People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)


Vol. XXXIV

No. 45

November 07, 2010

The Obama Visit

 

Prakash Karat 

 

US president Barack Obama is visiting India in the first week of November.  The last time a US president visited India was when president George Bush came in 2006.  At that time, there were widespread protests in the country. His visit was opposed primarily due to the war on Iraq and its occupation.  There were protests in both houses of parliament against the visit. 

 

The election of Barack Obama as president and the end of the Bush regime was greeted with relief around the world.   There were high expectations from  the young president of Afro-American origin who had opposed the war in Iraq in the US Senate.  The world looks forward to an end to the unbridled neo-conservative aggression of the Bush era.  In the nearly two years of the Obama administration, much of the expectations have been belied.  There has been a change in the tenor and style, but not much change in the substance of US foreign policy. 

 

Though the United States has announced the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq, it continues to station 50,000 US troops and other mercenary forces in IraqUS military bases will remain to oversee American interests which includes capturing a major share of the oil resources of the country.  The Obama administration has continued to target Iran on the  nuclear issue  and taken the lead to get the fourth around of sanctions against Iran adopted by the UN Security Council.  Despite the promise of initiating talks for a just settlement of the  Palestinian issue, the Obama administration has failed to do so because it cannot afford to  antagonise the powerful Jewish lobby in the United States. It continues to overlook the Israeli regime’s illegal and  expansionist schemes in the occupied  territories.   

 

In Afghanistan, Obama sent in 30,000 more troops and  devised the “Afpak” strategy. The US-NATO war on Afghanistan will not be able to crush the Taliban but will succeed only in intensifying the suffering of the  Afghan people.  The Obama administration continues the illegal economic blockade against Cuba. It echoes the  call of successive administrations for “democracy” in Cuba as a precondition for ending the embargo.   

 

The single worthwhile initiative Obama took has been the Prague speech in 2009 wherein he called for universal nuclear disarmament.  This was followed up by the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START III) with Russia which will result in a cut in the existing nuclear warheads of both countries by one-third.  Though, this agreement awaits ratification by the US Senate. 

 

Two year after, the Obama administration has confirmed that Republican or Democratic, there will be no change in the basic pursuit of a global  strategy and foreign policy goals which are in the interests of the ruling classes of America.   

 

Obama is visiting India at a time when the US economy is still floundering  with the unemployment rate standing at a high 9.6 per cent.  This has reduced his support among the people considerably and this was reflected in the  losses suffered by the  Democrats in the Congressional and Senate elections. The visit would, therefore, see more earnest attempts by the US side to  get India to open up its markets and allow American companies to invest in sectors like retail trade and  agriculture. Indians see the Obama administration taking steps to discourage outsourcing business operations to India while at the same time, India is expected to provide more business opportunities for the United States.   

 

President Obama’s visit has evoked varied reactions in India.  There is the pro-US lobby which is well entrenched in the ruling establishment that hopes that the occasion can be used to strengthen the strategic  alliance with the US. They advocate further expansion of defence ties and conceding to the United States its demands for opening up investment opportunities in new sectors.  A vocal section of the rightwing and corporate media even want India to go alongwith the  aim of the United States to pitch  India as a counterweight to China. We have seen in the past the claptrap about the “Community of Democracies” acting in concert which was bought by the Vajpayee government  during the Clinton administration.   

 

Ironically in India, there are still people who feel nostalgic for the Bush era.   The former Indian Ambassador to the United States, Ronen Sen, had encapsulated this  feeling when he said that  George Bush has been the best American president for India. Those who yearn to be an ally of the United States miss the Bush era. There was the promise to make India a great power provided India becomes a reliable  strategic ally. However, even Bush refused to back India’s quest for permanent membership of the UN Security Council.   

 

As far as the CPI(M) and the Left are concerned,  we recognise the difference between Bush and Obama.  At the same time, we are aware that Obama administration represents a continuity in terms of the basic US approach for global dominance.  That is why the Left has decided to utilise the occasion to highlight the opposition of the people of India to the continuing US imperialist interventions.  It will express the Indian people’s opposition to the pressures mounted by the US government to intensify the neo-liberal economic policies in India and to facilitate the opening up of vital sectors like agriculture, retail trade and higher education to American multinationals.   

 

The Obama visit should not result in Walmart being allowed into retail trade in India which will destroy the livelihood of tens of thousands of small shopkeepers and traders.  The commerce minister and sections of the UPA government are rooting for FDI entry into multi-brand retail trade. 

 

Under the Indo-US Defence Framework Pact signed in 2005, the United States is seeking to get a series of agreements signed.  Two of them – the Logistics Support Agreement (LSA) and the Communications, Interoperability and Security Memorandum of Agreement (CISMOA) – are key to making the Indian armed forces an ally of the Pentagon. Obama would be keen that India buy US arms in a big way. Already India  has agreed to buy C-17 military transport planes.  The Americans are more interested in India placing the order for 126 fighter planes with the US which would cost more than $ 10 billion.  The Left parties have been consistently opposing the military collaboration with the United States which is impinging on India’s independent foreign policy and strategic autonomy. 

 

President Obama should be  told that he has a responsibility to ensure justice for the Bhopal gas victims.  A US company was responsible for this worst industrial disaster in the world.  If Obama could get  BP to cough up billions of dollars for the clean up of the oil spill in the Gulf coast, why should not the Dow Chemicals be made to pay for the damages and the clean up of the Bhopal site?   

 

The Left parties will demand that the United States stop assistance to the Israeli regime which has sustained an illegal occupation of Arab territories for more than four decades.  They will demand that Obama  stop the economic blockade of Cuba and initiate talks with Iran for a settlement on the nuclear issue without resorting to coercive sanctions. 

 

On November 8, president Obama will be addressing parliament.  Alongwith others, the Left party MPs will  also listen to him. On the same day, there will be demonstrations and meetings all over the country voicing the opinions of the Indian people. President Obama should listen to them.