On the CD forum:
The CD fulfils a unique function by bringing together all the militarily significant states. It is also a forum that brings together all states possessing nuclear weapons. (Para 1)
The CD fulfils a unique function by bringing together all the militarily significant states. It is also a forum that brings together all states possessing nuclear weapons. (Para 1)
"We need a dedicated group of people — within the establishment, industry, technical and scientific community, academia, civil society and media — who can reflect upon and define India's long-term interests in advancing the cause of democratising global internet governance and free ourselves from the current model where the space for discussion is arrogated by apologists for the current model of unilateral control.
The UN has launched a process for observing the 10th anniversary of WSIS in 2015. This provides an opportunity for India to work with other leading democratic countries like Brazil and South Africa within the IBSA platform and with other like-minded countries in the UN for democratising global internet governance to make it truly "multilateral, transparent and democratic", as envisioned in the Tunis Agenda."The problem with this is not sentiment about democratizing the Net, but the lack of realism about how international politics works. India has for long championed such efforts at democratizing global governance: remember the New International Economic Order (NIEO) or the New International Information Order (NIIO)? There is little to show for such efforts because global politics are determined by power, not by justice or democracy. Indian foreign policy mandarins only occasionally recognize this, and they mostly do not even understand the contradictions here. For example, India has been campaigning assiduously for a permanent seat in UN Security Council. (Indeed, Puri --who was then PR at the UN -- was quoted by Headlines Today (part of the India Today news group) in 2011 as saying that he expected India to be a Permanent Member of the UNSC by December 2012, latest. Obviously, a Realist he's not). The only basis for Indian claim is that it is a rising great power and that the UNSC should recognize the changed realities from when the UNSC was formed in 1945. No talk about democratizing global governance here! The point is that the US controls the internet because it is the prevailing global power. May be someday this will change, and then so will control over the internet. Until then, no amount of money-wasting UN conferencing will change who controls the internet. Unfortunately, Indian foreign policy-makers continue to believe that they can talk their way to getting what they want. Krishna Menon, after all, still holds the record for the longest speech ever at the UN (not that that worked either!).
". . . sections of the Indian establishment have deliberately sought to create some political distance between Delhi and Washington and sell discredited ideas from the Cold War past as great strategic insights. Singh nearly bought the crazy proposition that a bird in the hand was worth a lot less than two in the bush. The belief in Delhi that going slow with America might convince China to offer India a boundary deal now stands discredited, thanks to the Chinese military intrusion into Ladakh during April-May.Singh must rely on common sense rather than the overly clever theories that have derailed India's diplomacy in the second tenure of the UPA."