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Protests in
India against multi-national war games
NEW DELHI—About two dozen ships from five nations, led by the U.S.,
began their most ambitious exercises in the Bay of Bengal on Tuesday, as
communists opposed to strategic ties with Washington launched protests.
The naval drill, called the “Malabar Exercise”, is the seventh involving
aircraft carriers, submarines and fighter jets of India and the U.S.,
whose friendship has blossomed this decade after they were on opposite
sides of the Cold War.
This year, the exercises have been expanded to include a few ships from
Australia, Japan and Singapore in what some analysts see as a new
alliance of democracies ranged against the growing military might of
China. “The basic aim is to learn from each other and gain from each
others’ expertise,” a top Indian defence official said. “By including
more countries this time we are saving on costs and time as we won’t
need separate exercises with each country.”
“If this sends a message to China in the process, why not?” said the
official, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity as he is not
authorised to speak to the media. Although top officials from countries
involved in the wargames have publicly assured Beijing that it is not
the focus of the exercise, China remains concerned by what it sees as a
new security alliance that aims to encircle it.
The drill coincides with a summit of Asia-Pacific leaders in Sydney this
week and a trilateral security dialogue on its sidelines between U.S.
President George W. Bush, Australian Prime Minister John Howard and
Japanese premier Shinzo Abe. The exercises have angered communist
parties who shore up Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s coalition,
already threatened by the opposition of the left to a landmark nuclear
energy deal with the United States.
The communists say the nuclear deal and the wargames are part of an
American strategy to subvert India’s foreign and security policies and
draw it into Washington’s sphere of influence. They have announced
protest rallies that will converge on the port city of Visakhapatnam,
headquarters of the eastern command of the Indian Navy, at the end of
the week.
On Tuesday, thousands of communist supporters gathered in Kolkata as two
buses carrying protesters were flagged off to Visakhapatnam. Some
carried placards that read “American Imperialists Go Back” and “Down
With USS Kitty Hawk”, referring to one of the two U.S. aircraft carriers
participating in the wargames.
“This is an extremely important battle, not only against America but
also against the central government in New Delhi, which is handing over
our country to imperialist forces,” veteran communist leader Jyoti Basu
told the rally. The communists, who also protested against a port call
by U.S. nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Nimitz in July, were
unnecessarily muddying the waters, said C. Uday Bhaskar, a former Indian
navy officer and an independent analyst.—Agencies
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