The Rediff Special /J N Dixit
NAM: Is it still relevant?
The Non Aligned Movement foreign ministers meeting begins in Delhi on Monday. Former foreign secretary J N Dixit asks whether NAM's objectives and principles are still relevant in the post-Cold War era.
Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda has yet to
participate in a summit of
the Non-Aligned Movement. His introduction to the movement so
far has been indirect through the G-15 summit in Harare which
he attended late last year. Though External Affairs Minister I K Gujral
knows the chemistry
of the movement, Deve Gowda's perceptions are theoretical so far.
He will get introduced to the movement when he inaugurates the
non-aligned foreign ministers meeting on Monday.
Fundamental questions have been raised about the relevance and
the role of the movement since the end of the Cold War and the
disappearance of ideological power blocs. Though no member of
this large and amorphous movement has withdrawn from the membership,
the intellectual and ideological figure of the movement has diminished
since 1989-90. Some of the movement's original objectives
have disappeared. The remaining objectives are being pursued by
different members of the movement through other instrumentalities
and co-operative arrangements.
Two questions need to be answered: Is the movement necessary?
Will it survive as a multilateral trans-continental forum of states?
The foreign ministers meeting
could be an occasion for member-states to deliberate on these
questions and come up with collective responses for them.
Prominent members of NAM like India, Egypt,
Algeria, Mexico, and Indonesia have articulated their continuing
support for the movement in ritualistic terms. Prime Minister
Deve Gowda, responding to a question from the media recently,
stated that in his view NAM should be nurtured
and strengthened. His speech at the G-15 summit at Harare also
underlined the continuing relevance of the movement.
Ritual genuflection to the movement and theological commitments
apart, it is time to ask down to earth questions about how relevant
the movement is in the post-Cold War age. The first point of examination
should be as to what constitutes the movement. The creation and
survival of a movement is predicated on there being a substantive
parallelism, if not commonality of interests and concerns amongst
members who become part of the movement.
The second predication
is that there is agreement on steps to be taken and policies to
be followed to meet the objective of fulfilling these shared interests
and responding to shared concerns. The third predication is that
the constituent elements of the movement share the conviction
that the movement or association is an effective instrument or
means to meet the shared interests and concerns.
There is also
a definitional difference between being non-aligned and being part of an aligned
movement. Being non-aligned means retaining complete freedom of
options to take decisions related to your interests and objectives
without being subjected to any extraneous or external influence
to the extent possible. Non-alignment in this sense provides an
abiding and valid terms of reference for the conduct of foreign
policies and for fashioning one's defence and developmental policies.
Being part of a non-aligned movement, however, presumes that all
the members of the movement are ideologically and operationally
committed to the concept of non-alignment based on the conviction
that it is the most effective approach to meet their individual
and collective national interests in comparison to other options
and equations which are available.
The functioning of the movement
over the last seven years, examined on the basis of these criteria,
makes one questioning about the relevance of the movement now and
into the 21st century. Assuming defence and foreign policy stances,
independent of Cold War and the ideological power blocs, has no
meaning now for obvious reasons.
The other issues which united
NAM members like de-colonisation,
anti-imperialism, racial discrimination and the Palestine issue,
have all been resolved more or less. These disputes were resolved
not through the operational contribution of NAM
but through other means reflecting the changing power equation in
the international community.
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