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In Modi’s AMU pitch to Muslims, retreat from party politics hurting foreign policy interests

Lot's of truths in this post (not everything is bang on though). Hindustan has bred a very specific type of Muslim, subservient, toothless, obsessed with religious dogma as a means to distract it from the clandestine erasure of its true identity and heritage as the erstwhile builder of modern India, unable to think logically for itself any more, and unable to guarantee its long-term existence.

If Muslims built India then where are those Muslims now. Look at any indicator education, wages, population growth. They are all bad. Fact is that Muslims have a small elite that accounts for much of the wealth and then a huge underclass that accounts for the backwardness.

It was elite Muslims that ruled India, the mercantile Muslim that traded with India, but the average Hindu that built India.
 
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Modi chose the last full week in 2020 to launch some important outreach to two sets of angry constituents: Muslims and the farmers


Prime Minister Narendra Modi chose the last full week in 2020 to launch some important outreach to two sets of angry constituents: Muslims and the farmers.

It is his first outreach, to India’s alienated Muslim minority, that we are more interested in. First, because, as in 2019, he concluded the year with a pitch to India’s Muslims. Second, because, somewhat serendipitously, he chose 22 December to do so. Remember, last year, he had similarly spoken at Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan when the anti-CAA agitation was at its peak. Third, because his tone and political proposition to Muslims again seemed contrary to his party’s politics and actions. And fourth, because it followed a very significant statement by his home minister, and deputy any which way, Amit Shah, who stated clearly during his West Bengal visit that the process of implementing the Citizenship Amendment Act has been put off for the time being.


The deadline for framing rules under the new law is long over and now the government will have to go back to a Parliamentary committee for a third extension. How could we implement the law when the pandemic is raging, Shah said, adding that it’s better to wait until the vaccination process starts.

We will risk inferring from this that the government has realised the downside — for international relations, and even internal security — of pushing too hard with this strategy. Because, whatever the arguments on either side, it is seen internationally, and by a critical mass of people at home, as a policy of Muslim exclusion.

The prime minister’s choice of Aligarh Muslim University’s annual day for making this outreach was significant. Earlier this year, the same university was caught in a maelstrom of protests, police high-handedness and calumny. Now, Modi has described it as “mini India” and asked its students and faculty to present a good and fair picture of the country to the world.

The reference was obviously to the many foreign students who routinely come to study at AMU. At this point, the number, ThePrint reporter Fatima Khan tells me, is about 615 in a total of 22,000, besides the NRIs. The larger contingents come from Afghanistan (42), Bangladesh (68), Indonesia (66), Jordan (49), Nepal (20), Palestine (13), Iran (15), Thailand (117), Turkmenistan (21), Yemen (151), and Iraq (29).

There are smaller contingents even from the US, Mauritius, New Zealand and Nigeria. Each is a friendly country and of vital national strategic interest.

Just for the record, AMU also has a Pakistani woman student, in the dentistry college. The impressions these students take back of India are mostly formed on the AMU campus.

For the past year, that impression has been overwhelmingly negative. And young, aware Indian Muslims, who constitute a majority of its students and faculty, have had reasons to feel angry and alienated.

Yet, why should Modi bother? Muslims do not vote for him. If anything, the coming elections in West Bengal and Assam will bring back the need for polarisation, the tip of the BJP’s electoral spear.

The BJP under him and Amit Shah has done an incredible electoral job of collecting votes in a narrower catchment, excluding the minorities. They’ve made the Muslim vote irrelevant in the big picture. Why should they then bother to reach out to them now? Angry, frustrated, alienated and isolated Muslims may indeed cheer their base.

We have to go back exactly by a year, to 22 December 2019, and Modi’s speech at the Ramlila Maidan, for a clue. In that speech, he took appreciative note of the fact that Muslim protesters were using the Tricolour and the Constitution, and then qualified it by suggesting that they should, at the same time, be speaking against terrorism. That is the usual BJP/RSS Tebbit test for India’s minorities. For those of younger generations or not interested in cricket, this refers to British Conservative politician Norman Tebbit, who, infamously, put British citizens from the cricket-playing former colonies to the test of whether they supported England or their native countries’ teams in a Test match.

But Modi got off that kerb quickly, kept his tone friendly and benign, asserted that none of his welfare policies discriminated against minorities. Which, to be fair, is correct. Then, he topped that cake with icing of his choice: By listing all the prestigious national honours and awards he had been honoured with by important Muslim countries. That is what we see as a possible clue to his thinking.

Everybody likes awards, honours and adulation. Yet, whatever these mean to Modi personally, more important is that this was part of his very significant reaching out to Muslim, especially Arab, countries. This was a deft outflanking of Pakistan to its West. What he tried to the East, with Xi Jinping, failed.

