Jawaharlal Nehru
The house will remember that a few
days ago I made a fairly lengthy statement in this House about the affairs of Jammu and Kashmir State . I do not propose to weary the House
by a repetition of what I said then. But at this stage, I should like to
emphasize certain aspects of this problem.
For the last five years nearly,
the Kashmir problem has been one of the
heaviest burdens that the Government has had to carry. It has been a heavy
burden because it was a complicated affair and one in which our saying 'aye' or
'nay' was not quite enough. Other factors were involved. There are many things
in this world which we would like to change but we cannot shape the world to our
will. We live, as the House well knows, on the eve of what appears to be a tragedy
in the world and we try-when I say 'we' I do not mean we in this House but people
all over the world-to avert the tragedy and somehow to assure peace for this world.
But nobody can control events completely. Of course, one tries to mould them to
certain extent, tries to affect them in some way; but what the ultimate resultant
of the various forces and passions and prejudices at work is likely to be, no
man knows. The misfortune of the State of Jammu and Kashmir and our misfortune have
become a part-perhaps a small part but, nevertheless, a part-of the larger picture
of the world. And therefore the difficulties in our way have increased greatly.
It is an international problem and would have been an international problem
anyhow if it concerned any other nation besides India -and it does. Its international
character was further emphasized because a large number of other countries took
an interest in the problem and gave advice.
Well, we have tried to fashion
our actions in regard to this problem according to what we considered to be our
obligations and responsibilities. What were those obligations and
responsibilities? The first was to protect and safeguard the territory of India
from every invasion. That is the primary responsibility of the State. Secondly,
it was our duty to honour the pledge we gave to the people of Jammu and Kashmir State .
And that pledge was a two-fold pledge. We were obliged to protect them from
invasion and rape and loot and arson and everything that accompanied that
invasion. That was the first part of the pledge. The second part of the pledge
was given by us unilaterally and was to the effect that it would be for the
people to decide finally what their future was to be. The third was to honour
the assurances we gave to the United Nations and the fourth was to work for a
peaceful settlement. That was not a pledge we had given to anybody but one that
was implied in the policy we had tried to pursue right from the beginning. It
is in the nature of things that we should pursue a policy of peace, since we
are wedded to the ideals of peace. Apart from that, it was necessary that we
should do so because the world in which we live appears to be on the edge of a
precipice and one has to be very careful in taking any step which might,
perhaps, cause the world to tumble over that precipice.
So, these were the four major
considerations that we had to keep in view and sometimes it was difficult to
balance them. Sometimes they seemed to lead in different directions. I t would
have been an easy matter if all these factors had led us to the same conclusion.
But since they pulled in different directions, our obligations and
responsibilities lead us to think not only of one line of action but of several.
Then, difficulties arose. Well, we have faced these difficulties and we have
sometimes had a hard time deciding what we should do and what we should not do.
I should like the House, therefore, to think in terms of balancing these very
important assurances, pledges and the other factors in the situation.
In the course of these years, I
have repeatedly placed the situation before this House and it is with the
concurrence and support of this House that we have continued to pursue the
policy that we have pursued. I t has been my belief that, in this matter more
than in others, the great majority of the people of this country have approved
of our policy. We have had evidence of this approval from time to time in this
House and in the House that preceded it. We have received advice from
innumerable people, friends and critics in this country and we have always
welcomed that advice, even though some of it did not appear to be feasible or
right. We have also received advice from innumerable people outside this
country. We welcome their advice, too, when it is friendly' advice. vVe do not
welcome it when it comes from unfriendly minds or is accompanied by threats or
any hint of threats.
We took this matter to the United
Nations four years and eight months ago, in the belief that thereby we were
serving the cause of peace and in the hope that we would settle the question of
Kashmir by means of an agreement. We have not
settled it yet, in spite of the labours of the United Nations and its various
organs. I would like to repeat what I said on the last occasion in this House
when I paid a tribute to Dr Frank Graham, who has shown enormous patience and
enormous perseverance in his pursuit of a peaceful settlement. So far as we are
concerned, we shall help him to the end, even though people may get tired of
our pursuing the same path. Peace is always an ideal worth pursuing, however
tired we may get in the process. Many of our colleagues and friends in the
country have perhaps got weary of this process and I can very well understand
their weariness; but their weariness can hardly compare with the weariness of
those who are in charge of the Kashmir affair.
