A minister of Indira Gandhi's cabinet betrayed
This is the highlight of the book CIA's Eye on South Asia by journalist Anuj Dhar. Published by
Delhi-based Manas Publications, which is facing government's ire for coming out
with a book on the R&AW, the book compiles declassified CIA records on
In the run up to the 1971 India Pakistan war over what
was then East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), The
New York Times first hinted at the presence of a CIA operative in the
Indian government. By December The
Washington Post had reported that
Records and telecons declassified recently—but not
properly explained up till now—show that a dramatic turnaround came on December
6 when a CIA operative, whom Dhar pins down as a minister of the Indira
Cabinet, leaked out India's "war objectives" to the agency. Prime
Minister Gandhi told Union Cabinet that apart from liberating
When he came to know of the CIA report, a furious Nixon
blurted out that "this woman [Indira Gandhi] suckered us," thinking
that Mrs. Gandhi had promised him that India won't attack East Pakistan—not to
speak of targeting West Pakistan and PoK. "But let me tell you, she's
going to pay," he told his National Security Advisor Dr Henry Kissinger
even as he tried to leak out the CIA report to give her bad press.
The CIA went on assess that fulfilment of
As a direct result of the operative's information, the
Nixon administration went on an overdrive to save
Nixon personally threatened the
Dhar quotes in the book the official records showing
that USSR's First Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov visited Delhi after
Nixon's threat and told the "Indians to confine their objectives to East
Pakistan" and "not to try and take any part of West Pakistan,
including Azad Kashmir" as "Moscow was concerned about the
possibility of a great power confrontation over the subcontinent."
Kuznetsov also extracted a guarantee from Prime Minister Gandhi that
Dhar repudiates recent assertion by a former Indian
Navy chief that showing up of
In subsequent years, former Prime Minister Morarji
Desai, and two deputy PMs—Jagjivan Ram and YB Chavan—were alleged to be the CIA
operative active during the 1971 war. However, all such charges lacked any
substantiation because there was no confirmation whether or not such an
operative ever existed. As such no constructive discussion on the issue ever
took off. This has changed now given the unassailable evidence in the form of
US records making it clear that the CIA had a "reliable" agent
operating out of the Indian cabinet in 1971.
In declassified records the name of the operative has
been censored because the CIA Director has "statutory obligations to
protect from disclosure [the Agency's] intelligence sources." Dhar writes:
"Naming the Indian operative even after so many years will adversely
impact the Indo-US relations, and hit the Agency's prospects of recruiting new
informants."
However, he suggests that Indian government may have
known the identity of the operative. "R&AW under the most capable RN
Kao could not have missed the reference to the 'source close to Mrs. Gandhi'
and must have dug deeper," he writes, adding that in 1972 Mrs Gandhi
herself charged that "she had information that the CIA had become active
in
More pertinently, Dhar quotes from the declassified
record of a 5 October 1972 meeting between Indian Foreign Minister Swaran Singh
and
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