Actually, Nehru was establishing bases in disputed territory along the Chinese border. The Chinese appear to have legitimately believed he was planning a move against them - based in no small part on India's invasion of the Portuguese colonies in India shortly prior to this - and decided to pre-empt. This had nothing whatsoever to do with any Chinese pretensions to being a "non white power [sic]" and everything to do with the long-standing Chinese concerns about territorial integrity, combined with Nehru's own poor diplomacy.Good post - Ace.
Mao Tse Tung had the Chinese fight and win a war with India over some worthless glaciers merely to demonstrate that it was China not India that was the non white power in Asia.
The Chinese won, but it humiliated the Indian leadership which caused them to try to switch towards both the USA and the USSR.
This left Pakistan to align with China.
However for India trying to cultivate both the USA and the USSR at the same time was problematic.
Actually, Nehru was establishing bases in disputed territory along the Chinese border. The Chinese appear to have legitimately believed he was planning a move against them - based in no small part on India's invasion of the Portuguese colonies in India shortly prior to this - and decided to pre-empt. This had nothing whatsoever to do with any Chinese pretensions to being a "non white power [sic]" and everything to do with the long-standing Chinese concerns about territorial integrity, combined with Nehru's own poor diplomacy.
Since the Sino-Soviet Rift was an ongoing process during this period, India, wisely, sought support from China's primary enemy, the USSR, which in turn led to China backing India's other rival, Pakistan. Since the US wanted Chinese backing against the USSR in the Cold War, it also backed Pakistan, though it was never on truly unfriendly terms with India.
It was hardly a coincidence that Gromyko signed Indo-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation in Delhi just weeks after Nixon revealed he'd been invited to China.Since the Sino-Soviet Rift was an ongoing process during this period, India, wisely, sought support from China's primary enemy, the USSR.
I agree with all of this. I'm not really ascribing much control over the situation to Nehru at all. He was in charge of India when the bases were established, and he certainly did nothing to curb them, even if he personally did not order their establishment. Of course, once the Chinese - predictably - attacked what they perceived as a threat to their interests, Nehru was forced to take a much more hands-on role.I think you ascribe more control over the situation to Nehru than he deserves. He really doesn't seem to have had much of a coherent strategy when it came to China beyond some grandiose ideas of a third power bloc.
The poor showing the Indian army made of itself in the war combined with the surprise Nehru himself felt at the whole affair and his desire to avoid a wider war in Asia (supposedly preventing the Indian air force from launching air strikes on Chinese supply lines, though I think the idea is suspiciously like a stab in the back legend produced by nationalist historians, it's extremely unlikely the Indian air force was capable of somehow severing Chinese supply lines which would require it to fly over the Himalayas while executing precision strikes, the Indian air force at the time still had mostly propeller driven planes, rather than jets and the airbases weren't really there in the region to operate in that capacity.)
I think indicate that establishing forward bases and things like that weren't really part of a grand plan on his part, it's possible the Army may have been acting to a certain extent on its own, it's worth noting that the military leadership was pretty heftily reshuffled and reformed following the war. Both him and Krishna Menon fancied themselves some kind of Metternich's on the international stage, when they were mediocre diplomats at best. Interesting biographies nonetheless.
Of course it was. But it was primarily fear of China that pushed India into the Soviet camp. It's neutralist ideals were effectively killed off for good by the US-China rapprochement.It was hardly a coincidence that Gromyko signed Indo-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation in Delhi just weeks after Nixon revealed he'd been invited to China.
The USSR was just as interested in India as an ally as vice versa.
"antisemitism in a European country prior to 1939"
I'm afraid that the scope is too limiting
I don't think you need to worry about that. Europe has a rich history of anti-Semitic material.
The Dreyfuss Affair was more a symptom of French anti-Semitism than its cause. Many of the proto-Fascists that Mussolini studied were French, as a matter of fact. She may want to dip into that well for information.True enough. Also, the question is worded more like "explain the alarming rise of antisemitism in one European country prior to 1939", I kind of feel like that might give her more leeway to look at the Dreyfus Affair itself which was (by and large) the reason in France.. I suppose she'll just have to ask her professor what is acceptable.
Official anti-Semitism was certainly waning, but anti-Semitic feelings among the general populace - particularly the middle class - seem to have actually been increasing at the time.I'd contest that anti-Semitic was on the rise compared to any previous point in history. Really it was at it's low point, the trend in Europe was toward greater civil rights and freedoms for the Jews. Across Europe the Jews had been emancipated or were in the process of being emancipated.
Russia, Poland, and the Ukraine are a different matter of course.
Official anti-Semitism was certainly waning, but anti-Semitic feelings among the general populace - particularly the middle class - seem to have actually been increasing at the time.
ace99 said:How would you go about measuring that? Lynchings, progroms, and targeted riots didn't tend to happen.
The Dreyfuss Affair was more a symptom of French anti-Semitism than its cause. Many of the proto-Fascists that Mussolini studied were French, as a matter of fact. She may want to dip into that well for information.
Action Francaise's rise is attributed to popular reaction against the defense of Dreyfus. I don't know about Mussolini's attitude toward religion, but I know that AF was vehemently Catholic and had no issue with depriving non-Catholics of rights.