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“My Dear Jawaharlal” – Sardar Patel on China

3 September 2009 1,340 views 14 Comments

Courtesy VigilOnline, these fascinating excerpts from a letter penned by Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel to PM Jawaharlal Nehru (emphasis mine). I wonder the India that might have been had the Sardar lived longer.

*** Excerpts from Sardar Patel’s Letter to Nehru on China dt. 07 Nov, 1950 ***

My Dear Jawaharlal,

Ever since my return from Ahmedabad and after the Cabinet meeting the same day which I had to attend at practically 15 minutes notice and for which I regret I was not able to read all the papers,I thought I should share with you what is passing through my mind.

I have carefully gone through (all) the correspondence…but I regret to say that neither of them (our Ambassador and the Chinese government) comes out well as a result of this study…The Chinese Government has tried to delude us by professins of peaceful intentions. My own feeling is that at a cruicial period they managed to instil into our Ambassador a false sense of confidence in their so called desire to settle the Tibetan problem by peaceful means.

There can be no doubt that during the period covered by this correspondence,the Chinese must have been concentrating for an onslaught on Tibet. The final action of the Chinese, in my judgement, is little short of perfidy. The tragedy of it is that the Tibetans put faith in us; they chose to be guided by us; and we have been unable to get them out of the meshes of Chinese diplomacy or Chinese malevolence. From the latest position, it appears that we shall not be able to rescue the Dalai Lama.

Our Ambassador has been at great pains to find an explanation or justification for Chinese policy and actions. As the External Affairs Ministry remarked in one of their telegrams, there was a lack of firmness and unnecessary apology in one or two representations that he made to the Chinese Government on our behalf.

.

…During the last several months, outside the Russian camp, we have been practically alone in championing the cause of Chinese entry into the UNO and in securing from the Americans assurances on the question of Formosa…In spite of this,China is not convinced about our disinterestedness; it continues to regard us with suspicion and the whole psychology is one, at least outwardly, of scepticism,perhaps mixed with a little hostility.

I doubt if we can go any further than we have done already …Their last telegram to us is an act of gross discourtesy not only in the summary way it disposes of our protest against the entry of Chinese forces into Tibet but also in the wild insinuation that our attitude is determined by foreign influences. It looks as though it is not a friend speaking in that language but a potential enemy.

With this background, we have to consider what new situation we are now faced with as a result of the disappearance of Tibet…Throughout history, we have been seldom worried about our North-East frontier. The Himalayas have been regarded as an impregnable barrier against any threat from the North.

…We can therefore, safely assume that very soon they (Chinese government) will disown all the stipulations which Tibet has entered into in the past. That throws all frontier and commercial settlements with Tibet, in accordance with which we had been functioning and acting during the last half a century, into the melting pot.

…Chinese ambitions in this respect not only cover the Himalayan slopes on our side but also include important parts of Assam. They have their ambitions in Burma also.

…While our Western and North-Western threat to security is still as prominent as before, a new threat has developed from the North and North-East.

Thus for the first time after centuries, India’s defence has to concentrate on two fronts simultaneously. Our defence measures have so far been based on calculations of superiority over Pakistan. We shall now have to reckon with communist China in the North and North-East, a communist China which has definite ambitions and aims and which does not in any way seem friendly towards us.

Let us also consider the political conditions on this potentially troublesome frontier. Our Northern or Northeastern approaches consist of Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim, Darjeeling and tribal areas in Assam. They are weak from the point of view of communications.Continuous defensive lines do not exist. There is an almost unlimited scope for infiltration. Police protection is limited to a very small number of passes. There, too, our outposts do not seem to be fully manned. Our contact with these areas is by no means close and intimate.

…I am sure the Chinese…would not miss any oppurtunity of exploiting these weak spots, partly in support of their ideology and partly their ambition. In my judgement, therefore,the situation is one in which we cannot afford to be either complacent or vacillating. We must ahve a clear idea of what we wish to acheive and the methods by which we should acheive it. Any lack of decisiveness in formulating our objectives or pursuing our policy to attain them is bound to weaken us and increase the threats.

Along with these external dangers, we shall now have to face serious internal problems as well. Hitherto,the Communist Party of India has found some difficulty in contacting communists abroad, or in getting supplies of arms, literature etc.from them. They had to contend with the difficult Burmese and Pakistan frontiers in the East or with the long seaboard. They shall now have a comparitively easy means of access to Chinese communists, and through them to other foreign communists. Infiltration of spies, fifth columnists and communists would now be easier.

…It is, of course, impossible for me to exhaustively set out all the problems. I have, however, given below some of the problems which,in my opinion, require early solutions, around which we have to build our administrative or military policy measures.

