War and Peace in Modern India: A Strategic History of the Nehru Years by Srinath Raghavan


War and Peace in Modern India: A Strategic History of the Nehru Years
Title : War and Peace in Modern India: A Strategic History of the Nehru Years
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 8178242575
ISBN-10 : 9788178242576
Format Type : Kindle , Hardcover , Paperback , Audiobook & More
Number of Pages : 359
Publication : First published April 27, 2010

During his seventeen years as Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru led India through one of its most difficult and potentially explosive periods in international affairs. As the leader of a new state created amidst the bloodiest partition in history, saddled with new and outstanding problems, Nehru was confronting with a range of disputes which threatened to boil over.

Srinath Raghavan draws on a rich vein of untapped documents to illuminate Nehru's approach to war and his efforts for peace. Vividly recreating the intellectual and political milieu of the Indian Foreign Policy establishment, he explains the response of Nehru and his top advisors to the tensions with Junagadh, Hyderabad, Pakistan, and China. He gives individual attention to every conflict and shows how strategic decisions for each crisis came to be defined in the light of the preceding ones. The book follows Nehru as he wrestles with a string of major conflicts -- assessing the utility of force, weighing risks of war, exploring diplomatic options for peace, and forming strategic judgements that would define his reputation, both in his lifetime and after.

War and Peace in Modern India challenges and revises our received understanding of Nehru's handling of international affairs. General readers as well as students of Indian history and politics will find its balanced consideration of Nehru's Foreign Policy essential to gauge his achievements, his failures, and his enduring legacy.


War and Peace in Modern India: A Strategic History of the Nehru Years Reviews


  • Deepika Sekar

    A superb account of how Nehru dealt with the crises that confronted a just born India – Junagadh, Hyderabad, Bengal and Kashmir. With extensive footnotes, it is clear that every information that’s presented is a result of rigorous research. For a book so thick with facts, the narration is breezy and the tension is palpable.

    For someone who’s never read a book on Kashmir, this was especially good. It never assumes you know something and really, each chapter begins with a brief background on the matter so you can always make sense of what’s coming.

    A whole two chapters are on Kashmir – the tribal invasion, the U.N intervention, the difficulty in reaching an agreement on how a plebiscite could be conducted – all of these are spelt out with exceptional detail.

    In each of these, Nehru did his best to avoid escalations and he is conciliatory almost to a fault. Nehru, it seems to me now, saw the consequences of what a war would do to a fledgling India and was clearly eager to avoid it.

    The book then goes on to explain the boundary dispute between and India and China – and the events that led to India’s crushing defeat in the Sino-Indian war of 1962. Here, the book is critical of the Forward Policy – and discusses how both the military and civilian assessment of the matter was wrong. It was always known that India could not handle a full-fledged war with China and yet Nehru had misjudged that patrolling previously unoccupied areas would not evoke retaliation from China. How the Soviet treated the boundary dispute is also set out – here again Nehru seems to have miscalculated that after the Sino-Soviet split, the Russians would not be too eager to lend support to China.

    In the concluding chapter, it is suggested that more than anything, Nehru understood that power should never be divorced from legitimacy. An entire other book could be written on it, but I can imagine Nehru struggling for an entire lifetime wondering when war would be justified. He comes across as a man who viscerally hated it, and to his credit he has shown restraint even when he had the means to offend. More than ever now, I shudder to think of anyone else as the first Prime Minister of this fascinating nation.

  • Savyasachee

    TL;DR: If you have any thoughts about Nehru and you want them substantiated by facts, read this book.

    Military power is most impactful when it's latent. I'm mangling the quote, but the sentiment seems to set the tone of Jawaharlal Nehru's foreign policy. Srinath Raghavan's study of his handling of conflicts in independent India dives deep into the thought process which came out with such a unique foreign policy, and brings out nuances which seem to have been hitherto dismissed or, to give some critics their due, merely missed.

    The author takes the reader through all the major crises Nehru faced during his seventeen year-long tenure as Prime Minister involving other countries, or in some cases, Indian princely states. Junagarh, Hyderabad and Kashmir are all presented as case studies all linked with each other. While the first two are the subjects of a chapter each, Kashmir, due to its outsize importance, is mentioned in nearly every chapter and has two long chapters completely dedicated to it. A forgotten crisis in Bengal, diffused ironically by the assassination of Pakistani Prime Minister Liaquat Khan gets another chapter, while the Sino-Indian war gets two.

    All the chapters are expertly written. Each one is extensively sourced, the footnotes have annotations, and viewpoints are presented properly. Justice is done to the opinions of everyone involved, whether they be British, Indian or Pakistani to the extent the sources vindicate them. The chapters flow into each other in the case of chapters two to four, and the rest of them dovetail nicely into the next. The end result is a coherently written, cogent source of information about the Nehru years which both Nehru admirers and revanchists ought to read.

    Perhaps the only criticism I can lay upon it is that it seems to portray Nehru in a rather favourable light. It would be rather interesting to see points of view other than the ones which support Nehru. What exactly was Jayprakash Narayan thinking during all this? Can we get a better idea about what was going on in the minds of the Pakistanis while all this was going on? Maybe get a bit more detail into the strategic interests and ruminations of the Chinese? Of course, these criticisms aren't enough to derail my enjoyment of the book itself, but they do remain in my mind.

