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The Duran Podcast

Bangladesh Coup. US Challenges India

Bangladesh coup. US challenges India

Duration:
16m
Broadcast on:
18 Aug 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

All right, Alexander, let's talk about the situation in Bangladesh. We did get a coup. That's the way it looks. Actually, the coup Prime Minister has said it was a U.S. coup, so she's come out and said it was a coup. The United States denies that it was a coup in Bangladesh, but we do have an interim Prime Minister, Eunice, who does appear to be a type of Juan Guaido character for the United States, someone who comes from their side of things, who's gone through the process that they put leaders through in order to put them into leadership roles in other governments. We have him in place, and we have some indication, at least from the coup Prime Minister, as to what all of this was about. Basically, this was about control of the Bay of Bengal. Obviously, this is something that India and China will probably have to address, if this was indeed what the coup was about. I'm absolutely sure that this was a coup. I mean, if you want to look at the way it was set up, I mean, Brian Balletik has done a good program about this on his channel. I mean, I've never done anything with a coup, and all you have to do is look at the person who's taken over, Eunice is somebody with a very, very long connection to the United States, going all the way back to the 1960s. He is very strongly pro-American. He's very hostile both who endure in China, and the way in which the events were executed is just very consistent with the whole colour revolution format. Protests by young people, students as they call, and many of them are for students, but you know, protests about them, stories spread about violence against the protesters. I mean, there may have been violence against the protesters. I'm not saying, but we always get stories about violence against the protesters in this particular type of scenario. Then the police and military who are expected, you know, might have been expected to stand behind the constitutional and democratically elected prime minister, which is what the prime minister was. It's important to remember this. Anyway, they melt away. Perhaps they've been bribed. Perhaps they've been persuaded. Maybe many of them are not particularly enthusiastic about her for all kinds of reasons, but anyway, they melt away. And she is forced to take the helicopter and fly off to India and go into exile, and everything collapses around her. And then the new person steps in, interim prime minister, and he's absolutely, as I said, the kind of person that you can imagine handpicked by the United States. And, you know, we've seen this play out in place after place and time after time. If you want me to say which one it resembles most closely, it is the Maidan events of 2014 in Kiev. I mean, it's almost exactly the same as that. And the explanation I think the Prime Minister, the acid prime minister, Shima, has provided it the Americans want an able base in Bangladesh so that they can control the Bay of Bengal. By the way, this is one of those bad ideas that has been floating around in the Pentagon for a very, very long time. I can remember that it was being first. I mean, I actually can remember this. It was first been debated in the early 1970s, late 1960s. I mean, it gets me all that way. The Americans then lost interest in it for a while, because firstly, Bangladesh became independent of Pakistan and started to tilt a bit more towards India. This is in the 70s. Then the US and China and that base, that naval base was really principally targeted in China in those days. The US and China had a long period of very good relations. But now, of course, US relations with China are not so good. In fact, they're very bad. The US sees China as its adversary. US relations with India, which has been historically the country that has been had the closest relationship with Bangladesh. It was the Indian army that intervened in Bangladesh in 1971 and helped Bangladesh achieve independence of Pakistan. Anyway, and India's relations with the United States are not so good anymore either. So, you have a coup, you get the naval base. Eventually, they will get their naval base. The American warships will be able to operate at the Bay of Bengal. That was why Hashima had to go, and that's why the coup happened. I am not saying, by the way, and this is an important point to make, that there were not reasons for discontent within Bangladesh. That there is no doubt that definitely where there's been inflation. There's been economic issues. There was issues about a government recruitment, an education recruitment policy, not issues in themselves, which one would have expected, would lead to the collapse of the government. And as for the economic situation, yes, it is true that there has been an economic boom in Bangladesh. Yes, it is also true that the benefits of that boom have been very unevenly distributed. But that is what often happens in countries like Bangladesh. And usually, you do not expect events like this to take place spontaneously in countries which have had a prolonged economic upswing. So, yes, I think this was a coup. I've set out wine. And the objectives, it seems to me, are very clear. And it will prove horribly counterproductive in the end, both for Bangladesh, and dare I say, for the United States also. Because India and Chad are going to have to respond to this. I mean, how do they view this? Well, they don't use this with any favor. I mean, China, of course, is extremely concerned about the potential establishment of another US naval base in the Bay of Bengal. China, of course, does not have a coastline in this area. But if there's American warships in the Bay of Bengal, well, you know, conceivably, I'm not sure about ranges and things of this kind, but you could perhaps imagine US Navy being used to launch strikes against Chinese positions. And, of course, it also enables the US to put pressure on other countries in this area. Myanmar, Thailand, Thailand, thinking about joining the BRICS, for example, it creates another