Regime Change in India - Now or never!
The machinations of regime change operations are gearing up for a big assault on India. This is a make-or-break moment for regime change. Lets understand why.
The ecosystem is hard at work. The goal is regime change. The window of opportunity is closing slowly. It has to be now or never. Let us understand this in more detail.
The players in the ecosystem.
The ecosystem comprises various actors guided by their own self-interest but united in their anti-India or break-India EFFECT.
Some of these actors are people who want to enrich themselves. Some derive direct financial benefits like kickbacks etc. Others are looking for government contracts, sponsorships etc.
Other actors crave respect and acknowledgement from foreign institutions like universities and international institutes like IMF, world bank, UN etc.
Some other actors are furthering their religious agenda. Some of them harbour wet dreams of ghazwa-e-hind. Others want to harvest a billion souls.
One group of actors is militarily anti-India. This includes spies, and foreign actors, actively plotting according to their military strategy. It includes Chinese and Pakistani spies and other such actors.
How do these actors come together to form an anti-India ecosystem?
The alignment of objectives and tactics between the actors described above is quite incidental. Each acting in his own interest ends up working together to the detriment of the country.
Such coordination also happens in the economic sphere. Adam Smith called it the invisible hand that aids in coordination between various economic actors.
A similar invisible hand operates in the political sphere coordinating the various anti-India and break-India actors. Just like in the economic sphere, the political sphere too is governed by the flow of money. This invisible hand creates networks, institutions and organisations that have overlapping financial interests.
Modi tightened the screws on the ecosystem.
Starting from Modi’s first term in 2014, various break-India actors have found their streams drying up.
The press establishment found itself away from all the doles and insider information.
The nexus between top-level bureaucrats and businessmen was broken. The kickback culture allowed certain businessmen to access government finance and government assets cheaply.
The channels of corruption that financed the political middlemen through the corruption of public distribution and public procurement also dried up through the use of Aadhar and e-auction platforms.
Modi’s first term also raided the funds squirrelled away by the break-India forces from decades of abuse of their position of advantage through demonetisation.
The ecosystem believed that demonetisation would definitely turn the tide in their favour. It appeared to them that Modi’s first term would not last long. But to their chagrin, Modi won an even bigger mandate in 2019.
The ecosystem found its invisible hand increasingly constrained by the lack of funds. The pressure was on Congress and the lynchpin of the ecosystem to allay the actors, first to stem this crackdown on cashflows and second, to reverse these losses. The leaders promised compensation if the ecosystem managed to wrest power - by hook or crook.
The ecosystem fights back!
The ecosystem believed the best way to oust Modi was to create street riots and mayhem. Low on finances, it could not create large-scale riots and disruptions. It had to choose its battle.
The first battle was CAA and NRC. It was the first salvo at the very start of Modi’s second term. All the regular channels and tactics were used. The theme of this protest was religious discord.
The farm bills were another Modi attack on the financing of rural politics. Farm bills eliminated the corruption and rents that were burdens on the farmers. It also would have dried up the funds of the rural politicians. The ecosystem fought back this time. They created well-funded protests and a reasonable environment for launching regime-change / colour-revolution types of operations.
Unfortunately for the ecosystem and fortunately for India, these two events were not successful in creating a mass movement. It was a combination of Modi’s development reaching the last mile AND the law and order compulsions of the COVID pandemic that got Modi out of this trap.
For the ecosystem, a change of strategy was necessary as the resources were drying up fast. Promises and pipe dreams can sustain the invisible hands only for so long and no more. For one final push, however, the ecosystem needed money!
Advertising for international regime-change financiers.
Regime change experts like Vicky Nuland collaborated with Soros and other financiers paraded out in India and challenged the local ecosystem leaders to prove their mettle. Funding could be made available if one could prove one's ability to create mass demonstrations.
Rahul Gandhi and Arvind Kejriwal are the leading contenders for backing from international ecosystem financiers. They are creating various events to advertise their credentials.
Bharat-Jodo was Rahul Gandhi’s demonstration to the financiers that if they were to back him, they would be backing the winning candidate. The final pitch presentation was in the West. Trusted media and lobbyists vetted him during his visit to Europe.
Kejriwal is demonstrating his credentials. His pitch is that he can create mass riots and mayhem to create the right atmosphere for regime change. He is also advertising his credentials to access anti-India micro-financing networks developed for khalistani separatism and others developed by non-US entities.
Yet, the financiers do not want to spread their resources too thin. They also have to fund US elections, which will be a money pit considering the divisions within the parties - both the Democrats and Republicans. For India, they want just one Modi challenger to throw their weight behind. Here again, luck has favoured India.
It is Now or Never!
With accumulated resources already exhausted. Foreign funds and international toolkits are tapped. They also demand high returns on investments. This is the final stand by the ecosystem and they will fight hard. It is an existential battle for them.
India must remain ready. I have detailed possible lines of attack in my previous post.
It is time for India to hold strong. This will get worse before it gets better.