http://scroll.in/article/807830/why-india-should-not-be-playing-game-of-thrones-in-nepal

OPINION

Why India should not be playing Game of Thrones in Nepal

Bihar is going to pick up the debris if Nepal descends into the abyss
of political instability.

Yesterday · 05:30 pm

MK Bhadrakumar

It seldom pays to interfere in another country’s domestic politics.

Take the cataclysmic downturn in the relations between India and Sri
Lanka in the early 1980s that made the stuff of tragic history
eventually within the decade. One main reason behind the trust deficit
between the then leaderships of Indira Gandhi in India and of JR
Jayewardene in Sri Lanka in the early 1980s, was that the Indian prime
minister somehow insisted on keeping a line of communication directly
to Sirimao Banadaranaike, the iconic opposition figure in Colombo,
even after she became a political outcast following her indictment for
abuse of power as prime minister and banned from public life in 1980.

All this is far from a moot point, as the echo of the footfalls of
early ‘80s can be heard in the corridors of power today. Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s situation vis-à-vis his Nepalese counterpart,
KP Sharma Oli bears an uncanny resemblance to Indira Gandhi’s with JR.

The heart of the matter is that the sheer sight of the coalition led
by the communists ruling Nepal has become an intolerable eyesore for
the Hindu nationalists ruling India. How could the abode of Lord Shiva
be under the jurisdiction of communists?

New Delhi advised Kathmandu to have the good sense to draft a
constitution that proclaimed Nepal as “Hindu Rashtra”, but the
irascible communists made a mockery of the Sangh Parivar and opted
instead for a secular state.

New Delhi's agenda

The “China bogey” or the “Madhesi problem” are only the alibi –
comparable to Jayewardene’s “pro-western tilt”. New Delhi’s real
agenda was to smash up Jayewardene’s will power to steer an
independent foreign policy – and that’s also the agenda vis-à-vis Oli.

The string of Nepali politicians – starting with the Madhesi leaders –
visiting New Delhi in the recent months betrayed the Indian game plan
to browbeat the elected government led by Oli, who is viewed by the
Indian establishment as a “defiant” politician.

The newly-elected chief of the pro-India Nepali Congress Sher Bahadur
Deuba made a pilgrimage to New Delhi last month and he was followed by
Maoist leader Prachanda’s close aide, Krishna Bahadur Bahara.

No sooner than these two gentlemen returned to Kathmandu after their
confabulations with the Indian establishment, a potent realignment in
Nepalese politics began surfacing whereby Prachanda would replace Oli
as the prime minister with the support of Deuba.

Of course, Prachanda’s overvaulting ambition to become prime minister
a second time is his Achilles heel, since his sheer survival in office
would depend on Deuba’s support – and, Deuba who as former interim
prime minister piled up an impeccable record of being “pro-India”,
would be the real power broker in Kathmandu.

The best part of the script would be that Oli’s overthrow would be an
interim measure that undermined the unity among the Nepalese communist
parties and discredited the Left as a whole, which would help Nepali
Congress to recover lost ground and stage a comeback as the country’s
ruling party.

Meanwhile, Oli made a capital error by keeping in Delhi as ambassador
a prominent Nepali Congress politician who was appointed by the
previous government, and is close to Deuba.

The scenario was almost perfect to push for “regime change” in Nepal.
But then, even the best-laid plans in politics can go awry.

In the event, Prachanda failed to carry his party colleagues along in
the project to overthrow Oli. The collective leadership of Maoists
could foresee New Delhi’s resurgence as the kingmaker in Kathmandu if
Oli were overthrown with the support of the Nepali Congress.

Ironically, Deuba too faces flak from his party colleagues who feel he
made a fool of himself by offering to support Prachanda. They
reprimanded him not to resort to such solo acts again without taking
his party into confidence.

Suffice it to say, Oli survived. And he hit back by cementing his deal
with the Maoists by conceding their longstanding demand on granting
amnesty for their cadres who committed violent crimes during the
decade-long insurgency (1996-2006).

Furthermore, Oli cancelled the week-long visit of President Bidhya
Devi Bhandari to India starting May 9 and sacked the ambassador in New
Delhi (whom he suspected to be the Indian establishment’s “fifth
column”). Oli has generally let it be known that if push comes to
shove, he might expel the Indian ambassador in Kathmandu.

Unsurprisingly, Modi brusquely called off his earlier plan to visit
Lumbini on May 21. With Nepal remaining a secular country, with
communists in power, and Oli in a defiant mood, Modi understood that
this is not exactly an opportune moment to visit Nepal.

Triumphalist tone

However, the indication from the triumphalist tone of BJP general
secretary Ram Madhav’s widely publicised tweet on Monday is that Plan
B is in the pipeline. Madhav tweeted:

Ram Madhav ✔ ‎@rammadhavbjp
Palace coup not new in Nepal. Growing anti-India rhetoric holding it
responsible fr what actually ws an internal power struggle is a
concern
8:31 AM - 8 May 2016
  120 120 Retweets   156 156 likes

Madhav is certainly wired into the bowels of India’s foreign and
security policy establishment and can hear the churnings there, which
the rest of India cannot hope to hear.

His tweet suggests that the ruling circles do not accept that the last
word has been spoken yet about the abortive coup attempt (“palace
coup”) in Kathmandu, and, secondly, that they care two hoots if
anti-India sentiments are cascading in Nepal.

The bottom line is, it is total war now – Modi versus Oli; New Delhi
versus Kathmandu; Nepali communists versus Sangh Parviar; Nepali
political class versus Indian spooks and diplomats – and, alas, India
versus Nepal.

It is an unequal brawl. Oli cannot hope to unseat Modi. The Nepali
politicians cannot match Indian diplomats and spooks in money power.
To be sure, the Game of Thrones will be played out in Kathmandu only.

What a miserable way to celebrate Modi’s neighbourhood policies as he
completes two years in office! Today, India has deeply troubled
relationships with four out of its six neighbours – by the way, the
remaining two are little Bhutan and one half of Bangladesh led by
Sheikh Hasina.

Is there a way to mend the fractured India-Nepal relationship? Of
course, there is. But then, it means going back to Modi’s own
electoral pledge to “federalise” India’s neighbourhood diplomacy and
apportion the due role to India’s border states to have a say in the
crafting and execution of policies.

Bihar is going to pick up the debris if Nepal descends into the abyss
of political instability – or, worse still, a Madhesi-led insurgency
takes roots in that country (which, alas, some sections of the ruling
circles have been openly threatening.)

That makes Chief Minister Nitish Kumar a stakeholder in Modi’s Nepal
policies. Modi should invite Nitish Kumar to step in and help rebuild
trust with Kathmandu, now that he himself has become a burnt-out case,
wittingly or unwittingly.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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