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Address by
Shri Atal
Bihari Vajpayee
Prime Minister of India
(Text
as Delivered)
Asia Society
Annual Dinner
September
7, 2000, New York
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a great pleasure to return to Asia Society. It is a
privilege to once again address this distinguished gathering
of scholars, thinkers, captains of industry and practitioners
of foreign policy.
Two years ago, I had the opportunity to share my thoughts
with you on future relations between India and the United
States of America. This March, President Bill Clinton and
I outlined the vision of a new relationship between the world's
two largest democracies in the 21st century.
This vision is anchored in something that is fundamental to
both countries. And is best captured in the joint declaration
we signed, A Vision for the 21st Century:
"We are nations forged from many traditions and faiths,
proving year after year that diversity is our strength. From
vastly different origins and experiences, we have come to
the same conclusions: that freedom and democracy are the strongest
bases for both peace and prosperity, and that they are universal
aspirations, constrained neither by culture nor levels of
economic development."
As India and the United States work to deepen their ties,
these common conclusions are greatly strengthened by institutions
such as Asia Society.
You provide a forum to examine the antiquities of Asian civilisations,
study current Asian affairs and analyse possible future developments.
These interactions have helped us understand how the USA perceives
Asia, especially India. I hope they have also helped members
of the Asia Society acquire a deeper understanding of India's
aspirations and her desired place in the world.
Since I last addressed Asia Society members, there have been
several political and economic developments in India.
In the fall of 1999, we had a fresh mid-term general election.
By giving a clear and decisive mandate for the National Democratic
Alliance, the people of India have once again reposed their
faith in our policies and programmes. More importantly, they
have wholeheartedly reiterated their unflinching commitment
to democracy.
Ironically, even as my Government was being sworn in, an elected
Government in our neighbourhood was being dismantled and democracy
being snuffed out by that country's military. The irony was
even greater because the coup took place in the dying light
of the 20th century whose passage into history was supposed
to herald a new era free of militarist triumphs over democratic
values.
These and other developments in India and her neighbourhood
represent, in a larger sense, India's success as a democracy
in South Asia, indeed in Asia. The political, economic and
social transformation that is taking place in India today
embodies the aspirations of a billion people as well as our
Government - equality of opportunity, power of participation
and freedom to succeed.
We believe that empowering the individual means empowering
the nation. And empowerment is best served through rapid economic
growth coupled with rapid social change. To keep pace with
the fast changing global economy, we have taken several steps
to deepen and broaden the process of economic reforms.
It is true that only by opening our doors can we usher in
the wind of change. But it is equally true that we need to
be cautious so that all we have and value are protected if
the wind were to turn into a storm. And because we are a vibrant
democracy, we have to be sensitive that the weak and the vulnerable
benefit from economic reforms and globalisation.
We will continue to make our markets more conducive to enterprise
and initiative. We will continue to make our institutions
stronger and more transparent. We will continue to invest
in people, who are our greatest resource and strength. In
short, the course we have charted hinges on the twin goals
of economic growth with social equity.
Impatient investors and eager sellers can often be heard saying
that India is slow to change. To them, I have this to say:
We are a diverse democracy and we need to carry the people
with us. Efforts are being made in this direction and we are
confident of success.
India today is a nation of the move. The momentum for progress
has started gathering speed. Nowhere is this more pronounced
than in industries that will shape global economic relations
of the future, industries that also the prime movers of Indo-US
relations - in formation technology, knowledge intensive industries,
entertainment, communications and services.
I would also urge those who tend not to notice this change
to heed the fact that we have averaged a stable and consistent
growth of over six per cent a year in the last decade. We
have laid the foundation for significantly higher long-term
growth of seven per cent and beyond. This is something few
economies can claim with certitude.
It is, in a fundamental sense, our emphasis on stable political
and dynamic economic environments that has helped accelerate
growth. Openness and transparency, rule of law and free flow
of information that characterise democracy are also the institutions
on which durable and stable market economies are founded.
And an increasingly open and dynamic India does not see its
socio-economic development in isolation. We see our fortunes
linked to the prosperity and stability of our Asian neighbours,
indeed, to that of the global community.
Friends, India's historic and civilisational role in Asia
over millennia is well recognised. A large number of countries
in Asia trace the roots of their cultural traditions to India.
India has been, and continues to be, the link between West
Asia and East Asia. In a sense, India is central to the Asian
identity.
Much of the harmony and stability that we seek in Asia would
depend on how India evolves and reflects its growing strength.