Day after day, week after week, month after month, we have had to carry this
heavy burden. However weary we may have become, we dare not act in a hurry, we
dare not act in anger, we dare not allow ourselves to be led by passion. The
consequences of acting in passion are always bad for an individual; but they
are infinitely worse for a nation. Therefore, we have restrained ourselves. We have
restrained ourselves even when loud cries of war and loud threats have reached
us from across the border. We restrained ourselves and I am glad to say that,
generally speaking, our people and the press in this country also restrained
themselves. I have great sympathy and understanding for those who sometimes
felt that we should do something more active and throw off restraint; but I was
sure then and I am sure now that it would have been utterly wrong to do so. I
am not referring to any minor step here and there but rather to the major trend
of the policy that we pursued. We must keep these four major obligations in our
minds as we have done in the past, even though we have put the matter before
the United Nations. Some friends have advised us to withdraw it from the United
Nations. I am not quite sure if they have studied this subject or considered
how it is possible to withdraw this or any such matter from the United
Nations, unless, of course, we withdraw ourselves from the United Nations. The
United Nations concerned itself with this matter at our instance. And, in any
case, if we had not brought the matter to the United Nations, others might have
done so. If we say, 'we withdraw from the United Nations,' we shall only be
showing impatience and temper without achieving the results that some people
hope we will. Therefore, the question of withdrawal from the United Nations
does not arise, unless, of course, this House wishes that the Government of
India and the Union of India itself should withdraw from the United Nations. In
the latter case, the House must be prepared to face all the consequences of
such an action. I presume that the House does not wish this, just as I do not
wish it.
I have ventured, in all humility,
sometimes to criticize those developments at the United Nations which seemed to
me to be out of keeping with its Charter and its past record and professions.
Nevertheless, I have believed and I do believe that the United Nations, in
spite of its many faults, in spite of its having deviated from its aims
somewhat, is, nevertheless, a basic and fundamental thing in the structure of
the world today. Not to have it or to do away with it would be a tragedy for
the world. Therefore, I do not wish this country of ours to do anything which
'weakens the gradual development of some kind of a world structure. It may be
that the real world structure will not come in our lifetime but unless that
world structure comes, there is no hope for this world, because the only
alternative is world conflict on a prodigious and tremendous scale. Therefore, it
would be wrong for us to do anything that weakens the beginnings of a world structure,
even though we may disagree with this particular organization and even though
we may sometimes criticize it, as we have done. It is mainly for these reasons that
I fail to understand this cry about our withdrawing the Kashmir
dispute from the United Nations. It is not like withdrawing a case from one law
court and taking it to another. The United Nations is not to be considered
merely a forum dealing with the Kashmir question.
The question is before the nations of the world, whether they are united or not
and whether they are a forum or not. It is an international matter and a matter
which is in the minds of millions of men. How can you withdraw it from the minds
of millions of men? Surely not by a legal withdrawal. The question does not arise.
We have to face the world; we have to face our people; we have to face facts
and we have to solve problems.
Some friends seem to imagine the
easiest way to solve the question is to have an exhibition of armed might. They
say, 'Let us march our armies.' That can never be a solution in this case or in
any other case. The more I live and the more I grow in experience, the more convinced
I become of the futility and the wickedness of war as a means of solving a
problem. I consider it my misfortune that we even have to spend money on
armaments and that we have to keep an army, a navy and an air force. In the world
as it is constituted today, one is compelled to take those precautions. Any
person in a position of responsibility must take these precautions and if we
take them, we have to take them adequately and effectively. Accordingly, we
must keep a fine army, a fine navy and a fine air force. That is so. But to
think in terms of throwing our brave men into warfare is not something I
indulge in, unless circumstances force my hands as they forced my hands on a late
evening in October 1947. It was only after the most painful thought and consultation
that I decided upon our course of action. If I may say so in all humility and
without sacrilege, I did so after consulting the Father of the Nation.
