Book Details

Book title: IRRAWADDY IMPERATIVES: Reviewing India`s Myanmar Strategy
Author(s): Jaideep Chanda
ISBN: 9789390095346
Publication Year: 2021
Binding: HB
Pages: 500
Price: Rs. 1495 Rs. 1495
Quantity
Stock Availability Yes
ABOUT THE BOOK

Myanmar, the Golden Land, has for ages been the last frontier, steeped in mysticism and mystery. However, knowledge about Myanmar remains woefully inadequate in most spheres including Indian academia, media and in some cases, even foreign policy. The irony is such that premier educational establishments in India provide exotic courses on countries with which India has no borders and are thousands of kilometres away, but do not offer Myanmar studies or language courses, despite India sharing a 1643 km border with Myanmar.

India’s two-track engagement with Myanmar commenced in 1991 and today, in 2021, has completed 30 successful years of bilateral engagement. The realpolitik driven two tracks being, to engage with Myanmar on functional levels, while concurrently pressing for democratic reforms. On 1 February 2021, all that changed with Senior General Ming Aung Hlaing’s coup d’état and the ensuing violence which has already claimed over 700 lives. In such tragic circumstances, ‘business as usual` is no longer a viable foreign policy option. 

With this backdrop, Irrawaddy Imperatives: Reviewing India’s Myanmar Strategy, though written well before the coup, provides a fresh and original perspective to India’s relationship with Myanmar. In reviewing India’s Myanmar strategy, the book uses three principal approaches viz. the borderland studies approach, the geographic realism approach and the third concurrent approach being the centrality of the Northeast and its people as the principal stakeholders in India-Myanmar relations. Over the years the Northeast has been seen as a ‘gateway’ or ‘passage’ to the ASEAN and its markets, which consigns the Northeast to a transitory space, rather than a primary space and subordinates it to Myanmar and the ASEAN. The book counters this and suggests viable alternatives. The book also serves as a reference for the Myanmar scholar through the vast amount of data and various appendices which contain documents relevant to India-Myanmar relations. 

The research for the Fellowship leading to this book has been primary source oriented with the author visiting Myanmar and Mizoram for field trips. Archival research at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library provides delightful nuggets of history which are documented in it. In addition, interviews, interactions with former Ambassadors, Generals and other serving and retired functionaries have added value. This book is expected to be useful to students of Myanmar and neighbourhood studies in India, and casual readers as well.

The book concludes by attempting to codify a policy for India towards Myanmar and it avers that a strong and developed Myanmar is the best bet for India and for the development of India’s Northeast. For this, Indian businesses have to invest in Myanmar, especially along the India-Myanmar border. This is also the best way to hedge against Chinese influence in Myanmar and Northeast India. In effect, these, amongst others things, are the Irrawaddy Imperatives.   

ABOUT Author

Colonel Jaideep Chanda is a serving officer of the 3rd Gorkha Rifles, with operational experience in high altitude, jungle and mountain warfare; counter insurgency and terrorism; and on the Line of Control. He is a veteran of the Kargil War where he led the Commando (Ghatak) Platoon of his Battalion in action. On staff, he has served in the Strategic Forces Command; headed a logistics branch in a mountain division deployed in the East; served in the General Staff and Military Secretary`s Branches in a Command Headquarters and as a United Nations Military Observer in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In the past he has worked on gender studies in peacekeeping, mental health management in the Army and has a published monograph on the Historiographic Analysis of the Military History of Post-Independent India.

His interest in Myanmar stemmed from his tenures in the East and his frustration at the lack of available information about the country, which is perpetually  scarce and shrouded in secrecy.

The officer has more interests than he has the time and money to pursue, with some of the abiding ones being music, outdoor life and adventure sports, not necessarily in that order.  

© 2018 Pentagon Press. All rights reserved