Now, if the move with China failed — and at this point we have troops eyeball-to-eyeball and Pakistan has more or less ‘progressed’ to becoming a Chinese client state or protectorate — it is because Xi Jinping saw more value in that. The ploy with the Arab world, meanwhile, has worked so far. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, Pakistan’s closest friends, patrons and moneybags, have drifted far away. So far, that Saudis are demanding their loans back, China plays the white knight to rescue Pakistan, and the UAE has stopped issuing visas to Pakistani workers.

This is not a gain Modi wants to squander, particularly with a rapidly changing global environment. There has probably been a sizeable pushback from the friendly sections of the Islamic world on this.

How do they continue backing India against Pakistan, if the BJP’s politics moves on the pivot of polarisation? This, while they also deal with many fissures and challenges within the Ummah, with both Iran and Turkey jostling for influence, and US ‘persuasion’ at the same time to normalise relations with Israel. At a time when even Malaysia and Pakistan seem to be warming up to Israel, the last thing India needs is to put its Arab friends in a spot.

The world has also changed because Trump is going and Biden will be in the White House in three weeks. He’s committed to re-engaging with Iran, and that will open other possibilities in the Islamic world, east of the Persian Gulf as well. Although not nasty like Erdogan or Mahathir, Iran’s Khamenei has also lately been critical of India’s treatment of its Muslims. And Iran is a friendly country with many shared economic and strategic interests.

Closer home, it is Bangladesh. In the run-up to the AMU speech was the summit between Modi and Sheikh Hasina Wajed. The effort to repair India’s most important strategic relationship in the neighbourhood after damage done by the CAA-NRC rhetoric — the talk of throwing the “termites” into the Bay of Bengal — was evident. Now, India was offering everything, from onions to vaccines. Both the Chinese and the Pakistanis are exploring the space created by the anti-Bangladeshi (Muslim) rhetoric in India.

More than a change of heart, we are probably seeing a shift in tactics, for a time when the global picture is changing, and India’s own cache value has diminished with its economic growth. The downside of letting internal political actions play havoc with larger strategic interest and foreign relations is stark. This is just when India’s vulnerabilities have risen as a frontline state against China, and the need for allies is greater than in five decades.



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Don't agree with everything in Shekhar Gupta's analysis here but it is good to see Modi/BJP finally making efforts to blunt the attacks by the opposition labeling them anti-muslim/anti-farmer. Far too often, he's decided to not say a word when trouble (often caused by malicious actors like many in the opposition) erupted, leaving his massive base of (somewhat centrist) urban middle class liberal base disappointed. The Akhlaq lynching case and Delhi riots being 2 prime examples.

The politics of the BJP is evolving, they'll end up draining all Muslim support to the Ghandy party by the end of it. Hardcore mullah vote goes to the AIMIM, common sense muslims will vote BJP.. Pappu Ghandy, his party, and his band of increasingly irrelevant stooges will INSHALLAH soon be relegated to the dustbin of history once and for all.

@jamahir @masterchief_mirza @Joe Shearer @padamchen @ranjeet @waz @Naofumi @halupridol .. discuss, and please tag others too.

BJP got 2 seats in 1986 election to Congress 404. BJP since then has increasingly used communal divisive policies to gain in parliament. This is not about to change anytime to soon. This is just sweet talking to people to thwart momentum in current movements.

BJP for all practical purposes can not and will not change.
 
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Lot's of truths in this post (not everything is bang on though). Hindustan has bred a very specific type of Muslim, subservient, toothless, obsessed with religious dogma as a means to distract it from the clandestine erasure of its true identity and heritage as the erstwhile builder of modern India, unable to think logically for itself any more, and unable to guarantee its long-term existence.
Who tagged you?

- PRTP GWD
 
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Why not? After years of propagating Arabs as subhuman invaders and financier of Jihad. It's time for both Arabs and Indians to put each other on the spot.

Ittehadun among Aryas & Arabs can be seen all over History including Ancient History !!!

Guru Shri Guru Nanak Dev Sahib is indeed Wali e Hindu Quom !!!

Nishan e Khalsa.jpg
 
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As per me it is a good strategy to gain electorate.

Firstly though little is said here a notion is formed about his outreach to muslims. And now if muslims protest against any laws they will simply be termed with various objectives and more support will be gained and whichever party dates to say anything against it they will also be stigmatized .

Secondly, To brighten up image in outside world that he is a beacon of progress .
Good points.

@OP : Duh, this becomes stupid if it needs to be repeated every time but BJP can never adopt any flavor of civic nationalism as its mainstream vision, it's just doesn't fit its mold. A minority of Modi's "stans" may have those aspirations due to various reasons but that's not things work here. The whole point of BJP is having a right-wing ethno-religious party and you can't swim with two boats...
 
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