People say, 'A part of the territory of India has been invaded. It is held by
the enemy. What are we doing to defend that territory of India ?
We have failed in our defence.' Such statements would be perfectly justified;
such criticism of the Government would be legitimate to some extent. It was and
is our duty to push out the enemy from every invaded part of the territory of India . That is where the conflict
between obligations and responsibilities really begins.
As the House knows, we decided
right at the beginning that we were agreeable to a plebiscite in which all the
people of Jammu and Kashmir
State would take part. It
was a curious thing that in spite of having so decided, this war should have
continued. The war continued for fourteen months or so-from the end of October
1947 to the end of 1948. It was for us to decide at the end of 1948 or the
beginning of 1949, whether we should carry this war ·on to the bitter end and thereby
recover the lost territory or whether we should call a halt to active military
operations and try some other and more peaceful method. We decided and,
conditioned as we were, I submit we decided rightly to put an end to active
military operations and try other methods. These other methods have not brought
a solution in their train thus far. And yet, I think it would be right to say
that the mere fact that an extraordinarily explosive situation, such as the one
that has existed in the State of Jammu
and Kashmir for the last few years, has been
controlled is itself no small achievement. We see in other parts of the world
how other countries have got more and more entangled in all kinds of morasses
and how the path of war becomes more and more difficult. We had the courage
and, I say in all humility, the wisdom to pull ourselves out of continuing an
unending war before it was too late, so that we might think more calmly, more
patiently, more wisely. Whether it has yielded any result yet or not, the fact
remains that we have not been having a war for the last three and a half years
or so. This is not a bad result, although it may not be a satisfactory
solution.
Later, we declared that any
further aggression or attack - I say 'any further' because there had been
aggression and aggression was continuing-or military operations in regard to
Kashmir would mean an all-out war not only in Kashmir but elsewhere, too. That
decision was not lightly taken but after serious thought and careful
consultation. 'We said it knowing full well the consequences of what we said.
We had weighed the consequences and yet had come to that conclusion. It was no
threat but the statement of what was, to our minds, an absolute fact. There
could be no further attack on Kashmir without this matter becoming a major war
so far as India
was concerned. Having made that perfectly clear, I think we succeeded in
preventing many an attack that might have taken place in the hope that the
aggressors would get away with it.
Two or three basic things follow
from this. One is that, in so far as the United Nations is concerned, we shall
continue unless this House decides to the contrary, to deal with it in the
manner in which we have done in the past. We have tried our utmost to achieve a
peaceful settlement without giving in on any vital point or trying to evade any
of our responsibilities or obligations. We have resolved not to dishonour the
pledges we have given to the people of Kashmir or to the people of India
and, therefore, we shall pursue our policy accordingly.
The House is aware that we
accepted certain resolutions of the United Nations and of the UN Commission
that came here. We accepted them, not because we liked everything about them
but because in our earnest desire for a peaceful settlement, we were willing to
go to great lengths. Nevertheless, we made it perfectly clear that we would
not by-pass the pledges we had given or the responsibilities we had undertaken.
At a much later stage, another resolution was passed by the Security Council
which tried to impose an arbitration on us. We rejected that resolution or that
part of it which was objectionable to us. It was one thing for us to agree to a
certain proposal after having weighed all the consequences but we could not
possibly give up our responsibilities, pledges and assurances; we could not put
the matter in the hands of somebody else, whoever he might be. We could never
do that because we had our own duties and obligations to consider. How could we
hang the faith of the four million people of Jammu and Kashmir State
on the decision of an arbitrator? Great political questions-and this was a
great political question-are not handed over in this way to arbitrators from
foreign countries. That is why we had to reject this particular resolution of
the United Nations. We stand by that rejection and are not going to agree to
anything which prevents us from honouring the pledges or the assurances we have
given.
