Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07CHENNAI54
2007-01-22 11:09:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Chennai
Cable title:  

CODEL SPECTER IN SOUTH INDIA: COMMUNISTS, COMPUTERS AND

Tags:  OVIP PREL PGOV ECON SCUL IN 
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RUEHCI/AMCONSUL CALCUTTA 0684
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TAGS: OVIP PREL PGOV ECON SCUL IN
SUBJECT: CODEL SPECTER IN SOUTH INDIA: COMMUNISTS, COMPUTERS AND
CULTURE

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TAGS: OVIP PREL PGOV ECON SCUL IN
SUBJECT: CODEL SPECTER IN SOUTH INDIA: COMMUNISTS, COMPUTERS AND
CULTURE


1. (U) Summary: During a December 17-22 visit to the south Indian
states of Kerala and Karnataka, Senator Arlen Specter
(R-Pennsylvania) viewed first-hand India's high-tech and business
boom, met with judicial officials and journalists, and experienced
traditional culture and politics, the latter in a lively meeting
with Kerala's communist Chief Minister. Meeting topics included the
war in Iraq, the U.S.-India civil nuclear accord, the impact of
out-sourcing on U.S. jobs, and judicial activism and reform. The
south India destinations for Senator Specter and his small
delegation were Kochi and Thiruvananathapuram, the commercial and
political capitals of Kerala, and Bangalore, the main city of
neighboring Karnataka. End summary.

Chief Minister Revisits the Cold War
--------------


2. (SBU) On December 21 in Thiruvananthapuram (which is also still
known by its former name, Trivandrum),the capital of Kerala,
Senator Specter, joined by Chennai Principal Officer Hopper, met
with Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan (Communist Party of
India-Marxist),the state's highest elected official. Senator
Specter asked if the Chief Minister carries out Marxist doctrine in
governing Kerala. Achuthanandan said that in Kerala, like in West
Bengal and Tripura, the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M)
rules in coalition with other leftist, like-minded, but not
necessarily Marxist parties. He nevertheless is guided by the CPI-M
election manifesto prepared for the early 2006 state election, and
he characterized his government's policies as "left democratic."
Achuthanandan said that this means abolishing a "feudal system" of
land ownership in which some wealthy people owned 50,000 acres of
land they did not use while poor farmers had to make do with a tenth
of one acre. He said his government's land reform program operates
under the principles of "land to the tiller" and debt forgiveness
for poor farmers. Those willing to work on government-owned land
pay nominal rent for 12 years and then receive full ownership.
Achuthanandan said that one million farmers have now received land

under this program and hundreds of thousands have been freed from
bonded labor. He added that education and health care were also
priorities for his government. He claimed that every child has
access to 12 years of free education and that 50 percent of the
seats in universities are reserved for students from socially and
economically disadvantaged segments of society. He said health care
is universal and free and is administered at the village level.


3. (SBU) Senator Specter also asked about the application of Marxist
theory in the wider world where so many communist regimes have been
discredited and have fallen. Achuthanandan responded that "the
Soviet Union had been a huge success for 75 years but collapsed in
the end because of wrong practices and the actions of the CIA." He
said that even Russian President Putin, though not a communist, "is
engaged in a struggle against the United States." Achuthanandan
claimed that "despite U.S. efforts to encourage
counter-revolutionaries" in China during the Tiananmen Square
protests of 1989 and "despite 180 attempts by the CIA to kill Castro
in Cuba," communism is flourishing in those countries as well as in
North Korea and Vietnam.


4. (SBU) Achuthanandan then asked a number of rhetorical questions:
"How many democratically elected leaders have been assassinated by
the U.S. government?" "How can the United States justify attacking
Iraq?" "Why does the U.S. not free Saddam Hussein after a farcical
trial?" Achuthanandan also claimed, "Saddam in his entire life used
a fraction of the weapons of mass destruction that the U.S. used in
Vietnam." Senator Specter pointed out that Saddam had used WMD
against Iranians and Iraqis alike, that U.S. intelligence, although
later proved wrong, pointed to continuing stockpiles of WMD, and
that Saddam had been proved in Iraqi courts to have tortured and
murdered his own people and must now face Iraqi justice. Senator
Specter added that a precipitous withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq
would result in even more killing. The sometimes contentious
discussion between the Senator and Chief Minister ended with the
Chief Minister's backhanded comment: "We don't like Bush, but we
are with the American people."

