Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08KOLKATA21
2008-01-18 07:38:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Kolkata
Cable title:  

CPM SAYS THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE TO CAPITALISM

Tags:  PGOV PREL ECON EINV EIND EAGR IN 
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RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 KOLKATA 000021 

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SENSITIVE
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E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON EINV EIND EAGR IN
SUBJECT: CPM SAYS THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE TO CAPITALISM

REF: 2007 KOLKATA 68, 2007 KOLKATA 372

KOLKATA 00000021 001.2 OF 003


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 KOLKATA 000021

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SENSITIVE
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E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON EINV EIND EAGR IN
SUBJECT: CPM SAYS THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE TO CAPITALISM

REF: 2007 KOLKATA 68, 2007 KOLKATA 372

KOLKATA 00000021 001.2 OF 003



1. (SBU) Summary: In a series of recent statements, senior
Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM) leaders appeared to
endorse, or grudgingly accept, capitalism as a means for
economic development and industrialization. Although they
qualified their views as "the only way forward" given the
"neo-liberal policies" of the GOI, their seeming acceptance of
the capitalist model is a shift that puts the CPM somewhat at
odds with its far-Left allies. Also notable was the general
absence of concurrent anti-US rhetoric, which usually
accompanies or follows statements that stray from the typical
Marxist line. With almost every political party in India
calling for greater economic development in some form or
another, the CPM now has the task of convincing its loyalists
and friends that the party still stands for something unique.
This was easy to do at the state-level. Its recent aspirations
to a more prominent role in national (and international)
politics may tilt it a bit more toward the mainstream. The fact
that party leaders are debating their decades-long dogma with
one another and with their allies is encouraging. The CPM can
focus now, particularly in West Bengal, on development and
getting back on track after the disaster of Nandigram.
Simultaneously, they will be looking to forge alliances with
other regional parties and players to form a bloc capable of
challenging Congress and the BJP as a third alternative at the
Center. End Summary.

--------------
Capital Gains
--------------


2. (U) On January 3 during a CPM program celebrating the 41st
anniversary of the CPM's newspaper, West Bengal Chief Minister
Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee told the audience that capitalism was
the only way to industrialize West Bengal, although socialism
could have been a better alternative. He explained that,
"reality has forced us to accept capitalism as the only way to

get funds for industries." Bhattacharjee bluntly noted that it
was "simply impossible" for the state to mobilize funds for
industries and it had to depend on capitalism if the economy was
to make progress.


3. (U) Admitting that his government had no model before it to
emulate and that it had to pave its own way forward,
Bhattacharjee asked his supporters to understand the CPM's
position in the state in relation to the "bourgeois setup" at
the Center. He also reiterated his theme of greater industrial
development while consolidating the successes achieved in the
agricultural sector and focusing on the improvement of
economically weaker sectors of society. The Chief Minister
acknowledged the need for determining alternative rehabilitation
packages for people whose lands are being acquired for new
industry and infrastructure.


4. (U) A day later, CPM veteran Jyoti Basu endorsed
Bhattacharjee's stance, saying that socialism was not achievable
while working within the capitalist system and that private
capital had to be used while social welfare programs by the
state government would continue. Basu elaborated that socialism
was the CPM's political agenda -- it is mentioned in the party
document -- but that capitalism would continue to be the
"compulsion for the future."

--------------
Pro-People Capitalism
--------------


5. (U) On the eve of the West Bengal CPM's January 13-17 state
conference in Kolkata, Left Front Chairman and CPM State
Secretary Biman Bose told Poloff that the media has consistently

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campaigned against the CPM stance on industrialization in West
Bengal. Bose also blamed the media for fueling a "capitalism
vs. socialism" debate unnecessarily. He said the CPM does not
head a sovereign government and cannot formulate policies
opposing those of the GOI, implying that the CPM had no choice
but to operate with a capitalist model in India. Bose
recognized the "fact" of economic liberalization that began in
1991 and claimed the CPM had been successful in creating a
"neo-rich" population in parts of rural W. Bengal because of the
party's agricultural policies. This group's purchasing power
had now increased, he noted, and like Bhattacharjee, he saw
development of agro-based industry as the logical next step
forward.


KOLKATA 00000021 002.2 OF 003


--------------
Karat and Stick in National Politics
--------------


6. (U) On January 7, CPM General Secretary Prakash Karat
reaffirmed working within the "capitalist system" to undertake
industrialization, supporting Bhattacharjee and Basu's comments
but not going as far. Karat indicated that in situations where
the Central Government imposes "neo-liberal policies," Left
State governments have to pursue industrialization and economic
development in a manner that protects the interests of the
workers and the poorer sections.


7. (U) When challenged by his Left Front partners, Karat
responded by asking them why they chose to work within the
capitalist system all these years. Karat said that in a
situation where the Center imposes neo-liberal policies, the
Left governments have to undertake industrialization and
economic development in a manner that protects the interests of
the workers and the poorer sections. Karat dismissed talk of a
retreat from socialism, saying that only those ignorant of the
CPM's program could talk of the party saying "goodbye" to
socialism and "welcome" to capitalism.


