| by B.Raman
( October 17,
2012, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) The current three-day visit of Australian
Prime Minister Ms.Julia Gillard to India for talks with Prime Minister
Dr.Manmohan Singh and other leaders and captains of Indian industry indicates
the poverty of bilateral strategic thinking in both the countries in the
Government and the non-Governmental levels.
2. Most of the
analytical articles that I have read are preoccupied with the question how soon
India can hope to start importing uranium from Australia for its civilian
nuclear power programme. India has had reasons to be thankful to Ms.Gillard for
reversing her Labour Party’s opposition to the sale of uranium to India on the
ground that India is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Agreement.
3. Ever since
her arrival in India, the Australian Prime Minister has been at pains to
discourage exaggerated expectations in India that the uranium sales may start
immediately. She has been pointing out that the sale of uranium has to be
preceded by the conclusion of a civil nuclear co-operation agreement with India
with appropriate safeguards to prevent the diversion of the uranium sold by
Australia for military purposes. In her estimate, it will take at least another
two years before uranium sales can start.
5.Ever since
India’s relations with the US started improving under the administration of then
President George Bush ( 2000-08), it has had a beneficial fall-out for
Indo-Australian relations too with increased military-to-military contacts and
exercises, particularly greater co-operation between the two Navies and greater
intellectual exchanges with a strategic focus. Australia’s diplomatic and
consular presence in India has expanded, more Indian students have been going
to Australia for higher education and more Indian academics are being invited
to Australia on short or long-term fellowships. However, the academic exchanges
have largely remained one way from India to Australia and not the other way
round.
6.The poor
infrastructure and other facilities in Indian universities have come in the way
of the exchanges being two-way. Surprisingly, even in the prestigious Indian
Institutes of Technology and Business Administration Schools, Australian
presence has been an exception. The fascination in Indian academic circles for
exchanges with institutions of higher learning in Europe and the USA have come
in the way of an increase in exchanges with Australia.
7. Australian
concerns over jihadi terrorism after the Bali terrorist strike of October 2002
directed largely against Australian
tourists by the Jemmah Islamia have led to a greater exchange of counter-terrorism
intelligence between the two countries. While the military-military relations
between the two countries have picked up momentum, the police-police relations
have not expanded. 8.Some years ago during a visit to the National Police
Academy at Hyderabad, I did come across two Australian police officers who were
doing an attachment with the Hyderabad Academy, but no thought seems to have
been given by our National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS) to the scope for
greater exchanges between the police institutions of the countries for
strengthening the capabilities of the
Indian police in the field of forensic examination, with particular reference
to use of modern technology for the prevention and detection of improvised
explosive devices (IEDs).Many ASEAN countries have benefited from Australian
expertise and capabilities in forensics and scientific methods of
investigation. There is no valid reason why we should not do so too.
9. When our
policy makers and strategic analysts talk of strategic co-operation with
Australia, their minds are over-focussed on military-related co-operation. The
scope for expanding non-military dimensions of the co-operation has not
received the attention it deserves.
10.An important
field that has remained untapped is the modernisation of our agriculture. For
some time now, our Prime Minister has been talking of the need for a second
green revolution to further improve our
wheat production. There is a tremendous scope for Indo-Australian
co-operation for modernising the cultivation of fruits and vegetables through
the establishment of Special Agricultural Zones.
11. Even as the
Australian Prime Minister was holding talks in New Delhi, Ms.J.Jayalalita, the
Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, inaugurated on October 17,2012, a joint
Indo-Israeli project for co-operation in the improvement of vegetable and fruit
cultivation in Tamil Nadu. There is no reason why we cannot supplement it with
Australian co-operation.
12. There is a
need for a more comprehensive thinking on the scope for multi-dimensional
co-operation between India and Australia. It is hoped that the Australian Prime
Minister’s visit will lead to such thinking.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director,
Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate of the Chennai Centre For
China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com
Twitter @SORBONNE75)