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Even in 1971, Awami League wasn't stating it wanted independence: Srinath Raghavan
Times Of India-30.12.13
With elections approaching amidst violence, Bangladesh's
future looks uncertain. Some of this is rooted in a past marked by enduring
clashes.Srinath Raghavan, senior fellow at theCentre for
Policy Researchand senior research fellow at
King's College, London, spoke withAshish Yechuryabout why Bangladesh's creation was a global
affair, influences shaping this — and how even Israel apparently got involved:
Your book is called 1971: A
Global History of the Crea-tion of Bangladesh — why global?
Well, the creation of Bangladesh
is generally seen as a subcontinental affair; in default mode, it's seen as the
second partition. This seems to me a very narrow view. It doesn't take into
account a wider international context in which this happened and which
decisively shaped the outcome. This was a global event — participants
themselves thought they had to secure global support. In a sense, the struggle
on the ground was matched by a struggle for global opinion. That's central in
understanding these events.
You argue Bangladesh's
creation wasn't inevitable — but you list conditions in the build-up to 1971
which played a key role. How do you reconcile these?
The deterministic reading of Bangladesh
primarily comes from the view that united Pakistan was an unsustainable
entity. The arguments are on geography, with two wings of the same country
separated by India.
There are arguments about economic disparity, cultural differences between the
Bengali and West Pakistani elite and the lopsided power-sharing arrangement
between the two.
What i argue is that you don't really need to look at the background to
understand how the quest for autonomy transformed into a demand for freedom. We
need a wider perspective.
Is your view that if the
Pakistani response wasn't so heavy-handed, there would not have been an
independent Bangladesh?
You might have had a loose confederation which, in some ways, is what theAwami Leagueand SheikhMujibur Rahmanwanted — even as late as March 1971,
the Awami League was not stating it wanted outright independence. They were
asking for a loose confederation with devolution of political and economic
autonomy to East Pakistan.
There was hope that with a looser confederation set-up and fair elections, the
Bengalis' numerical superiority would kick in and they could get greater power,
a fairer share.
Why link this to the 'spirit of
1968'?
To me, the student movements of 1968 are the turning point in the history of Pakistan.Ayub Khanhad been in power for 10 years and Pakistan was
doing well economically, despite growing disparity and concentration of wealth.
Student movements in East and West Pakistan precipitated
change.
Student movements were a global phenomenon and i quote a CIA document where
they say that this was a global movement. In Pakistan, these students were from
a different generation. Sheikh Mujibur himself was a student leader in the 1940s,
he had fought for Pakistan
with different aspirations. The radicalisation of this student movement forced
the Awami League to make their negotiating position far less flexible.
Meanwhile, amidst all this, you
mention Israel
getting involved — can you tell us more?
The Israelis have a history of supplying weapons to India. In 1962 and 1965, they sent
some weapons despite the US
embargo on India
in 1965. So India
had a secret backchannel with the Israelis — there is no indication that the
Americans knew about them giving arms in 1971.
Full diplomatic recognition from India
was important for Israel
as they were feeling extremely isolated at that time — they thought this would
help.
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