While the article makes some good points, and makes some useful observations, I have to disagree with its general tone - which seems to lay the blame for lots of things having gone wrong over the past 50 years at India's feet. India voting against the US at the UN - well lets look at America's past history - a violent interventionist philosophy involving assassinations, coups, invasions, destabilizations, corporate takeovers, etc. And who were America's "friends" during this time, why pretty much rabid anti-communist dictators and their countries. Can you blame India for having voted against such a country? If there has been movement since then its not just India that's learnt the lesson but America too that's realized you can't change the world by destroying it.
India Cleans Up Its Act
Manmohan Singh's new stand on Copenhagen is just part of a plan to reposition India as a global power.
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Until very recently, India seemed to pride itself on poking a finger in the eye of rich superpowers, particularly the United States. Beginning in the mid-1950s, India was the leader of the group of poor, postcolonial nations that banded together in what they called the nonaligned movement, but which routinely tilted to the Soviet Union and bashed American imperialism. To Washington's consternation, New Delhi voted against the U.S. at the United Nations time and again. Relations between the United States and India soured further when it refused to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and then tested a nuclear device in 1974. Even after the fall of the Berlin Wall, when India began to abandon Soviet-inspired economic planning, New Delhi retained a reputation for obstructing America at every opportunity. It opposed NATO intervention in Kosovo, and the establishment of no-fly zones over northern and southern Iraq in the wake of the first Gulf war. As recently as last spring, the highest profile Indian voice on the world stage arguably belonged to Commerce Minister Kamal Nath, who set himself up as a defender of all poor nations against the trade machinations of the conniving rich. Many in Washington saw Nath as the man who killed the Doha round of global trade talks. Western diplomats continued to describe India's negotiating style as a series of attempts to score debating points before "getting to no."
Now, as he prepares to make his first summit visit to see Barack Obama in Washington later this month, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is repositioning India as an emerging power that can say yes. In place of the resentful leader of poor, postcolonial nations, Singh is defining India as an emerging powerhouse that can sit at the table of rich nations, with fewer chips on its shoulder. This new stance has been evolving for some time, and led to the landmark 2005 deal in which America agreed to help India with civil nuclear technology—and at the same time essentially conferred legitimacy to India's nuclear-weapons program. Partly in return, India has in recent years twice voted at the International Atomic Energy Agency to condemn Iran's nuclear program, siding with Washington against a former Third World ally, and a major energy supplier. Now the transformation of Indian foreign policy is gaining pace. Nath was shunted off to the Ministry of Roads in May, a move that has helped revive hope for the Doha round. Then in August, according to sources who attended the session, Singh said in a closed-door address to foreign ambassadors and senior Indian diplomats that India would work to drop its image as an obstacle to progress, particularly in talks on trade and climate change, and instead "play a role in the international arena in a manner that makes a positive contribution to finding solutions to major global challenges."
Singh's speech signaled a growing realization in New Delhi that India can have greater influence as a player inside the G20—the group of large economies of which it is now a member—than merely as a leader of the outsiders. Though still controversial at home, the new tone acknowledges that if India wants to exercise the political clout that is its due as one of the world's fast-growing economies, it needs to accept certain responsibilities. "You can't [be] a global player and just obstruct all attempts at cooperation," says Arvind Subramanian, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, D.C. It also revealed the increasing sense in New Delhi that India is being outmaneuvered by its regional rival China, which has been earning plaudits as a stabilizing force amid the global financial crisis as well as for offering concrete action to combat climate change. Singh's former spokesperson, Sanjaya Baru, says Singh aims to position India as a "consensus builder and a bridge" between rich and poor nations, rather than a spokesnation for the poor. At the recent G20 summit in Pittsburgh, for instance, India backed a U.S. call for "balanced growth" while also calling for reform of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to give greater representation to developing nations.
India's new personality is perhaps most obvious in its attitude on climate change. For years India had insisted that it was under no obligation to cut carbon emissions, because global warming was the result of the emissions rich nations produced as they industrialized. But two years ago, Singh began to shift in a way that was subtle, but, for an Indian politician, extraordinary. Dropping India's longstanding refusal to consider any cap on its emissions, he pledged instead that the country would never exceed the developed world in per capita emissions. Since India produces the equivalent of just 1.7 tons of carbon dioxide per capita, which is less than 7 percent of what the United States emits, critics said he was committing to doing nothing in the foreseeable future. Still, he had set a precedent for India to change.
This summer, Singh went further by removing India from the camp of global-warming denialists. India had long rejected the scientific evidence suggesting that an average global temperature rise beyond 2 degrees Celsius would be catastrophic. At the Major Economies Forum meeting in Italy, Singh signed a joint declaration stating that the world should attempt to limit the average rise to 2 degrees above preindustrial levels—and that each nation would take on its own carbon-mitigation efforts. Then, at the September summit on climate change in New York, Jairam Ramesh, Singh's environment minister, dropped another pillar of Indian obstructionism: its insistence that developing countries would not take on significant efforts to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions unless the industrialized world pays for them.
India, Ramesh declared, would voluntarily curtail its future emissions, even without a global pact or a pledge of financial support from the West. By 2011, he said, the country would introduce a fuel-efficiency cap on cars and trucks. A year later it would implement an energy-efficient building code, and it would mandate that 20 percent of its energy come from renewable sources by 2020, the same target to which the EU has committed itself. What's more, he promised that when the world sat down to hammer out a new treaty to combat climate change in Copenhagen this December, India would "be a deal maker, not a deal breaker." Senior Western diplomats, accustomed to Indian recalcitrance, welcomed Ramesh's remarks as a potential turning point.
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