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A measured engagement
INDIA'S NEW INITIATIVE to engage Mr. Saddam Hussein's Iraq in a
measured but substantive manner is as much an exercise in some
enlightened economic diplomacy as an attempt at upholding
autonomy in foreign policy. The latest agreement, with two
distinctive facets of interaction with Baghdad, provides for
Indian wheat supplies to Iraq in exchange for its crude oil. This
marks New Delhi's first decisive step in reorienting its ties
with Baghdad since the end of the Gulf War in 1991. It is an
eloquent testimony to India's empathy for the suffering people of
Iraq. But the accord, given the limits of its bilateral
character, can be no masterplan for rescuing the ordinary Iraqis
from the trap of sanctions which the U.N. Security Council has
kept in force for nearly a decade since the U.S.-masterminded
eviction of Mr. Hussein's military forces from Kuwait. In simple
but profound terms, the cumulative effect of the sustained U.N.
embargo is an unmitigated humanitarian disaster for the Iraqi
population. It is in this grim context that India will extend
help to Iraq under the explicit terms of the U.N.'s prevalent
`oil-for-food' programme. This is a U.N. concession to the Iraqi
people so that they can receive food and other essentials of
livelihood in barter for the oil that Mr. Hussein's regime could
export through an internationally-monitored window.
In addition to this transfer of aid within the modified framework
of the U.N. sanctions regime, New Delhi has now said it will
consult the Security Council on a separate issue of benefit to
both India and Iraq. New Delhi's objective is to explore ways of
importing additional crude from Iraq in the context of the cross-
currents on the international oil market that had already
affected India. Referring to Iraq as an oil source in this
situation, India hopes to invoke a specific provision of the U.N.
Charter. A planned move of this magnitude by New Delhi seems to
have been a factor in Iraq's new hopes for a long-term
``strategic'' relationship with India. However, two questions
must first be sorted out. The outcome of India's proposed
discussions with the Security Council will be determined by not
only the facts of the case but also the diplomatic compulsions of
the U.S., in particular, in dealing with Mr. Hussein in the short
run.
On a different plane, Baghdad may find it necessary to wait until
its equation with the U.N. is redefined so that the potential
scope of a meaningful India-Iraq ``strategic'' tie-up can be
adequately considered in brain-storming sessions in the first
place. Impinging on this new bilateral equation will be New
Delhi's current diplomatic exercise, undertaken in conjunction
with Teheran, in identifying ways to transport Iranian natural
gas to India through or outside Pakistan. More importantly, much
will also depend on Iraq's own world view after the sanctions on
it are lifted. A diplomatic spin-off effect of the current India-
Iraq dialogue is that New Delhi has now joined the ranks of an
emerging morality club of sorts consisting of Russia and China,
which seem keen to expose the horrific miscarriage of the U.N.'s
anti-Hussein embargo. A pertinent point is that the countries
advocating a humane exit strategy for consideration by the
Security Council in regard to its sanctions on Iraq are also the
ones favouring the emergence of a multipolar global political
order at this stage. Russia has of course made clear that it is
not thinking of a tripartite alliance involving India and China.
However, the three have been able to identify some commonalities,
not amounting to a partnership as of now, in quest of a more
balanced international political dispensation. Their views on
Iraq will be of some direct interest to the next U.S.
administration too.
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