to his joint secretary dealing with the country concerned or to the chief passport officer is to waste New Delhi's considerable diplomatic capital abroad.

The worst case of this kind was perhaps in April this year when the United States of America's deputy chief of mission in New Delhi was summoned to South Block over a mere 75-minute delay in clearing the actor, Shah Rukh Khan, at White Plains airport in New York. The summons was preceded by the unedifying spectacle of a procession of members of the UPA's council of ministers going on record protesting against what is a normal delay that millions of Indian citizens like Khan regularly face at airports the world over in the course of their travels.

A plethora of such examples of diplomatic excess pale into insignificance before the bad judgment that South Block is now displaying on the airport row with the Maldives. The defence minister A.K. Antony is a man who does not speak out of turn before TV cameras and, instead, does what he has to do in private. So, it is not yet clear to those outside the government if Antony has brought to the attention of the prime minister and his cabinet colleagues the risks involved in an undesirable government intervention in a private business dispute with Male at this stage, and the stakes in such ill-advised action for India's defence and national security.
Those in New Delhi who are threatening to cut off aid to the Maldives — a pittance of $25 million — could not be unaware that Antony made a highly sensitive visit to the Maldives in August 2009. Typical of the defence minister's style, the visit was low profile, but the composition of his team was a dead giveaway. India's defence minister would not spend as many as three full working days in a tiny country like the Maldives, that too accompanied, among others, by his defence secretary, the director-general of the coast guard, at least one vice admiral and the deputy chief of naval staff unless there is very important business to be transacted with his hosts.

With that visit put together by the ministry of defence, the navy had begun a strategic initiative to establish a bridgehead in the once-critical World War II royal air force base of Gan, which the British vacated and handed over to the Maldives in 1976. In addition to a presence in Gan, Antony and his team unveiled, during that visit, the road-map for an Indian naval and air force presence permanently in Male and in the Maldivian atoll of Haa Dhalu. This has been one of the navy's biggest initiatives since it began a rapid expansion a few years ago.

Those in the UPA government who are demanding punishment of a sovereign state for cancelling an airport contract are ignoring the reality that today the Maldives is being wooed by big powers because of its strategic location. It is a failure of recent Indian diplomacy that the Maldivians are now willing to be wooed. That would have been unthinkable in the years of Indira Gandhi, her son Rajiv or their successor, Rao.

The man of the moment in Male is the US assistant secretary of state for South Asia, Robert Blake, who knows the atolls well from the time he lived in Colombo as the American ambassador. Blake is now waiting for India to mess up its relations with the Maldives and walk away with Gan, giving the Pentagon its biggest gift in the region since Diego Garcia military base in 1971.

IntelliBriefs: The US is waiting for India to mess things up with the Maldives

***********************************

It is unfortunate that India is under a rudderless, appeasement centric governance, apparently having lost its direction and spine on the way.

Interestingly, the last time Maldives felt that it could ignore India, the same Salman Khurshed, made them wise and see the light. Of course, the Govt was then under Narashima Rao who was a man of few words, but an ocean in vision.

Right now, the same Salman, in a higher post, flounders.

Speaks volumes!
 

nrj

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India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

With the ouster of GMR Infrastructure from Maldives imminent, the Indian government has put on hold a Rs 250 crore bilateral aid it had promised to the atoll nation, CNBC TV18 reported, quoting sources.

An earlier report on the TV channel, however, quoted the Maldivian government as saying that it is yet to receive any intimation from the Indian government on the issue.

India's move is likely to be aimed at arm-twisting the Maldivian government to fall in line. However, the Maldivian government led by Preident Mohamed Waheed Hassan Manik seems to be determined to take over the airport management control.

Earlier, another report on the TV channel said that the government authorities there are actively engaged in determining the contours of the compensation that is to be paid to GMR Infrastructure for cancelling its airport development contract.

The Maldivian government has also expressed confidence that the management of the airport will be taken over by Maldives Airport Company Ltd, CNBC TV18 reported.

Adding to the uncertainty over compensation to GMR, Maldives has also rubbished the figures floating around in the media as speculative.

"We have heard figures of $700 million, $550 million, $350 million and also $220 million," Masood Imad, press secretary to the Maldivian president, was quoted as saying an HBL report yesterday.

The CNBC TV18 report said the Maldivian authorities met GMR officials yesterday and have decided to retain all GMR staff, including Indians, after the takeover of the airport.

The CNBC TV18 report also said the present Maldivian government has serious concerns on how the project was awarded to GMR by the former Mohammed Nasheed government.

Airport development charge was a strong point behind move by the then Maldivian government, it said.

Strong arm: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives | Firstpost
 

mikhail

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

great work finally by the GOI!i have been waiting for this for a long time.now perhaps the time is now ripe for an armed intervention in maldives just like Operation Cactus!:rolleyes:
 

Defcon 1

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

great work finally by the GOI!i have been waiting for this for a long time.now perhaps the time is now ripe for an armed intervention in maldives just like Operation Cactus!:rolleyes:
Maybe you should lead our navy in that invasion.:thumb::thumb::rofl:
 

parijataka

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Pakistan is just the puppet. The puppet master sits elsewhere :namaste:

BTW sometimes religious motivation can make people do crazy things and believe me Maldives is one crazy Islamist state..probably more than BD.
An anecdote. One of my relatives, a doctor, is working in Maldives. He has a 2 year old kid who is fond of dogs. Apparently there are no canines in that country as dogs are considered haraam. So the little one is shown his relative's dog in India over Skype!
 

mikhail

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

Maybe you should lead our navy in that invasion.:thumb::thumb::rofl:
nah we have got able officers to lead the IN!besides my job is to make strategies for IN,they are the ones who'll execute those strategies!:wave::laugh::taunt:
 

