India’s Stakes at Risk as the US Armtwists Bangladesh Over Election

India’s national interests demand that the Awami League forms the government yet again.

 

India’s Stakes at Risk as the US Armtwists Bangladesh Over Election
America’s muscle-flexing ahead of parliamentary polls in Bangladesh, manifested in the State Department’s open declaration that it would deny visas to persons obstructing free and fair elections, undermining democracy, or violating human rights, is really bad news for India.

Washington’s intention is crystal clear. It has put Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League government on a tight leash to dissuade it from resorting to undemocratic, illegal, and extra-constitutional methods to win the upcoming general elections like the previous rigged elections in 2014 and 2018. But New Delhi, in contrast, wants Hasina to win by any means.

On the one hand, the US has such grave misgivings about Hasina that it wants to evict her from power. And on the other hand, the biggest priority of India’s foreign policy-cum-security establishment is to get Hasina re-elected in January 2024 for a fourth successive term at any cost.

The gaping chasm underlines the India-US conflict over Bangladesh and raises valid questions about India’s capabilities to pursue its goal defying the US – and whether it is wise to do so. It also flags gross US insensitivity to India’s interests even in India’s own backyard and how the US always expects India to quietly sacrifice its interests for America if they happen to clash!

India’s national interests demand that the Awami League forms the government yet again so that its needs and requirements in Bangladesh are met without even having to ask. For India, there is no alternative to Hasina – New Delhi’s tried and tested ally. But the US is neither in Hasina’s nor Awami League’s favour – it is in favour of an outright regime change, no less.

There is no doubt that Washington’s sudden assertiveness has thrown a spanner in New Delhi’s works. It has jolted the Ministry of External Affairs, the Research and Analysis Wing, the National Security Coordination Secretariat, and even the Prime Minister’s Office. It has certainly made Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar’s and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval’s life a little difficult and increased their workload.

And it’s hardly a secret that more US measures are in the offing to rein in Bangladesh and tie down Hasina before the January 2024 elections, adding to India’s concerns and worries.

There would be hell to pay if Hasina henceforth tries to intimidate the political opposition, the free press, or notable civil society figure like Muhammad Yunus or Mahfuz Anam. There is a very high probability of visas of Hasina’s immediate family members getting revoked to demonstrate that the US means business and that the announcement by the State Department is not mere lip service to the promotion of democracy.

Importantly, US intervention has come as a shot in the arm for the beleaguered Bangladesh Nationalist Party which New Delhi abhors for its anti-India policies in collusion with Pakistan when it was last in power from 2001 to 2006 during Begum Khaleda Zia’s prime ministership. In that period, Islamabad had outsourced to Dhaka the job of exporting terror and subversion to India.

The BNP — after being mercilessly bullied and battered for years by an increasingly authoritarian Hasina – is today buoyant and thinks that it now has a fighting chance of contesting the polls on a level playing field and even turning the tables with US support.

Any such outcome — unimaginable until the Biden Administration doubled down on the Hasina regime in end-May with ominous visa curbs — will come as a big blow to India in its immediate neighbourhood and dent its image as South Asia’s superpower.

Other Repercussions of US Intervention 

Moreover, US pressure tactics will inevitably drive Bangladesh further into China’s arms for comfort which will be naturally very discomforting for the Narendra Modi government, especially as India’s relations with China are currently at their worst since 1962 when they fought a war.

US intervention can have other repercussions too. Any rise in Beijing’s clout in Dhaka is bound to reinvigorate Islamabad’s influence over Islamist and Jihadi forces in Bangladesh to the detriment of India’s national security. If the ISI gains elbow room in Dhaka under the Chinese umbrella, it is bound to take advantage of the turmoil in India’s northeast. Unless Hindu-Christian fires burning in Manipur are not extinguished quickly, the state will turn into a magnet for agents provocateurs.

After the visa threat, there are some reports of US Ambassador in Dhaka, Peter Haas, trying to convince the Awami League dispensation to step aside after installing a caretaker government for holding elections next year. The BNP too is lobbying hard for a caretaker government – basically a neutral interim administration – to conduct free and fair elections. There was a provision for a caretaker government in Bangladeshi Constitution but it was done away with by the Awami League (AL) to perpetuate its rule.

Notably, Pinak Ranjan Chakraborty – India’s Ambassador in Dhaka from 2007 to 2009 – wrote in 2018: “The AL’s move to expunge the caretaker government provision, has been seen as designed to give it control over the election process and, therefore, malafide in intent” which speaks volumes.

I foresee a US-backed BNP agitation for its restoration as the election tempo picks up in the shadow of visa curbs and Bangladesh becomes more amenable to American advice.

(SNM Abdi is a distinguished journalist and ex-Deputy Editor of Outlook. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)