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India's Jawaharlal Nehru
(center) using interpreter to speak with China's Chou En Lai (left) at the
Bandung Conference. Howard Sochurek / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Imagee
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Ishaan Tharoor
Earlier this year, my family
and I were staring at a fearsome Aztec frieze in Mexico City's Museum of
Anthropology when an elderly janitor approached. He wanted to know where we
were from. "India," we said. Immediately his lips curled into a
smile. India, he expounded, led the way. It had a socialist past, stood up to
imperialism and offered hope to anticolonial movements. My rudimentary Spanish
couldn't keep up with the rest, but he slapped his chest when saying the name
of Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Indian Prime Minister. Indira Gandhi, Nehru's
daughter and also a Prime Minister, was, he said, like "mi madre."
We were taken aback, but his
feelings aren't that surprising. While it's hard to imagine most Mexicans these
days referring to Gandhi as their mother, the janitor's affection for India was
not an aberration. Indeed, such dreamy-eyed solidarity once shaped the whole
worldview of an earlier generation living outside the global north.
In the West, people look
back at the latter half of the 20th century and see only the binary
conflict of the Cold War, a clash between capitalism and communism, liberal
democracy and totalitarianism. But it was always far more complicated than
that: most of the world was still emerging from the shadows of empire and the
legacies of racism and foreign exploitation. Fledgling nations wanted little to
do with the two nuclear-armed superpowers of the day.
The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM)
— a bloc of countries trying to chart a path free from the influence of both
the U.S. and USSR — was founded in 1961 on that spirit of independence. At
NAM's peak, its members ranged from Indonesia to Yugoslavia to Argentina. Its
pro-poor, antiwar politics would lead to the bolstering of institutions such as
the U.N.'s atomic agency and its development program. Few statesmen stood
taller in this project than Nehru — a suave, Cambridge-educated lawyer who, as
India won its liberty in 1947, spoke famously of that moment when "the
soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance." He went on to inspire
fellow third worldists from Africa to Latin America.
But that was then. In the last
week of August, as heads of state and dignitaries from some 120 nations
gathered under NAM's umbrella in Tehran, there was little room for nostalgia.
With the Cold War over, NAM is almost always dismissed as a fusty, pointless
relic. The bloc is, in some respects, a failure; as a body representing the
global south, it was too weak and fractured to stave off the 1979 Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan or the U.S.'s first Persian Gulf intervention in 1990.
After spending decades calling for peace and disarmament, NAM's core members
now rank among the world's leading weapons purchasers. The socialist bonhomie
of NAM's founders has given way to the cold-blooded imperatives of the BRICs.
Even in India, some of New Delhi's elites speak of Nehru's internationalist
moralism as a naive, self-defeating embarrassment.
That NAM even reached
international front pages recently was less a result of its continued relevance
and more because of its host. Iran has assumed the rotating three-year mantle
of NAM leadership, much to the chagrin of American and Israeli hawks seeking to
raise international pressure on Tehran's nuclear program. The U.S. State
Department sounded notes of outrage over the Islamic Republic's human-rights
record, urging U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon not to attend. But that call
went unheeded; no U.N. chief has missed a NAM summit since the organization's
inception.
Instead, as the U.S.
grumbled on the margins, NAM seemed to reflect a new status quo. Egypt's
Islamist President Mohamed Morsy jetted into Tehran, in part to push the
diplomatic envelope on finding a solution to the bloody conflict in Syria —
something Washington has little leverage to achieve on its own. Shrugging off
months of American hectoring over his country's ties with Iran, Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh held substantive talks with Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad. Chief on the agenda was the countries' shared interest in
stabilizing Afghanistan, which will remain a headache for both long after U.S.
and NATO troops withdraw at the end of 2014.
"NAM is just a name for
regionalism now," says Vijay Prashad, a professor of international studies
at Trinity College in Connecticut. "And the future of world politics lies
in this regional thinking, not the U.S. State Department." The solidarity
of old may be gone, but in its place is something far more real: power.
Ishaan Tharoor, TIME, (only subscribers), Monday, Sept. 10, 2012
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