It would depend on not only economic progress, but also how
best we are able to nurture and strengthen our democratic
way of life and plural society.
It will also depend on our success in ensuring peace and stability
around us. In this great endeavour, I am sure we will derive
strength and encouragement from our growing, co-operative
relationship with the United States of America.
We are conscious that for all the promise of co-operative
prosperity, Asia also faces risks and challenges to its future
security environment. Asia is still striving to cement its
various fault lines, reconcile past differences with future
interdependence, confront the challenge to progressive and
liberal values from terrorism and religious extremism that
belongs tot he medieval age, and cope with social strains
caused by unequal development.
Asia faces future risks from possible aggressive assertion
of interests and claims. Across the immense space and diversity
of Asia, the challenges are sometimes similar, but often different.
The task of securing India's future in this complex scenario
of risks and challenges is ultimately ours. We will exercise
our judgement, with responsibility and restraint, to meet
our objective.
As I see it, Asia's collective peace and prosperity will be
best secured only when nations on this continent develop common
stakes and are no longer divided by narrow interests. And,
common stakes can be developed only through close ties and
friendly relations.
As the largest country in South Asia and the only one that
shares borders with all other countries in the region, we
are mindful of our special responsibility in taking the leadership
in fostering co-operation. Indeed, India has consistently
sought to build good neighbourly relations in the South Asian
region. This is not only the policy of my Government, but
is a reflection of our national consensus. We seek no undue
favours, nor do we accept the right of others to seek unilateral
advantages.
In pursuit of this approach, we have displayed a generosity
of spirit that few countries can match. We have shown this
in our dealings with all our neighbours. Again, this is as
much a reflection of my Government's thinking as of our national
genius.
All these have been an integral part of our approach to Pakistan,
also. From the time of the Shimla Agreement - a generous agreement
if ever there was one - we have sought to build friendly relations.
Those of you who were present when I last addressed the Asia
Society in 1998, will recall my emphasising India's faith
in bilateral dialogue and accords in building peaceful relations
with Pakistan.
In the spring of last year, I travelled to Lahore in search
of a new quality of relations in the sub-continent and a new
age of regional co-operation. That our initiative was not
merely a gesture is reflected in the Lahore Declaration and
the resumption of composite dialogue.
The rulers of Pakistan responded through Kargil in the summer
of 1999. The history of that episode is well known. Pakistan
suffered a military and diplomatic defeat. But instead of
heeding international opinion, instead of responding to our
offer to normalise relations, Pakistan responded by removing
the last vestiges of democracy and embarking upon a yet more
adventurous course of stepping up its terrorist campaign.
The hijack of the Indian Airlines aircraft to Kandahar in
the winter of last year, the massacre of 40 innocent Indians
during the visit of President Clinton in March, the carnage
that left more than 100 men, women and children dead and whose
purpose was to scuttle the nascent peace talks in Kashmir,
are part of the painful record of this cross-border terrorist
campaign.
In the face of extreme provocation, we have shown patience
and restraint. Unfortunately, Pakistan has misread our generosity
of spirit and our desire for friendly relations as weakness.
It has consciously opted to pursue the path of hostility by
promoting terrorism in different parts of India.
The protagonists of this terror campaign are known to the
world. The proliferation of practitioners of medieval religious
extremism in our neighbourhood is only one of the factors
that have contributed to cross-border terrorism. But they
have provided a convenient cloak to disguise the aggression
on our civil society - the cloak of jihad.
This is nothing but an attempt by those who have adopted cross-border
terrorism as an instrument of state policy to disown responsibility
for their terrible crimes against humanity. We reject, and
we call upon the international community to reject, attempts
to cloak cross-border terrorism as jihad.
We are a patient people and have persevered in the search
for a peaceful settlement with Pakistan in the conviction
that war is in nobody's interest. We have displayed patience
and restraint in order to discharge our higher responsibilities
towards the region.
We are determined to preserve and protect our national interests.
None should doubt that India has the means and the will to
protect her territorial integrity, secular unity and communal
harmony. We will continue to conduct ourselves in accordance
with the great traditions bequeathed to us by our civilisational
history in combating the terrorism and instability that is
emanating from our neighbouring region.
Nevertheless, India remains committed to a composite dialogue
process with her neighbour. But for any meaningful dialogue,
that country must demonstrate its commitment to existing bilateral
agreements and abjure cross-border terrorism. Unfortunately,
the current leadership of Pakistan has time and again publicly
repudiated both the Shimla Agreement and the Lahore Declaration.
