Guest guest Posted February 18, 2004 Report Share Posted February 18, 2004 President, Chicago Council of Foreign Relations `I don't think it serves our purpose to blame Musharraf or humiliate him' Marshall M. Bouton, academic, policy wonk and India-hand, has been coming to this country long before it became fashionable to do so ASHOK MALIK India, they say, is the flavour of the season in the United States. This week, New Delhi played host to someone who was an Indophile well before it became the fashion. Marshall M. Bouton arrived for a visit, ``probably my 70th'', to a land that defines him about as much as his native New York does. He came, of course, as president of the Chicago Council of Foreign Relations, formidable India hand, well-networked on the Hill and, most recently, co-author of a task force report on the American engagement of South Asia, particularly India and Pakistan. The CV wasn't always this impressive. Bouton was drawn to India by ``accident''. ``I had taken a course on India in my senior year at college (Harvard),'' he recalls, ``not by choice but because it was the only course available in the time slot to fulfil a requirement in non-western history.'' Instant karma or destiny's long shot — the Marshall plan for India was underway. Two years later, Bouton was living in a village in Tamil Nadu, working with a Quaker voluntary organisation between 1964-66. As he says, ``I got hooked.'' On his way to a PhD, Bouton eventually did a dissertation on the ``agrarian transformation in south India that began with the Green Revolution''. Researching in Thanjavur, he interrogated stereotype: ``There was this whole question of why India had not had a peasant revolution. Unlike China, unlike Vietnam, unlike Algeria... There was talk of the Green Revolution turning Red.'' It was another age, almost another universe. India and the US were still trapped by the Cold War. As vice-president of the Asia Society some years ago, Bouton commissioned academic-politician Jairam Ramesh to write a paper on Indian perceptions of America. Its title, ``Yankee go home, but take me with you'' about summed up a duality that saw America as a land of opportunity but was yet sceptical. Is this now history? To Bouton, ``If you talk about US polices towards India, there's a sense that what was an endemic, structural tilt towards Pakistan has changed. Kargil was remarkable because for the first time we seemed to tilt towards India.'' Even so, travelling the ``backroads of Tamil Nadu and Kerala'' with his family earlier this winter, Bouton found a ``different kind of negativism about the United States, related to the Bush administration's policies vis-a-vis Iraq'' Whatever the effect of unilateralism on bilateralism, Bouton argues, ``The Indo-US relationship has to walk on two legs. It's built up muscle on the political-security leg but the economic leg, while functional, is still weak.'' Bouton has seen India evolve from a nation that sought American grain to one that seeks American jobs. He isn't awed by the outsourcing backlash: ``There'll be lot of hot air and rhetoric and crazy proposals and crazier legislation. But it will blow over.'' Bouton has met Indians for 40 years. Do they talk less about Pakistan than they used to? ``Not much less,'' he says wryly, ``a little less.'' Yet Bouton is the sort of American you should talk to about Pakistan. He was part of a task force co-chaired by Frank Wisner, former US ambassador to India, and Nicholas Platt, former US ambassador to Pakistan, on America's engagement of this part of the world. ``We wanted to take a longer term view,'' Bouton explains, ``given the new realities created by 9/11, what should be the objectives of US policy towards south Asia say 10 years down the road.'' ``Specifically with respect to Pakistan,'' Bouton says, ``the report expressed concern about the medium to longer term outlook — unless, in addition to dealing with Al Qaeda and the Taliban, the Pakistan government also began a process of creating a new political space, of dealing with the socio-economic problems that have provided fertile ground to the jihadis.'' In sum, Pakistan has to de-program and reboot. Yet is General Pervez Musharraf the sole, even irreplaceable tool for this ``internal change''? Whether it's the issue of the Taliban regrouping or nuclear proliferation, why is Musharraf America's Teflon man? Why is it always somebody else's fault? Bouton is resolute, ``I think we're putting a lot of pressure on Musharraf. The question is whether it serves our purpose to publicly blame Musharraf or humiliate him. I don't think it does.'' In the gradual conversion of the LoC in Kashmir into some sort of international border, too, Bouton sees Musharraf as being the key. He believes there is a ``fatigue'' among Pakistani's middle classes on the Kashmir front and that they would ``be open to a settlement that has a degree of real and perceived honour to it.'' His feedback is ``Musharraf could be bold without being rash and reach a settlement that gets support from the Pakistani public.'' Ah, there's that final attribute to Marshal Bouton we didn't reveal. He's an incorrigible optimist. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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