hidden image

External Affairs and the Constitution!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
04 Nov 2024

It didn't shock anyone when we heard North Korean troops had been sent to fight for Russia.

Why? Yes, why wasn't it a shock? Ponder for a moment about North Korea, the dictatorship, the total suppression of human rights, their nuclear pile-up and their constant threat to the world!

Now, ask yourself again, why weren't you shocked. Is it because both countries share very similar ideologies about elected leaders? Both are dictatorships, even if camouflaged under the guise of elections? Both have taken away the people's voice? Both are bullies?

Think deeply, then ask yourself, how would you react if you heard India had sent troops to help Russia? Looking at how we are suddenly leaning towards that country, don't be shocked if that day isn't far away.

But looking at what we believe in, would we be doing the right thing?

Isn't it time that the Constitution, which safeguards our beliefs and the rights of every Indian, also safeguards our foreign policies?

That every government that comes in, should strictly follow the ideologies laid down in our laws, while dealing with other countries? That a democracy supports a democracy, that people's rights safeguarded by our Constitution, are also safeguarded in the countries we support, and that any country violating the same doesn't get our support during a war?

It is time that just as rules, regulations and the law apply to every other union minister in our domestic setting, it also applies to our external policies.

This is an absolutely logical argument because, as the old adage goes, 'a person is known by the friends he keeps,' and so is a country, but here we go beyond: That the Constitution of our country is binding on our relationships and support given to other nations.

It is very easy to sway a mob. If Delhi starts shouting that the US is bad before you can say Jack Robinson or the Indian equivalent, the rest of the group in our country will say the same. That is how mob psychology works.

But that isn't how our Constitution works. The law is definite, and if these checks and balances have guarded our people well, I am sure it will certainly look after our foreign policy, too. So, we need to check whether our agreements and exchanges with other nations follow the same set of rules, and from which no government will be allowed to deviate.

This begs the last question: are we jumping towards Russia and China because of revelations that might surface through US and Canadian investigations into killings we are accused of being involved in? Then let's face those lawful investigations head-on since they are both democracies doing it fairly, and let's not sell our souls to the devil like Dr Faustus for a few scraps of immediate gain..!

Recent Posts

It is not surprising that India has been lukewarm to Pope Leo XIV's Encyclical on Artificial Intelligence. The Pope has warned that Artificial Intelligence threatens to normalise an "anti-human vision
apicture John Dayal
01 Jun 2026
What began as a "special revision" of electoral rolls has evolved into something far more unsettling: a test of who truly belongs in the Republic. By upholding the Election Commission's powers while o
apicture A. J. Philip
01 Jun 2026
Two newly elected governments, two sharply different visions of India. While West Bengal's new BJP regime signals majoritarian assertion and ideological confrontation, Kerala's UDF government projects
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
01 Jun 2026
As concern for climate change and environmental destruction grows, the deeper crisis of "human ecology" is often ignored. From family breakdown to abortion and demographic imbalance, the defence of hu
apicture Bp Gerald John Mathias
01 Jun 2026
A movement born from mockery of unemployed youth now commands millions, headlines, and political panic. But beneath the cockroach memes and anti-establishment spectacle lies a deeper question haunting
apicture Oliver D'Souza
01 Jun 2026
India's rise cannot be measured by GDP, expressways, or digital ambition alone. A Republic becomes truly developed only when constitutional promises translate into dignity, employment, equality, justi
apicture Jaswant Kaur
01 Jun 2026
"If an untouchable marries a non-Dalit girl, then he must be put to death. If untouchable commits adultery with a Hindu woman, then he is to be burned alive" (Matsya Purana, 227.131; Vaishtha Grhyasut
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
01 Jun 2026
My lifelong passion is cricket, and in more recent times, the political world has become an obsession, not joyful as with cricket, but born of a profound anxiety about the state of the world. Given su
apicture Mathew John
01 Jun 2026
The saddest part is that twenty-two lakh students studied honestly. Millions of parents worried honestly. Teachers taught honestly. Yet a handful of dishonest people have managed to drag one of the co
apicture Robert Clements
01 Jun 2026
India's political summer is witnessing impulsive governance, bulldozer crackdowns, and inflammatory rhetoric symbolised by "cockroaches." From hurried populism to selective demolitions and anti-minori
apicture Julian S Das
25 May 2026