Terrorism poses as much a threat to all countries that subscribe
to open society and democracy, as to India. In fact, many
a country in the West, including the USA, is seized of this
problem.
Huge amounts of narcotics that form the mainstay of terrorist
funding are today finding their way into the USA and European
countries. Some terrorist groups have sought sanctuary in
the West. Let there be no doubt that they will one day threaten
the fabric of those very societies that have given them shelter
today. Indeed, the USA is already facing this threat.
India has been in the forefront of campaigning for early adoption
of the Comprehensive Convention Against Terrorism. We acknowledge
with appreciation the USA's support on this front. We look
forward to the Convention's adoption by the United Nations
General Assembly.
When I addressed Asia Society in 1998, I had mentioned how
India had raised, for five decades, her voice for universal
verifiable nuclear disarmament. But not only was our voice
disregarded, India's sovereign right to keep the nuclear option
open was sought to be curtailed.
In the circumstances, we exercised our nuclear option. Our
decision was as much influenced by national security concerns
as to assert our objection to nuclear apartheid.
The multipolar world of the 21st century necessitates a plural
society order that accommodates and acknowledges the growing
strength and confidence of emerging economic and security
players. We believe that in the emerging multipolar world,
a plural society order alone can deal with the challenges
of the new era.
Hence, our resolve to build a multipolar world where we have
strategic space and autonomy in decision-making, instead of
being subjected to the hypocrisy and hegemony of those who
refuse to dismantle their nuclear stockpiles.
However, our decision to acquire credible minimum nuclear
deterrent has not deflected us from our belief that peace
between nations in this new century is best guaranteed by
nuclear disarmament, and not nuclear deterrence. But there
appears to be little inclination on part of nations that have
acquired huge stockpiles and delivery systems to turn their
swords into ploughshares.
Therefore, till such time weapons of mass destruction are
dismantled, we will retain a credible minimum deterrent. Our
experience has taught us that to defend peace, we have to
be strong.
Above all, India's security, stability and prosperity are
central to security, stability, democracy and prosperity in
Asia. The security of a billion people will contribute to
the security of Asia. Our strength and unity will be vital
to the stability of Asia. Our prosperity will support prosperity
in the region. And, the initiatives we take to uphold all
that India values and symbolises will not threaten, but strengthen,
the future of others.
I also believe that those who share our vision of Asia must
show in the policies they formulate that they recognise our
stakes in the region and the full sweep of our security concerns.
I cannot imagine that any future paradigms or arrangements
for security in the region can be effective if it does not
include India.
Friends, as a nuclear weapon state, we acknowledge the responsibilities
that come attached with it. Indeed, India has proved to the
world, in more ways than one, that it is a responsible state.
We have maintained our unilateral moratorium on further tests.
We have scrupulously adhered to export controls, unlike some
countries in Asia. We continue with our "no first use"
policy.
On CTBT, we have been involved in seeking a national consensus.
However, pending the evolution of a national consensus on
India signing the CTBT, my Government will not prevent the
Treaty's entry into force. We also believe that all other
countries that must ratify CTBT under article XIV of the Treaty,
should do so without condition. My Government has agreed to
participate in negotiations on a FMCT at the Conference on
Disarmament in Geneva.
All this demonstrates that India's genuine concern is to secure
her national interests without in any manner affecting peace
and stability in the region. If I may quote one of your presidents,
we believe that peace lies in strength.
We believe that economic restrictions serve little purpose
other than being irritants in bilateral relations. We feel,
as do your policy makers, that India and the USA are natural
allies. Given the potential of mutual benefit of close co-operation
between India and the USA, it is for you to judge how far
such restrictions serve our mutual interests.
Before I conclude, I would like to comment on what is perhaps
the most significant development in India-US relations since
I last had the opportunity to speak to you.
President Clinton's visit to India was truly historic. It
is my belief that when the history of India-US partnership
is written, the six-month period between March and September
2000, beginning with President Clinton's visit to India and
culminating with my return visit, will be seen as the defining
moment.
Two years ago, I had said that India and the USA are natural
allies in the quest for a better future for the world in the
21st century. This March, the two natural allies forged their
common challenges and opportunities into a vision of co-operative
endeavour.
That partnership is important, above all, for Asia. Our many
shared values provide the foundation for it. Our many common
interests in the region demand it from us.
In the world of the 21st century, in which Asia will be central
to global stability and prosperity, our relationship will
play an important role.
Thank You.
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