Defcon 1

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

nah we have got able officers to lead the IN!besides my job is to make strategies for IN,they are the ones who'll execute those strategies!:wave::laugh::taunt:
Really, so YOU make strategies for IN?:rofl: YOU?:rofl: I never knew! So are you like an admiral or something? I think only those guys make strategies right?
 

mikhail

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

Really, so YOU make strategies for IN?:rofl: YOU?:rofl: I never knew! So are you like an admiral or something? I think only those guys make strategies right?
you got me mate,well i used to make strategies for them but nowadays i work for the U.S.N.!:lol::taunt::taunt1:
 

Defcon 1

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

you got me mate,well i used to make strategies for them but nowadays i work for the U.S.N.!:lol::taunt::taunt1:
Idiot kids like you couldn't the job of peons of strategists even if they waited 15 years outside their office. You think you are being funny, but actually you just sound ignorant and pathetic. Are you still in school by the way, cos that would explain a lot.
 

mikhail

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

Idiot kids like you couldn't the job of peons of strategists even if they waited 15 years outside their office. You think you are being funny, but actually you just sound ignorant and pathetic. Are you still in school by the way, cos that would explain a lot.
mate don't your parents taught anything related to culture or etiquette when talking to someone!actually i don't blame them as you belong to that group of kids who are ignorant as well as arrogant at the same time!you may be a world class idiot(probably you are one) but you should learn a thing or two about how to have a decent conversation with a senior person!and personally i don't think you will even get a job(even that of a peon) in your entire life if you don't stop behaving like this kiddo!
 

Defcon 1

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

mate don't your parents taught anything related to culture or etiquette when talking to someone!actually i don't blame them as you belong to that group of kids who are ignorant as well as arrogant at the same time!you may be a world class idiot(probably you are one) but you should learn a thing or two about how to have a decent conversation with a senior person!and personally i don't think you will even get a job(even that of a peon) in your entire life if you don't stop behaving like this kiddo!
If only the world gave a damn about what you think.

You didn't answer my question. Are you still in school?
 

mikhail

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

If only the world gave a damn about what you think.

You didn't answer my question. Are you still in school?
the same logic also applies to you mate!anyways i won't give any further reply to a person like you as you ain't worth it kiddo!
 

Defcon 1

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Re: India holds back Rs 250 cr aid to Maldives

the same logic also applies to you mate!anyways i won't give any further reply to a person like you as you ain't worth it kiddo!
So I will just take it that you are in fact, still in school. There is no need to be ashamed about it actually. I was once in school as well.
 

thakur_ritesh

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Re: What's happening in Maldives ?

It is unfortunate that India is under a rudderless, appeasement centric governance, apparently having lost its direction and spine on the way.

Interestingly, the last time Maldives felt that it could ignore India, the same Salman Khurshed, made them wise and see the light. Of course, the Govt was then under Narashima Rao who was a man of few words, but an ocean in vision.

Right now, the same Salman, in a higher post, flounders.

Speaks volumes!
Thanks for sharing the article sir.

There are few things that stand out in the article.

One, complete lack of coordination between the various ministries of the GoI. MoEA didn't find it feasible to at least get some sense of what the MoD was up to in Maldives.

Two, for absolute trivial political domestic gains, the GoI has used the MoEA as a toll to further the agenda.

Three, no matter what the circumstances, no matter how good relations we might ever develop with either the Russians, or the Americans, or the Chinese or who-so-ever, we should never ever let these bigger powers make way in countries like B'desh, SL, Mal, Burma, etc, not that we have been completely successful, but wherever we can exert our influence, no one from outside should be allowed to do any sort of military build up. I raise the point in particular because of cozing up of our relations with the US, and quite a few of us have argued that we should welcome the US intervention is some way in BD and SL so as to curtail the growing Chinese influence. No one is a friend out there, we should be absolutely sure about that.

Lastly, Salman Kursheed isn't really a smart and a tactful cookie, as it stood out in one of his interviews with the two Pakistani jurnos, recently. Salman did what he did then purely under the guidance of PVNR and Dinesh Singh.
 

Ray

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One, complete lack of coordination between the various ministries of the GoI.
That is the bane of this Govt.

Each Minister thinks he is a Khalifa and Tees Mar Khan and runs his own Empire while the PM bumbles along leaving the Govt and the country in a rudderless spin.

Even Tata has groused over the same!
 

Ray

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India should patrol the West of Maldives and around Sri Lanka in the anti piracy role against the Somali pirates, which is a legitimate activity.

The presence of IN vessels would be an adequate signal to all concerned.

It will also protect the Indian fisherfolks from harassment from the SL Navy!

Maldives would get the message quick as silver, while acting as innocent as a lamb.

India must avoid the crude muscle flexing as China is doing in the South China Sea or India will come to grief like China.
 
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Rage

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You know, I'm reminded by the whole history of these events- how India has always taken the soft approach toward the Maldives: loans, developmental assistance, stabilising governments to end up having its interests evicted- by what Machiavelli once said- A prince can endure very well being feared as long as he is not despised, which will always be when he is perceived as strong and just, and not cowardly and weak [..] But if among the two, fear and love, one must be dispensed with, it is better to be feared than to be loved.

We have not learnt to be unapologetically strong when issues require it, and unreluctantly compromising when issues do.
 

amoy

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We have not learnt to be unapologetically strong when issues require it, and unreluctantly compromising when issues do.
India should have intervened when Masheed was ousted. Peanut island state - Maldives can be finished in hours like Invasion of Grenada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia , relatively easier than Grenada with Cuban and Soviet presence.

All carrot no stick ends nowhere.
 

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