[Assam] From ToI

Chan Mahanta cmahanta at charter.net
Mon Jul 30 07:17:15 PDT 2007


>I suspect the western world can't handle that India's new generation 
>does not pay them obeisance.

*** That must be it!

But the question that would follow would be, where were they-- the 
new generation of 30/40 years old --- when the leader of Shining 
India went into a fit at not being considered for that 'parity'? Do 
they count? Or were there numbers so tiny that their voices do not 
register in the din ?










At 8:19 PM -0700 7/29/07, Dilip/Dil Deka wrote:
>"All one needs to do is look at the Indian press head-lines or NRI 
>proclamations here in the USA or in Europe to know how much Indians 
>need that notice of whom they suck-up to." --
>The fact that some netter brought this article from someone called 
>Campbell to our attention is a testimony to the older NRI 
>generation's (at least some)suck-up to the western world. Talk to a 
>30 or 40 year old Indian and you will hear how they perceive India's 
>relation with USA and UK. I suspect the western world can't handle 
>that India's new generation does not pay them obeisance.
>The respect aspect is changing every year. There was a time when the 
>work of an engineering company from India would be checked and 
>doublechecked. Now they are treated as equal partners. There was a 
>time when US procurement managers would not put Indian suppliers on 
>the approved vendors' list, and now Larsen and Toubro is a favorite 
>supplier for high pressure vessels to the large oil companies.
>Again, I am not saying the Indians are the best in the world but I 
>must say their performance is improving and it is being noticed.
>Dilip
>
>Chan Mahanta <cmahanta at charter.net> wrote:
>
>Ram:
>
>I wasn't even paying attention to that part of the story. It is a 
>spook vs spook  intrigue that I don't pay much heed to.  But now 
>that you bring that up, why do you think that the hotel room could 
>NOT have been bugged, even though it was chosen by the Brits 
>themselves? Its not like that they had the place cordoned off by the 
>British security apparatus before Blair came a calling? And it 
>wasn't like some third party who supposedly found  the bugs -- it 
>said the Brits found them during their sweep.
>
>At any event, what would be Campbell's motive to throw that in, 
>while the entire book merited about ten references to an India with 
>super-power  pretensions? A calculated resurrection of the 
>benign-neglect doctrine :-)? Racism? Die-hard colonial 
>condescension? Fear of an emerging India? What?
>
>Be that as it may, what I found ironic and held my nose at was ABV's 
>supplication ( I had to look that up -means   prayer to a higher 
>power, a humble request for help from someone in authority ) for 
>Blair not to pass India by on his Pakistan visit, the grovelling for 
>equal notice, that much despised 'parity' problem that continues to 
>haunt India :-), never mind all the bravado declaring it as past.
>
>Not that I was surprised. I had a pretty good idea how much Britain 
>or even the USA respects India. All one needs to do is look at the 
>Indin press head-lines or NRI proclamations here in the USA or in 
>Europe to know how much Indians need that notice of whom they 
>suck-up to. What I was surprised by was  ToI's ability to print the 
>piece, warts and all, obviously written by an 'anti-Indian' , 
>probably an ex-pat , if not a 'pseudo-secularist' who hates ABV or 
>the BJP :-).
>
>c-da
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>At 6:40 PM -0600 7/29/07, Ram Sarangapani wrote:
>
>>Hi C'da
>>
>
>
>This news was reported also sometime ago (both in the British and 
>Indian press).
>
>The Indian Govt. asserts that there was no way they could have 
>planted bugs, as the hotel was chosen by the British Govt. And the 
>M16 or was it M15 had gone thru the suites with a tooth comb.
>
>
>
>Now, how did all that get past British Intel.
>
>
>
>The story seems too convenient as a story for Cambell.
>
>
>
>--Ram
>
>
>
>
>
>On 7/29/07, Chan Mahanta 
><<mailto:cmahanta at charter.net>cmahanta at charter.net> wrote:
>
>** Tsk, tsk!
>
>cm
>
>_______________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Blair's spin doctor spills beans on Indian waiters, PMs
>30 Jul 2007, 0038 hrs IST,Rashmee Roshan Lal,TNN
>
>Did you know there are more Indian waiters in Britain than there are
>coal miners?" Tony Blair was asked in September 1994 by one of his
>high-flying researchers Peter Hyman.
