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Yes I'm also from Bengal, and yes I'm also under surveillance by the very Criminal British State, and their dogs.
I should add that I have not been involved in any politics, or expressed political ambitions.
The political elite in India are Macaulay Brown Sahibs who were chosen by the British to rule the country after they left.
That is why at the elite level South Asia is Still too close to the Criminal Paedophile Jewish run Satanic UK state.
That is why South Asia is still shamelessly participating members of the British Commonwealth.
Why there is still mass poverty in South Asia, after 67 years of 'independence'.
Why the rich elite send most of their money to the West.
Why Pakistan is a failed state.....which is a nuisance to one and all.
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What did Jawaharlal Nehru fear when he continued IB snooping?
By MJ Akbar at the Times of India blog
Subhash
Chandra Bose and Jawaharlal Nehru were too similar to cooperate beyond a
point, for there was only one place at the top and Gandhi had reserved
it for Nehru.
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Both came from privileged families. Both
harvested an excellent education into intellectually stimulating public
discourse and books: While Nehru was descriptive, perceptive and
sometimes lyrical, Bose was analytical and strategic. Both could have
been glamorous pillars of the Raj but chose a lifetime of sacrifice and
struggle in the cause of freedom. Both leaned to the Left without
toppling into communism. Both were heroes, whose private lives were also
a testimony to their extraordinary charisma. Both were nationalists as
well as internationalists.
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It is not widely known that when Bose
chose to enter the World War-II as an ally of the Axis powers, he told
Japan that he had no desire to replace the British empire with a
Japanese one. Both were fiercely independent.
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Gandhi took an early, and still
unexplained, dislike to Bose. Perhaps the Mahatma saw in Bose the one
national hero who could interfere with his plans for Nehru. When Bose
once welcomed Gandhi in Bengal with a parade by volunteers, Gandhi
mocked Bose with uncharacteristic venom.
(Bose favored discipline, militarism, uniforms and aggression to a certain extent against the Raj---this obviously went against what Gandhi stood for)
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Gandhi handed over leadership of the mass
campaign for the crucial 1937 general elections to Nehru. But within a
year Bose proved that he was not only more popular than Nehru but even
Gandhi in the Congress when he was elected party president at Haripura
in 1938, against Gandhi’s expressed wish. He could not of course
function without Gandhi’s cooperation; the rift was complete. Bose
started his own party.
The conventional view was that Bose had
marginalised himself out of national space by leaving Gandhi, Congress
and then the country by 1941. Two events in 1946 proved that this view
was utterly wrong.
The revolt in the Indian Navy in February was
evidence that Bose’s influence in the armed forces was beyond the
control of the British.
And the trial of Bose INA veterans at the Red
Fort for treason led to such mass rage that British rule was no longer
tenable. India’s young had spoken. And they had spoken in the voice of
Bose.
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British fear of Bose and his family was
well-founded. But what did Nehru fear when he continued the Intelligence
Bureau surveillance for as long as he was Prime Minister? Bose death in
an air crash was always a mystery trapped in fog. What swirls the most
in any mist? Rumour. But rumour apart there was uncertainty at the
highest levels about whether Bose had actually died or not. One way to
establish facts would be to check whether Bose kept any form of contact
with Calcutta and his family. So letters were intercepted, and watch
kept on visitors.
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But surely the more substantive reason was
political. Nehru knew, better than anyone else, that Bose was the only
national leader who could challenge Congress dominance over India and
Nehru’s dominance over Congress. I certainly believe that if Bose had
been on the political scene, Congress would have been badly dented in
the 1957 general elections and certainly defeated in 1962. Bose was also
the only leader who could have patched together a non-Congress
coalition. What happened in 1977 could so easily have occurred in 1962.
It is interesting to speculate on what impact this might have had on
China’s war plans against India, or for that matter Pakistan’s
aggression in 1965.
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There are still 87 files about Bose that
the Government of India will not disclose. The official excuse is that
this will have an adverse impact on India’s relations with one or more
foreign countries. How? Why? If Bose actually died in the air crash why
would there be any reason for any adverse impact with any third nation?
Does this substantiate a rumour that Bose survived the crash, and
managed to reach an unnamed country where he was incarcerated for the
rest of his life? Was this imprisonment behind some curtain that was
made of such iron that news simply could not filter through? Did Nehru
know about this and do nothing for fear of consequences back home? In
the absences of answers we can only raise questions.
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Let me leave you with a thought. The head
of IB during Nehru’s prime ministership, and indeed beyond, was BN
Mullik. All IB chiefs have limited terms. Mullik was never removed from
his chair. Why? Did Mullik know something that gave him what can only be
described as blackmail powers over the Congress government? Was he
India’s version of FBI chief J Edgar Hoover? Once again, we do not know.
But we can safely assume that there is some fire smouldering within
this smoke, and that if that fire touches the oxygen of revelation,
there will be conflagration.