Is there such a thing as a hard or a soft state? What if we said that any state is indeed just that, the state? It has to have it in its guts to stay together, cohesive, orderly. That last is not my line. Who it’s borrowed from, I’ll tell you as we go along.
Take Nepal. The fall of its constitutionally elected government to just over a day of Gen Z protests in the capital is the third such in three years in the Subcontinent, after Sri Lanka (Colombo, July, 2022) and Bangladesh (Dhaka, August, 2024). As we keep saying, invoking the primer of journalism, this conforms to the three-example rule. We can also note much clamour on social media, mostly from the BJP base, which includes many prominent and respected names, that this is just what the “powers that be” would want done with the Modi government in India. The regime-change toolkit, as they’d put it.
Let’s also look at exceptions. Not every government collapses under a public protest. I know it is a super-provocative example, but remember Pakistan on 9 May, 2023?
Imran Khan’s supporters rioted not in one city but across many, even stormed Lahore’s Jinnah House, the Corps Commander’s home. The situation had many more ingredients for a ‘regime’ overthrow than Colombo, Dhaka or Kathmandu. A widely hated civilian government, handmaiden of a then reviled army for jailing the most popular mass leader.
That “revolution” ended within 48 hours. The leader (Imran Khan) is still in jail, now handed a 14-year sentence, the same coalition is still in power, having been rebirthed through another rigged election, and all socio-economic and democratic grievances remain. More than 250 protest leaders are being tried in military courts. The state looks way stronger.
Did the Pakistan establishment survive because they are a hard state, while Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal weren’t? Definitely, even Asim Munir doesn’t think so. Or, he wouldn’t have given Pakistan a “we have to become a hard state” call in that infamous 16 April speech.
The fact is, the regime survived in Pakistan because it is still a functional state. The heart of a functional state is law and order. Functional is the key word here, not hard or soft. No state can be functional unless it’s capable of maintaining law and order. And when there is law and order, catastrophic state failures like Colombo, Dhaka and now Kathmandu will not take place.
Also Read: Pakistan, Dhaka have played Washington well. Back home, Modi ecosystem has an inner conflict
Regime change can always be a democratic aspiration. But it will take more to achieve it than a few days of protests, riots and arson. It will take long months if not years of toil and struggle to build a political counter, go to the people, and create the revolution you want, through elections or mass movement.
What the collapse in Kathmandu with just one push underlines to us is that it was a non-functional state. It had an elected government, but its leaders did not have the first prerequisite for governance: democratic patience.
The leadership trained as guerrilla fighters through their youth to the middle ages and then ran cynical musical chairs through defection and alliance-switching, as elected politicians had no experience in dealing with ‘other’ angry people. The Maoists were once heroic change agents. Once they came to power they no longer thought the same people could also get angry with them. And when they did, they needed some negotiations to revive trust and credibility, not bullets.
Guns were an instrument of winning popularity and power. Nor had they spent any of the past 17 years since the end of the monarchy in 2008 to build and strengthen institutions of democracy. If they had, the same institutions would have protected them. If in the end the only institution the protesting masses trust is the army, it shows what a colossal failure the revolutionary political class in Nepal has been. They never built a functional state.
A hard state can be quite fragile. My most valuable case study is Georgia, then a Soviet republic. History has rarely seen a state harder than the USSR. It panicked when the first protests broke out in Georgia in 1988-89? It sent out the Red Army with special forces and armed KGB, who unleashed bullets and poison gas. This was a classical bull-headed hard state. It unravelled.
Its discredited party state had a broken economy, and didn’t know how to handle disagreements. Individual dissenters it could kill, or pack off to distant gulags. A mass protest wasn’t its glass of vodka.
Also Read: One person’s Deep State is another’s Non-State actor. And Shallow State is where the real power lies
We got a better understanding shortly afterwards as we were hosted for dinner, with my then editor Aroon Purie by Buta Singh, Rajiv Gandhi’s home minister. He said he had recently hosted Russian foreign minister Eduard Shevardnadze (a Georgian) who “asked me how we handled protests by lakhs when his army unleashed poison gas on a much smaller crowd” in Tbilisi.
“I said, your excellence,” said Buta Singh, “I can lend you a few companies of CRPF.” The lesson is that a state must maintain law and order. For this, it must have three prerequisites: the uniformed forces with the right training, negotiating skills and democratic patience or the willingness to trade spaces.
Today’s discourse confuses the absence of an opposition for a hard-state essential. It’s the opposite. The opposition serves as a pressure-release valve. People can vent through it rather than sack your president, prime minister or corps commander’s homes. All four of our neighbours banished their opposition in different degrees of extreme.
At which point, we return to our earlier question. Could this happen in India? A regime change through any “tool kit”? A quick way to explain why it can’t happen is to remind ourselves that constitutional democracies do not have a ‘regime.’
While there are a couple of dozen mutinies going on across India at any point, we have seen two serious challenges to the state from the “street” in the past 50 years. The first was Jayaprakash Narayan’s (JP) Navnirman Andolan, beginning 1974 compounded by the George Fernandes-led railway strike that paralysed India. Yet, failed to dislodge Mrs Gandhi. It took an election.
The second was Anna Hazare’s so-called anti-corruption protests fully backed by new TV and strong elements in the Opposition, especially the RSS as was the case with JP’s movement. But even a government as weak as UPA-2 had the strength to ride it out.
A debate on the Jan Lok Pal Bill going well past midnight sealed the issue. It was that line from late Sharad Yadav in response to self-proclaimed Gandhi, Anna Hazare pouring scorn over Parliament and elected leaders. Think of an Indian with the name Pakauri Lal he said, pointing to fellow MP (Samajwadi Party, Forbesganj). In this system a man as humble as him can be here. And this is the system you’ve come to destroy? The Anna movement was over at that moment. Parliament had risen to protect the state.
Finally, I will let you know that a “state needing to have it in its gut to stay together” observation. In 2010 when mass stoning and terror had peaked in the Valley many mainstream voices were rising, saying if Kashmiris are so unhappy why don’t we just let them go? M.K. Narayanan, then NSA, spoke this line in a conversation, pointing his fist where else, but at his gut. It was 15 years ago so I hope he’d forgive me for recounting this. See where the Valley is, now. This, by the way, was the same UPA-2, now seen widely to be running a soft state.
Also Read: Subcontinental setbacks have a message for India: Junk victimhood & respect thy neighbour
Indeed, this might not happen in India, since people are too brainwashed, or too scared to protest in mass. The biggest example is when the Vote Chori scam came out; youngsters were seen protesting against the Supreme Court’s stray dog order. This shows the priority of a protest in India. Dogs over Democracy?
Could it happen in India?
Shekhar’s analysis of why it hasn’t is rather superficial. India has been a hard law and order state at least since Indira Gandhi. But that alone wouldn’t have saved us.
And while revolutions have failed, Indian has had its share of long running insurgencies.
There has been a long running populist streak in all governments that has kept the masses in check.
Distributed and organized government at multiple levels has also helped keep a single rebellion from toppling all order.
But could it happen in India?
Absolutely! Just enact policies that begin to hurt the bottom line of our huge middle classes a bit severely, and before long you will have a revolution.
Consider the fiscal cost of a hard state. An $ 80 billion defence budget for a status quo power and a developing country which has many competing claims over its resources, including education and healthcare. One million men – more women now – in its Central Armed Police Forces. For a democracy where there is no disconnect between the government and the people. Not making a case for pacifism. Why were Nepal’s young so upset. Why so much disaffection in Bangladesh. Can we be completely sanguine that similar grievances do not exist in India, which need to be addressed thoughtfully.