It is reported
that Tony Blair, doing the rounds with his begging bowl, was in India and gave
a speech. Anxious to please as ever, he
apologised to India for all the problems that Britain has caused in Kashmir
because of the decisions of 1947.
It seems that
barely a day goes by without a headline hog politician making an apology for
things they know little or nothing about.
The danger is that cheap politics for media exposure leaves many people
with beliefs and ideas that are well removed from reality.
Blair was born
in 1953 so anything he says is derived from other sources. It does not take much to find out that the
Kashmir issue in 1947 was very complicated, born out of a long history of proud
warrior peoples and a situation that was fraught, very dangerous and needed an
answer then and there. As is so often
the case, all the options had serious downsides with the potential for later
conflicts and disputes.
Kashmir is and
was a territory with differing population groups, religious and political as
well as governing entities between whom agreement was normally difficult and could
be impossible. More to the point,
Kashmir was one of the Principalities in which Britain did not have direct
rule. There was a monarch Prince,
Marahajah Hari Singh, with a local administration.
By 1946 across
most of the Sub Continent, Britain had lost effective control despite having
nominal status and for many of the British there the only way was out and as
soon as possible. Not least the Army we
had left there, many young conscripts, was unable to exert authority and the
great majority of men just wanted to be on the next boat home.
So Prime
Minister Attlee and his government sent in Lord Mountbatten; who had experience
and prestige, to deal with it quickly and hand over power. But he was faced with Muslims who wanted
their own nation, Pakistan, and the Princes of territories with self rule some
of whom were difficult to convince.
Kashmir was a notable one.
The upshot of
this to have an agreement for Kashmir was for some poor man to be packed off to
draw a line on the map very fast so that Nehru of India, Jinnah of Pakistan,
the Marahajah Hari Singh and Lord Mountbatten could settle and avoid an
outbreak of local hostilities. Gandhi
wanted a united Indian sub-continent and had a great deal of support. Given the warrior histories and fighting
capabilities of many of the population groups it would have been very serious
and hard to stop.
In the Kashmir,
the bulk of that territory that went to India there were minorities and the
part that went to Pakistan also had many peoples. The Maharajah who had hoped for a united
India, then perhaps Pakistan gave in to Nehru and the option for India. By this
time Mountbatten was in the position of having to concede to Nehru.
London had to
accept what was done despite doubts and outcries against it. Britain was powerless to impose its own
policy whatever that might have been.
Mountbatten has many critics, but whatever he would have patched up at
the time would always have them.
The British
electorate, most of whom had left school at 12 to 14 could only watch and pick
up the limited information about it all from their rationed newsprint papers and
the few journals available. Few of them
knew much and fewer cared, that I do know.
Because
Britain in 1946-1947 offered too many problems at home and abroad. At home the rebuilding after 1945 had barely
begun before that winter wreaked severe damage.
The Cold War had started requiring a major military effort in
Germany. There were many other demanding
trouble spots, notably Palestine.
So where does
"fault" lie in the Kashmir question?
There are no easy answers because there was too much and too
many involved. What we can do without in
any serious discussion is easy come and easy go dodgy politicians on the make.
Had just commenced reading newspapers at this time - after experiencing War India seemed a mercifully long way away. Much for serious thought. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAt this rate the day will come when someone feels they have to apologise for Blair.
ReplyDeleteWell, I think you summed it up pretty well in the words "dodgy politicians" Blair is an intelligent man but perhaps he is not very good at seeing the big picture, and sees whatever suits his current situation. A good analysis.
ReplyDeleteWell, I think you summed it up pretty well in the words "dodgy politicians" Blair is an intelligent man but perhaps he is not very good at seeing the big picture, and sees whatever suits his current situation. A good analysis.
ReplyDelete