8. (U) Importantly, Karat called for unity among the Left
parties and for a "third alternative" at the Center sans the
Congress and the BJP. Such a stance continues the CPM's push to
distance itself from the Congress Party ahead of the elections
and yet maintain its national relevance. The theoretical
justification the CPM offers for this opportunism is that it
wants to set up a "people's democracy" as a step towards the
eventual goal of a socialist India. Since that this can't be
done by the three Left state governments alone, a third
alternative that is a national political force would be the
means for achieving this "people's democracy."

--------------
Rally for Unity
--------------


9. (U) At the January 13 CPM rally in Kolkata, U.S. bashing was
conspicuous by its absence, although at the end of the
conference, the CPM adopted a statement that criticized the UPA
government for becoming a "junior partner" of the U.S. by
entering into a strategic alliance and cooperating in Indo-US
joint military exercises. Senior CPM leaders addressed a large
gathering of grass-roots CPM workers in downtown Kolkata, many
of whom arrived in (and on top of) buses from rural West Bengal.
Karat made his "third alternative" pitch and emphasized that
the CPM would continue to oppose foreign investment in the
banking, insurance, agriculture and retail sectors. Chief
Minister Bhattacharjee said that West Bengal could not develop
on agriculture alone and that farmers would be recompensated and
rehabilitated if their land was acquired for industry. Jyoti
Basu admitted that it was not possible to achieve socialism
being in power in only three states, and that the party's
ultimate goal was to sit in New Delhi. All harped on Left Front
unity instead of attacking "imperialist forces" - a usual
practice at such gatherings.


10. (U) Reflecting the striking shift toward acceptance of
capitalist approaches to economic growth, the CPM invited
Deloitte Touche Toumatsu India's Managing Director Roopen Roy to
speak at a January 14 discussion on industrialization. The
following day, Roy told ConGen that he lectured the senior state
CPM leadership and thousands of supporters about the need for
greater economic reforms and that he encouraged policies for
fostering private sector investment. Roy also highlighted the
benefits of civil nuclear power for West Bengal and India.

--------------
David versus Goliath
--------------


11. (U) The CPM's partners in the Left Front, however, have not
been swayed by the rhetoric. During recent Left Front meetings,
they maintained that they would not toe the line of unabashed
capitalism advocated by Bhattacharjee. Bhattacharjee's
industrial roadmap for West Bengal has come under fire from the
CPM's allies in the ruling Left Front - particularly the Forward
Bloc and the Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP). RSP Central
Committee member Manoj Bhattacharjee said that the CPM was
mimicking the language of PM Singh and adopting a political
position that betrayed the ideals of the Left Front. RSP leader

KOLKATA 00000021 003.2 OF 003


and state Minister Kshiti Goswami said it was becoming difficult
for the Left Front to stay together as the ideological
differences were becoming fundamental ones. Goswami said it was
time to think of an alternative Left Front.


12. (SBU) Comment: Though the communist symbolism remains
strong -- announcements for the state conference in Kolkata
showed the traditional hammer and sickle joined by an industrial
wheel -- the CPM appears to be finally coming to grips with the
realization, albeit reluctantly, that its policies and
prescriptions of state-control and central planning may after
all be outdated and irrelevant for contemporary India. The fact
that party leaders are debating their decades-long dogma with
one another and with their allies is encouraging. At some point
it will fully sink in to the CPM leaders and their cadre that
the Soviet and the Chinese communists have moved on, leaving the
Indian communists rooted in their 1917 view of the world.


13. (SBU) Comment Continued: On the more practical side, with
BJP's thumping wins over the Congress Party in the Gujarat and
Himachal Pradesh elections, the CPM does not foresee snap
Parliamentary elections in the near future. It can focus now,
particularly in West Bengal, on development and getting West
Bengal back on track after the disaster of Nandigram. To
accomplish this, they will have to deliver on promised economic
development for their constituents, get their Left Front
partners in line behind them on ideology, and find a message
that differentiates them from the old guard leftists in the
Congress Party. This is no easy task, and the question is
whether there remains sufficient popular support for Marxists
who begin to sound more and more like Social Democrats rather
than revolutionaries for the proletariat.


14. (SBU) Comment Continued: Another challenge for the CPM is
at the national level: how it will continue to be the player it
has been in New Delhi since the UPA government came to power.
After finding that the Left Front has the muscle to put up
roadblocks to the U.S.-India nuclear deal, CPM leaders like
Karat will be looking to forge alliances with other regional
parties and players to form a bloc capable of challenging
Congress and the BJP as a third alternative at the Center. This
is a tall order, however, because many of the other parties the
CPM is flirting with for the third alternative are mostly
one-state regional players. For most of them, opportunism
always trumps ideology and they would align themselves with
whichever party - the Congress, the BJP or the Left - gives them
the best deal.


15. (U) This cable was coordinated with Embassy Delhi.
JARDINE