  1. A military and intelligence appreciation of the Chinese threat to India, both on the frontier and internal security.
  2. An examination of our military position and such re-disposition of forces as might be necessary,particularly with the idea of guarding important routes or areas which are likely to be the subject of di(s)pute.
  3. An appraisement of the strength of our forces and, if necessary, reconsideration of our retrenchment plans for the Army in the light of these new threats.
  4. A long term consideration of our defence needs.
  5. The political and administrative steps which we should take to strengthen our Northern and Northeastern frontiers.
  6. Measures of internal security in the border areas,such as U.P, Bihar , Bengal and Assam .
  7. Improvements of our communications,road,rail,air and wireless in these areas and with the frontier outposts.
  8. Policing and intelligence of frontier outposts.
  9. The future of our mission at Lhasa and the trade posts at Gyangtse and Yatung and the forces we have in operation in Tibet to guard the trade routes.
  10. The policy in regard to the McMohan Line.

*** End of Excerpts ***

* This letter of Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel is excerpted from the book:”Makers of India’s Foreign Policy : From Raja Rammohun Roy to Yashwant Sinha” – by J.N. Dixit, published by India Today.

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14 Comments »

  • 1. Babu (author) said:

    History proved that Patel was right.Nehru was a visionary without any practical sense.

  • 2. Dirt Digger said:

    “Nehru was a visionary” yeah he had wild imagination, does not make him a visionary.

  • 3. Gypsy said:

    Nehru a visionary? What vision did he have except self-glorification? His vision of India has become eternal nightmare. His foreign policy was slapped back on both cheeks – by China in 1962 and Pakistan ever since he went to the UN over Kashmir (when the Indian Army was about to throw out the infiltrators across the Hindu Kush). And to top it all, the great democrat left behind a dynasty to rule India.

  • 4. Satyabhashnam said:

    @Babu (#1)

    “Nehru was a visionary”, yeah right! More of Blunder of a century: http://satyabhashnam.blogspot.com/2008/08/jawahar-lal-nehru-blunder-of-century.html

    @Gypsy (#3)

    Hindu Khush was once called Hindu Raaj. Hindu Khush in persian/arabic means Slayer of Hindus. Its a shame we still use and propagate that term, unknowingly.

  • 5. Khandu Patel said:

    I am surprised that the GOI debacle over AP in the ADP has not been more seriously aired in these columns. The world trade accords mean that Chinese goods are having to be allowed into Bharat. For a country that has harped on so much Gandhi’s self reliance, there is no better policy to be pursued than for the substitution of Chinese imports by home manufactures and those of friendly countries.

    Australia’s blatant championing of China should be paid back by boycotting Australia’s education institutions. There is even less reason for Bharat’s talents to be invested in countries that have aligned themselves with China.

  • 6. Ashish said:

    Whatever NEhru was !!! Sardar Patel was definitely a task master and had he being there things would certainly been different… Thanks for putting this up

  • 7. B Shantanu (author) said:

    Courtesy CBCNN, this snippet from today’s Washington Post:

    (India was offered a permanent seat on the council 55 years ago, in 1955. But that offer, made by the United States and the Soviet Union, was declined by India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. Nehru said the seat should be given to China instead.)

  • 8. Sid said:

    Shantanu,
    Can you list all the follies this moron of a prime minister has committed ever since he was installed by the supposed “father of nation”?

  • 9. B Shantanu (author) said:

    @Sid: One blog post may not be enough for that! On a more serious note, for his economic follies, do read Sanjeev Sabhlok’s “Breaking Free of Nehru” (available as a free download)

  • 10. Sid said:

    Shantanu,

    I read Sanjeev’s book. Apart from the his view of Indian history (which I strongly disagree with), he has described follies of Nehruvian economics well. But what is more important: someone needs to take out his foreign policy as well as education policy and show the follies in detail.

  • 11. B Shantanu (author) said:

    Fair point Sid…I should look around…There must be something written on this (I hope)

  • 12. Morris said:

    B Shantanu

    Are you suggesting that if Nehru accepted that offer made by the US and USSR in 1955, India would have been on the Security Council ever since then? Good god, what kind of politician this guy was?

  • 13. Malavika said:

    Nehru was a disater for the country. First he lost UNSC seat for India, lost war with China, made sure tens of millions of Indians go to bed hungry. Made sure Kashmir is a festering wound.

    And worst of all he hoisted his useless dynasty on us. And we still celebrate his birthday as childrens Day when millions of kids still don’t have access to basic education and go to bed hungry.

    There is way too much needless hero worship in India.

  • 14. Sid said:

    @Malavika,
    There is way too much needless hero worship in India.
    Swapan Dashgupta expressed this in a sentence about Nehru and our worshipping him:
    “India has been to kind to Nehru”

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