>
>It was two months since Blair had become the youngest Labour Party
>
>leader since World War II. Hyman's question presumably reflected the
>
>profound changes in late 20th-century Britain. Blair was desperate to
>change his moribund party and drag it out of 18 years in the
>political wilderness. Hyman, who became one of Blair's favourite
>advisors, presumably asked his question to point to Blair the
>geography of the change he must embrace.
>
>Thirteen years from the day Hyman asked the question, the past is a
>different country. As is Britain. Blair has departed Downing Street
>after a decade as Labour's longest-serving PM. A new PM is in office.
>Blair's former aides have scattered like leaves in the wind. One of
>the most prominent of these, former spin doctor Alastair Campbell,
>has published extracts from his diaries. The volume, titled The Blair
>Years, finally hit stands in India.
>
>And so we finally learn what PM Blair and his golden guys and girls
>really, really thought about India in the 10 years they colonised the
>PM's office and the British political landscape. Going by Campbell's
>diaries, the answer is very little, if at all. Despite all the recent
>rhetoric about a new special relationship between India and its
>former imperial master, Campbell's diaries make clear that Blair's
>
>office, if not all of Blair's Britain, hardly thought about India,
>except by default.
>
>According to Campbell's account, Blair and Britain were forced,
>post-9/11 to acknowledge India's needs vis-a-vis Pakistan for
>face-saving Western tokens and gestures signalling New Delhi's
>importance and influence.
>
>In October 2001, says Campbell, Blair was on his way to Islamabad to
>firm up plans with the West's new best friend, Pervez Musharraf, for
>invading Afghanistan. New Delhi was not on the prime ministerial
>itinerary. "We had a real problem with the Indians over the planned
>visit to Pakistan," writes Blair's spin doctor, "Vajpayee was on the
>phone, totally adamant that if TB (Blair) went to Pakistan without
>also visiting India, it would be a real disaster for him. He
>(Vajpayee) was normally so quiet and soft-spoken but there was both
>panic and a bit of anger in his voice".
>
>Later, Campbell describes the "two bugs" found in the British PM's
>Delhi hotel room and notes, "we decided against making a fuss".
>Campbell fulminates at some length about the "valet, Sunil" he is
>assigned for the Delhi stopover, complaining that "he just would not
>leave me alone...I was beginning to wonder whether he had been put
>there either by the (Indian) spooks or a paper".
>
>Soon in January 2002, and Campbell is once again recounting the
>low-key theatricality of the UK-Indian relationship. Campbell's
>memories of this passage to India appear to be dominated by Blair's
>decision to wear a Nehru jacket.
>
>"Hopefully it would be seen as showing respect (to the Indians)", he
>writes. And then he damns PM Vajpayee with faint praise, describing
>how Blair "pushed hard but got very little change out of Vajpayee. He
>was holding out for a lot more from the Pakistanis. He was pretty
>shrewd and his total lack of embarrassment at long silences was a
>real strength".
>
>As a miniature portrait of Indo-British relations six years ago,
>Campbell's sketchy recollections of the stop-start bilateral rhythm
>offer an unedifying picture. There is British suspicion and Indian
>supplication; "mystical" Indian silences and wordy British lectures;
>there are unmemorable banquets in the Hyderabad palace, prying
>natives and clumsy Indian intelligence moves. All of this larded with
>streaky bits of Indian tub-thumping and British mantras on South
>Asia's need for stability.
>
>In the end, of course, it is significant that Campbell mentions India
>barely half-a-dozen times in this account of the 10-year period in
>which India's relations with its former master visibly and
>conclusively changed. The significance may lie more in what he does
>not say than what he does.
>
>_______________________________________________
>assam mailing list
><mailto:assam at assamnet.org>assam at assamnet.org
><http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org>http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>assam mailing list
>assam at assamnet.org
>http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.assamnet.org/pipermail/assam-assamnet.org/attachments/20070730/6c28ee17/attachment.htm>


More information about the Assam mailing list