pressure point that the United States could potentially use against China. So the Chinese are obviously not happy. But the country that is most unhappy and most concerned is India. Ashima, who was the prime minister of India, that's a pro-Bangladesh, the one who's just been overthrown, a very close ally and friend of India's. Her father, Sheikh Mujibur, Rahman, whom way of the way, just kind of remember, he was the independence leader in Bangladesh, he was somebody who was very close to India, and she has been very close to India also. So what's happened is that a pro-Indian government has been overthrown in a country that neighbors India. It's been replaced by a pro-American government, and the Indians are not going to be happy at all about this. And perhaps not coincidentally, they have been making moves over the last period of time to try to improve their relations with China. Jai Shankar, the Indian Foreign Minister, and Wang Yi had a meeting in Laos. This is before the events in Bangladesh to place, but you could see the buildup to it. They had a meeting in Laos, which apparently went very well. They're now again trying to come to terms about the tensions on the border. The Chinese media has been pointing out to the Indians that look, we're not really your enemies, we're not trying to overthrow you. The US is much more your enemy than we are. And of course, the Indians have to worry that what happened in Bangladesh might be attempted by the US in India itself. Not I think directly, I don't think the US believes that he can mount a color revolution against the Indian government. India is huge. I think we're almost impossible to do that. But there are lots of places within India itself, Kashmir, other places as well, where if you wanted to create trouble for the Indian government, you could. And I think that this is a signal to the Indians from the US that if they step out of line, go on doing what they're doing, pursue their independent policies. The full force of the United States will be turned upon them. And identity, the Indians for all kinds of reasons can sacrifice their independence in that sort of way. So they're going to be looking for friends. And that can only mean the Greeks, and that can only mean some kind of a reconciliation with China. Yeah, I mean, the big question is why now why did they decide to pull the trigger on a Bangladesh coup? Because you said this has been in the works for a long time. But the United States, the Pentagon, they never went through with it fully. But for some reason, they decided to pull the trigger now at this moment in time. And the only logical explanation is they're getting nervous at seeing bricks, at seeing a rep rush moment between China and India, at seeing India becoming much more independent, sovereign, more powerful. It's becoming a much more powerful country. So, you know, to me, it seems like this was a panic move in a way, but a move, nonetheless, to say, okay, well, we're going to establish our naval base here right next to you. And here we are. So don't get out of line. Correct. That's exactly what it is. And I think this is how it will be seen in India. I mean, this will be seen as a very, very unfriendly Indian American relations have been deteriorating for some months. The US expected that India would go all in into an alliance with the US against China. And that hasn't really happened. India is a member of the Quad, but the Quad has never morphed into the kind of anti-Chinese alliance that I think the US thought it would. And of course, India maintains and preserves this very long established and very popular in India relationship with Russia. So I think that the Americans have been very frustrated with India. And you've been seen for quite a few months now, a sort of drumbeat of criticism of India coming from the US and Western countries. So a couple of months ago, there was complaints about the fact that various Sikh separatists in Canada and the US had been assassinated supposedly by Indian agents. There were suggestions that Prime Minister Modi himself was implicated in those assassinations. You remember what we talked about it at the time. We said this looked like a warning shot directed at Modi. It was also staged even as India was on the eve of the G20 Summit meeting in India, which Modi was hosting. So all of those stories appeared then. Anyway, and then after that, we had more criticisms of India during the parliamentary elections, attempts to spin the elections as an electoral defeat for Modi, even though he's been re-elected for the third time, which is only one other Indian Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, who has ever achieved that. But anyway, they came after Modi then. There's been a drumbeat of criticism, which has been steadily growing. Now, he went to Moscow a couple of weeks ago, if you remember, met with Putin. Lots of economic agreements taken agreed at that time. And he's trying to balance that by a trip to Ukraine, though that has not yet crystallized and appears to have been postponed, perhaps to the end of this month. But anyway, they're now taking a much more aggressive step with this coup in Bangladesh, which will only land them with more problems. The Indians are the Chinese, more likely to sort of converge with each other. The Indians and the Chinese inevitably hostile to this government in Dakar, in Bangladesh, Bangladesh, a country that is not fully stable anyway. It's been through an economic boom, but it needs a lot more investment to develop economically in order to develop economically. It needs good relations with its neighbours, India, and of course, China, which is perhaps the only country that could invest in, which might be interested in investing and building up Bangladeshi infrastructure, which Bangladesh urgently needs. All of that has been sacrificed, again, to a geopolitical game, which to my mind has absolutely no value. The US won't gain anything, in the end. Bangladesh won't gain anything in the end. All that's going to happen is that the region is going to become more unstable. All right, we will end the video there, the duran.locals.com. 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