India takes strong pro-Israel stance under Modi
in a departure from the past
While previous governments kept dealings with Israel
largely quiet, the ruling BJP has different priorities
Hannah Ellis-Petersen
Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi
Tue 31 Oct
2023 05.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/31/india-pro-israel-narendra-modi-bjp-government
Just a few
hours after Hamas launched its assault on Israel, India’s prime minister was
among the first world leaders to respond. In a strongly worded statement,
Narendra Modi condemned the “terrorist attacks” and said India “stands in
solidarity with Israel at this difficult hour”.
The Indian
foreign minister retweeted the comment almost instantly. Another state minister
from Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) warned in a tweet that India
“may face the situation that Israel is confronting today if we don’t stand up
against politically motivated radicalism”.
Though
Modi’s words chimed with the messaging of most western governments, for India
they marked a departure from the past. It was not until a few days later that
the foreign ministry quietly reminded the public of India’s historical
commitment to the two-state solution for Israel and Palestine.
On Friday,
India was among the countries that did not back a UN resolution for a
“humanitarian truce” in Gaza, instead choosing to abstain.
For many,
the immediacy of Modi’s comments and the UN resolution vote symbolises just how
significantly the India-Israel relationship has shifted since he came to power
in 2014, notably demonstrated by the public bonhomie between the two countries’
prime ministers.
Nicolas
Blarel, associate professor of international relations at Leiden University and
author of The Evolution of India’s Israel Policy, said: “Modi’s position has
been openly supportive of Israel but this is the first time that you had an
immediate pro-Israel reaction without a balancing statement that immediately
follows it up.”
Israel
appeared to take Modi’s statement as unequivocal backing. Speaking to reporters
in Delhi last week, Israel’s ambassador, Naor Gilon, thanked the country for
“100% support”.
Yet it was
not a sentiment restricted only to the upper echelons of Indian government. As
Azad Essa, a journalist and author of Hostile Homelands: The New Alliance
Between India and Israel, said: “This messaging gave a clear signal to the
whole rightwing internet cell in India.”
In the
aftermath, the Indian internet factcheckers AltNews and Boom began to observe a
flood of disinformation targeting Palestine pushed out by Indian social media
accounts, which included fake stories about atrocities committed by
Palestinians and Hamas that were shared sometimes millions of times, and often
using the conflict to push the same Islamophobic narrative that has been used
regularly to demonise India’s Muslim population since the BJP came to power.
BJP-associated
Facebook groups also began to push the message that Hamas represented the same
Muslim threat facing India in the troubled, majority-Muslim region of Kashmir
and Palestinians were sweepingly branded as jihadis.
Messages
widely forwarded on WhatsApp urged Hindus to arm themselves and boycott
Muslims, reading: “In the future, India could also face conspiracies and
attacks like Israel. The possibility of Hindu women facing cruelty cannot be
ruled out.”
The same
narrative also made its way on to some of India’s most inflammatory news
channels, with Arnab Goswami, the rightwing firebrand presenter on India’s
Republic TV, telling viewers: “The same radical jihadist Islamist terrorist
thinking that Israel is a victim of, we are a victim of as well … Israel is
fighting this war on behalf of all of us.”
Some Hindu
nationalist groups appeared to heed this as a call to arms. Last week, groups
gathered outside the Israeli embassy in Delhi, offering their services to fight
Hamas. Among them was Vishnu Gupta, 58, the national president of Hindu Sena,
who said he was among 200 men who had volunteered for the Israeli army, adding
that his confidence had been boosted by Modi.
“We both
are victims of Islamic terror, that is why we have been supporting Israel from
the beginning,” said Gupta. “Just like Jerusalem was overtaken by Muslims, holy
places in India were also invaded by Muslims. Like Hamas, there are militants
from Kashmir supported by Pakistan who would carry terror attacks across India.
The only fortunate thing about us is that we are not in the minority.”
Historically,
India had a very different relationship with Israel. Its first prime minister,
Jawaharlal Nehru, and the influential Indian freedom fighter Mahatma Gandhi had
opposed the creation of an Israeli state, fearing it would disfranchise
Palestinians, and India voted against it at the UN.
India was
the first non-Arab country to recognise the Palestine Liberation Organisation
(PLO) as the legitimate representative of Palestine in the 1970s, giving the
group full diplomatic status in the 1980s and inviting PLO’s long-serving
leader Yasser Arafat to visit several times, and consistently maintained a
pro-Palestine position at the UN. It was only after the PLO began a dialogue
with Israel, and as US pressure began to build, that India finally established
diplomatic ties with Israel in 1992.
Potential friction with India’s valuable Gulf partners
Narendra Modi’s foreign policy has also overseen a
transformation in ties with Arab Gulf countries.
A turning
point came in 1999 when India went to war with Pakistan and Israel proved
willing to provide arms and ammunition. It was the beginning of a defence
relationship that has grown exponentially. India buys about $2bn-worth of arms
from Israel every year – its largest arms supplier after Russia – and accounts
for 46% of Israel’s overall weapons exports.
But it was
the election of Modi that marked a fundamental sea change. While previous
governments had kept their dealings with Israel largely quiet, due to concerns
of alienating foreign allies and its own vast Muslim population, Modi’s Hindu
nationalist BJP government had very different priorities.
In 2017,
Modi became the first Indian prime minister to visit Israel, which was
reciprocated months later when Netanyahu travelled to Delhi. The images of the
pair strolling barefoot with their trousers rolled up along Haifa beach in Tel
Aviv, described by Indian media at the time as a “budding bromance”, were later
used by both leaders in campaign material.
Essa said:
“The narrative they were pushing was clear: that India and Israel are these
ancient civilisations that had been derailed by outsiders – which means Muslims
– and their leaders have come together, like long-lost brothers, to fulfil
their destiny.”
The
ideological alignment between the two leaders was certainly more apparent than
in the past. The BJP’s ideological forefathers, and its rank and file today,
have long regarded Israel as a model for the religious nationalist state,
referred to as the Hindu Rashtra, that the Hindu rightwing in India hope to
establish.
While Modi
was also the first Indian prime minister to visit Ramallah in Palestine, much
of the focus of his government has been on strengthening ties with Israel, be
it through defence, culture, agriculture and even film-making. This year,
Gautam Adani, the Indian billionaire businessman seen to be close to Modi, paid
$1.2bn to acquire the strategic Israeli port of Haifa.
Nonetheless,
Modi’s foreign policy has also overseen a transformation in ties with Arab Gulf
countries including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, which has
been of great financial benefit to India and laid the foundation for a
groundbreaking India-Middle East economic trade corridor, running all the way
to Europe, which was announced at the G20 forum for international economic
cooperation this year but has yet to be built.
While the
Gulf has also been working to normalise ties with Israel, analysts said should
the Israeli-Hamas conflict continue to escalate, it was likely that India would
quieten its pro-Israeli stance to prevent friction with its valuable Gulf
partners.
Alvite
Singh Ningthoujam, a fellow at Middle East Institute in Delhi, said since
Modi’s initial comments, there had been a “calculated silence” from the
government.
“While Modi
is comfortable making statements that condemn cross-border terrorism, if this
conflict escalates, and other countries that his government has relationships
with get involved, it will be a big test for India,” he said.
Aakash
Hassan contributed reporting from Delhi.
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