Subject to that, we shall go all
out to seek a peaceful settlement. Among the assurances and pledges that we
have given is the pledge which was implied in our policy, namely, that the
people of Jammu and Kashmir
State would decide their
future. Let me be quite clear about this. There still seems to be a good deal
of misunderstanding about Kashmir's accession to India . The other day, I said in
this House that this accession was complete in law and in fact. Some people and
some newspapers, mostly newspapers abroad, seem to think that it is only
something that has happened in the last week or fortnight or three weeks that
has made this accession complete. According to my views, this accession was
complete in law and in fact in October 1947. It is patent and no argument is required,
because every accession of every State in India was complete on these very
terms by September in that' year or a little later. All the States acceded in
three basic subjects, namely, foreign affairs, communications and defence. Can
anybody say that the accession of any State in India was incomplete simply because
they acceded in only those three subjects? Of course not. It was a complete
accession in law and in fact. So was the accession of the Jammu and Kashmir State ,
in law and in fact, by the end of October. It is not open to doubt or
challenge. I am surprised that anybody here or elsewhere in the world should
challenge it. I was telling the House that when the first United Nations
Commission, accompanied by their legal advisers and others came here, it was
open to them to challenge it. But they did not, because it was quite clear to
them and to their legal advisers that there could be no question about the
legal validity of the accession. So, while the accession was complete in law
and in fact, the other fact which has nothing to do with law also remains,
namely, Our pledge to the people of Kashmir - if you like, to the people of the
world - that this matter can be affirmed again or cancelled by the people of Kashmir
according to their wishes. We do not want to win people against their will and
with the help of armed force; and, if the people of Jammu and Kashmir State
wish to part company with us, they can go their way and we shall go ours. We
want no forced marriages, no forced unions. I hope this great Republic of India
is a free, voluntary, friendly and affectionate union of the States of India.
The people of Jammu and Kashmir
State not only agreed to
come to us as they did but it was at their request that we took them into our
large family of States. I do believe that they have the same friendly feelings
towards us as the other States have. I believe that on repeated occasions they
have given evidence of this fact. Even in the election of this Constituent Assembly
that took place nearly a year ago, they exhibited that feeling of friendship
and union with India .
I am personally convinced that if at any time some other method of ascertaining
their feelings is decided upon, they will decide in the same way. But that is
my personal opinion; it may not be your opinion or the House's opinion. The
fact, however, remains that we have said to them and to the world that we will
give them a chance to decide. We propose to stand by their ultimate decision in
this matter. Within the limits of these assurances and pledges, we shall
continue to pursue the policy that we have decided upon.
A short while ago, we met the
representatives of the Government of Kashmir and they were not merely the
representatives of the Government but, undoubtedly, the popular leaders of the
people of Kashmir . We met .them, we talked to
them and we discussed many matters with them. We did not go to them in a
bargaining spirit or in a spirit of opposition. We discussed matter with them,
with a view to solving our intricate problems, With a view to unraveling the
knots and with a view to finding some way which would fit in with the various
assurances that we had exchanged and with the policies they stood for and we
stood for. Many of these policies 'were, of course, common to both. I placed
the agreements we arrived at before this House on the last occasion. It is
obvious that these agreements are not a final solution. Much has still to be
done; much has to be thought out. But two or three facts remain. One is that,
in the nature of things at the present moment, it is necessary to consider the
case of Jammu and Kashmir State on a somewhat different footing from the other
States in India .
This is inevitable because Kashmir has become
an international issue in the last few years. A different footing does not mean
any special right or privilege except in the sense that it may mean a greater
measure of internal autonomy. It is a developing, dynamic situation. One may
gradually change it more and more but it is not right for us under the existing
circumstances to try to do something by mental coercion or by pressure of some
other kind. That would defeat our object and that would, indeed, be playing
into the hands of those who criticize us.
Speech
in the Loka Sabha, August 7, 1952
Courtesy:
Jawaharlal Nehru’s Speeches 1949-1953
(Page: 100-109)
(First
Published: January 1954, Fourth Impression: June 1967)
Publications
Division
Ministry
of Information and Broadcasting
Government
of India
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