Rhetoric and missile tests may be flying, but for many Indians nuclear war
seems a remote prospect. At the height of tensions between India and Pakistan,
people in the bustling city of Bangalore, India's answer to California's Silicon
Valley, had decided that they were far more concerned about the dismal state
of the IT economy than they were concerned about nuclear Armageddon. Fear of
nuclear war in this South Indian city is conspicuous in its absence.
I just returned from three weeks in Bangalore and even after the Decemeber
13 terrorist attack on India's Parliament, I found no sense of impending nuclear
doom. In part, this is due to the city's geographical distance from the actual
tension; in part it is because India- Pakistan bickering is par-for-the-course
to South Asian ears; in part it is a consequence of thinking that New Delhi's
decisions really have little impact on their lives, and in part it reflects
a fatalism that characterizes the people.
The reality of a nuclear-armed South Asia has virtually no impact on the daily
lives of people here. The 1998 nuclear tests were popular because of the sense
of scientific and military accomplishment they provided. The nukes, however,
have long lost their ability to enamour the people. And, in what some may view
as dangerous naiveté, the bomb has yet to strike terror in the hearts of people
who go on with their lives far removed from New Delhi's political and security
wrangling over Kashmir. Thus, even with the military build-up along the Line
of Control in Kashmir, even as India cut its staff at the Indian embassy in
Islamabad, even in the midst of news reports (denied by Islamabad) that Pakistan
had moved its missile force to the border, Banglorians continued their daily
life largely unaffected and undaunted.
In public and private conversations people voiced vociferous political opinions,
of course. They shared the whole country's sense of outrage at what had been
attempted on December 13 - a terrorist strike at the heart of Indian democracy.
The foiled attack on India's parliament did change some of this city's nonchalance
towards Kashmir and "cross-border terrorism." There was some glib talk of "solving"
the Kashmir problem once and for all, drawing inevitable comparisons to the
American response to September 11. For the most part, however, the people here
recognized the need for restraint. There was consternation that this government
could find itself trapped in its own rhetoric, leading the country to war. Numerous
editorials expressed this fear and called for restraint both in rhetoric and
action.
Meanwhile, as Washington worried about the prospect of nuclear war, many in
Bangalore worried about their high-tech job prospects, quite oblivious, it seems,
that they were inhabitants of "the most dangerous place in the world."