    5/5, no doubt about it. Brilliant book which breaks the mold into which the legacy of Jawaharlal Nehru has been cast.

  • Conrad Barwa

    Bit disappointed with this; despite claiming to provide a balanced view of Nehru, it still seeks to shield him from criticism on a lot of policy blunders. The China war of 1962 is a case in point, his attempt to explain the Brooks-Henderson report not being released due to its potentially damaging revelations about the incompetence of the then military leadership in India rather than protecting Nehru's posthumous reputation are frankly unconvincing. More damaging is the whitewashing of Nehru's policy in Kashmir leading to Sheikh Abdhullah's arrest - which Raghavan very implausibly seeks to defend Nehru from orchestrating and not one word is really spoken about the subsequent period in Kashmir and how it laid the ground for continual interference in state politics from Delhi and created the foundation for the alienation of the 1980s which would explode into an insurgency.

  • Aman

    The thesis of this balanced and professionally written work is twofold. First, that Jawaharlal Nehru's foreign policy choices were guided not merely by naive idealism or as the revisionist histories claim mere opportunism/cutthroat realism. Second, there was consistency as well as continuity in Nehru's handling of foreign policy issues. In both of these, the book succeeds and them some. I will take a moment to point, the book is not a hagiography. While the author doesn't opine on the matter making it at cursory glance seem like one mid-read, a closing reading as well as the concluding notes make more than clear it is anything but. This is a remarkable first work by a historian and a valuable contribution.

    I came into this with very high expectations given all I'd heard about it so was somewhat disappointed for two reasons. First, the book's explanation of other actors relevant to circumstances (Pakistan, China who come off seemingly irrational) is not nearly as detailed. It is perfectly understandable that this was probably beyond the scope of the work which is after all, as the title makes clear about modern India. I understand the constraints, nevertheless, was left wanting for some more information on the matter. Second, the book's explanation of the IR theory paradigms it talks about (coercive, controlling and consensual strategies) could have benefitted from some more exposition too. 4.5

  • A

    Scholarly work. Clearly dispenses on the myths revisionists are trying to portray. End of the day people forget the context and make absurd claims of 'Naive Nehru' who was lost in 'idealism' and they couldn't be more wrong. Case by case the author discerns the strategic maneuvering of Nehru govt simultaneously addressing various issues presented back then. If there was any wrong that was with his realism wrt China debacle where his miscalculations about USSR contributed to various factors that were involved in the escalation. Apart from the China debacle Nehru made sure India started its journey in the right path backing up legitimacy to whatever power it could display.

    To quote the author 'it is the fact that very few of them turned into hot warrs. During each of the crisis with Pakistan, this was a distinct possibility. It is to Nehru's credit he swerved from the wars which were pregnant with internecine consequences which seemed imminent at various points. That he managed to do so without conceding India's core interests was Jawaharlal Nehru's major achievement in strategic affairs.'

  • Praveen Kishore

    An important book to know complex challenges faced by nascent Indian nation, on diplomatic and war fronts, especially in dealing with integration of princely states and troubles with Pakistan and China. A thoroughly researched and excellently presented book.

  • Navneet Bhushan

    A comprehensive review of Indian politico military evolution after Independence. One striking feature of this book is every assertion and description is backed up by specific document and citation which gives this book a authentic flavour that many others may only be reduced to opinions or viewpoints. In that dimension author has done substantial research and hence this should be considered as an authentic account of Indian politico military evolution post independence. One would have expected a road map of future and at least mapping those elements that author found are visible in Indian politco military thought after 6 decades of independence to be described or commented upon. For that miss _ a final chapter _ I have taken one star from the rating ! Nevertheless a must read book for understanding the evolution of politico military thought of post independent India.

  • Bikash Kanungo

    Srinath Raghavan provides a gripping account of the tumultuous years that followed the independence of India from the British rule in 1947. The nascent postcolonial Indian state was faced with the onerous task of integration of the various princely states, arresting the rising tide of communal violence, and tempering a hostile neighbor. In this backdrop, Raghavan presents deeply learned yet readable account of the strategy adopted by the tall leaders of the day. Central to Raghavan's inquiry into the strategy of Indian state is the role of Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime-minister of postcolonial India. Nehru's "liberal realism" of locating the Indian state's strategy, diplomatic or military, within the broader context of social history of India and the repercussions it will have on the pre-exisiting fissiparous pulls will appear refreshing to a 21st century reader whose world is now beset with belligerence. A sensitive reader can only hope for a belated return of world politics to the Nehruvian reason and wisdom.

  • Kaveri Sarkar

    A well-researched book that traces the strategy of Nehru’s (domestic and) foreign policy after Indian independence. For a book like this to come out during the present day political climate is slightly unthinkable now. The aspect that I appreciated the most was that this book showed how the making of India was a violent and constructed political project — independent India after all was not a primordial nation-state gaining national consciousness after British rule. The choice — and justification of — case studies is slightly puzzling given other important cases like that of Manipur and Sikkim did not bear a mention. The author, in an explicitly moderate view, still seems to have come across more sympathetic to Nehru. Overall, the book holds value in its use of archival materials and broad undertaking.

  • Vishnu Prazad Ram

    Superb

  • Mahesh Kumar

    An Excellent Work on Nehru's Response to Crisis with Princely States(Junnagadh, Hyderabad, Kashmir) and China and Pakistan.