Technology and Culture in Thiruvananthapuram
--------------


5. (U) Senator Specter visited U.S. Technologies, a California-based
information technology corporation with a large software development
and customer support facility in Thiruvananthapuram's "Techno-Park."
U.S. Technologies made a presentation highlighting the core values
and features of the company, including its information technology
consulting and development services to industry verticals such as
healthcare, retail financial services, and manufacturing utilities
and logistics. When the U.S. Technologies briefer proudly pointed
out that Independence Healthcare in Philadelphia is one of the many
U.S. companies supported from the Kerala office, Senator Specter
asked about the number and location of employees who were doing

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that work before U.S. Technologies was engaged.


6. (U) The head of the Travancore royal family, who were the
pre-Indian independence rulers of the area, Marthanda Varma
Maharaja, along with his sister Lakshmi Bai and their immediate
family members, received Senator Specter at the Kowdiar Palace and
discussed the history and culture of Kerala. The erudition of the
Kerala royal family was in rich display, as much as the religious
and cultural heritage of the state, deeply impressing Senator
Specter and the accompanying visitors. Senator Specter also visited
the art gallery housing many of the painting of Raja Ravi Varma, a
member of the royal family who was one of India's leading artists in
oils.

Kochi: Press, Judges and Business People
--------------


7. (U) Earlier, in Kochi (which is also still known by its former
name, Cochin),the economic and business hub of Kerala, Senator
Specter met with the editorial board of the Malayala Manorama, the
state's leading daily newspaper, including director and managing
editor Philip Mathew. The questions put to Senator Specter focused
on U.S.-Indian relations and India's standing in the world. Senator
Specter said that because of India's position as the world's largest
democracy and as a growing economic power, the country should be
considered for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. He said
that the U.S. should forge closer trade relations with India, and he
saw cooperation in the area of nuclear energy as a boon to both
nations. Senator Specter said that the U.S. government has not
effectively communicated its policies to the world's Muslims, many
of whom wrongly believe that the U.S. is against Islam.


8. (U) Another highlight of Senator Specter's Kochi visit was a
meeting with Chief Justice V.K. Bali and four senior judges of the
Kerala High Court. The judicial appointment system in India and the
relations between the Indian judicial and legislative branches of
government formed a good part of the discussions. "Do you
legislate?" Senator Specter asked the judges, touching off
discussions on the theme of judicial activism for which the Kerala
High Court is especially reputed. "We fill the gaps (in the laws
and the Constitution)," the judges replied, pointing to the powers
vested in them to issue orders and writs for ensuring the
fundamental rights of the citizens guaranteed in the Indian
Constitution.


9. (U) Senator Specter had lively discussions with Kochi businessmen
at two events -- a dinner hosted by the Kerala Indo-American Chamber
of Commerce and a lunch hosted by the Cochin Chamber of Commerce.
At both events, Senator Specter acknowledged the growing importance
of India on the world stage and the fair claim for a greater role
for India at the United Nations. He conceded that the U.S.
involvement in Iraq was based on inaccurate intelligence but pointed
out that now that the U.S. is there, it cannot withdraw
precipitously, leaving the country in chaos.

10. (U) Senator Specter toured the AD 1568 Mattancherry Synagogue
guided by Samuel Hallegua, the leader of the small Jewish community
in Kochi. He saw with great interest the scrolls of Jewish
scriptures and the historic copper plates in which the privileges
granted by the erstwhile Kochi kings to the Kerala Jewish community
are recorded. The delegation also visited the "backwaters" area of
Kerala, near Kochi, which is growing as a destination for
international and domestic tourism, an important industry for
Kerala's economy.

Bangalore: High-Tech City
--------------


11. (U) On December 20 in Bangalore, the capital of the state of
Karnataka and the center of India's information technology industry,
a visit to IBM India's facility provided an opportunity for Senator
Specter to witness some of the company's worldwide operations
directed from the Global Operations Center. Senator Specter asked
IBM India executives about the number of jobs that have been moved
from the U.S. to India, to which the executives replied that there
has been no migration of jobs to India.


12. (U) A visit to General Electric's John F. Welch Technology
Center (GE-JWTC) brought Senator Specter up close to some of the
next generation technologies that the company plans to bring to the
market. The qualifications of the scientists employed and the wages
paid to them were the focus of the Senator's discussions with
scientists present during his visit. GE-JWTC's next generation
imaging systems with medical applications caught the Senator's
interest as it enabled him to virtually enter the human brain.


13. (U) During a lunch meeting with Justice Mallimath, chairman of
India's Judicial Review Committee, Senator Specter asked about the
current state of the Indian criminal justice system and the measures

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taken to speed up the judicial process, a major aim of the
Committee. Justice Mallimath outlined some of the recommendations
made by his Committee and the government's effort to implement one
of the key recommendations, a witness protection program.


14. (U) For his visit Senator Specter was accompanied by Mrs. Joan
Specter, staffer Scott Boos, military escorts and Consulate General
Chennai staff. This message was not cleared by the delegation.
HOPPER