Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 24 24: The Weight Of Nations (3) from India 1947 : The Architect Of Superpower, a Action novel by DattebayoDude.

The New York Tis carried a detailed report from its Delhi correspondent on April 21st: "INDIA'S PARTITION QUESTION: NEW PROPOSAL COULD RESHAPE SOUTH ASIAN BALANCE OF POWER."

The article was remarkable for its analytical depth — and for certain perspectives that Vikram recognized as having been subtly seeded through channels he'd asked Kao to establish with sympathetic contacts at the Arican Embassy.

The correspondent wrote: "A united Bengal within India would create a significantly stronger Indian state — one with greater population, resources, and strategic depth than a fully partitioned alternative."

"Arican strategists are watching closely, aware that a stronger India could serve as a more effective counterweight to Soviet expansion in Asia."

The State Departnt's internal reaction was more nuanced.

A classified cable from Ambassador Henry Grady to Secretary of State George Marshall — which Kao obtained through his growing network of contacts in Delhi's diplomatic community — was revealing:

"The Bengal proposal, if successful, would produce a larger and more strategically significant India.

This aligns with US interests in creating democratic counterweights to Soviet influence in Asia.

However, a stronger India may also be a more assertive India — less anable to Arican guidance and more inclined to pursue an independent foreign policy.

The Pakistan alternative, while ssier, produces two smaller states that are individually more dependent on external patronage.

Recomnd careful monitoring and calibrated support for the proposal, contingent on India's alignnt with Western strategic objectives."

Vikram read the intercepted cable with a mix of satisfaction and cold anger. They want a strong India — but not too strong.

Not strong enough to be truly independent.

Not strong enough to say no to Washington. That's the Arican ga, and it won't change for eighty years.

But this ti, India will be strong enough. And when we are, we'll deal with Arica from a position of equality, not dependence.

Moscow

The Soviet reaction was characteristically opaque on the surface but deeply calculated underneath.

Pravda carried a brief ntion of the Bengal proposal on page four, framing it as evidence of "continuing British imperialist manipulation of the Indian independence process" — a reflexive ideological response that told Vikram little about actual Soviet strategic thinking.

More revealing was the behavior of Pyotr Volkov, the NKVD officer operating under diplomatic cover at the Soviet trade mission.

According to Kao's surveillance, Volkov had been unusually active since the Bengal news broke — eting with Indian Communist Party contacts, sending increased cable traffic to Moscow, and making discreet inquiries about Vikram Rathore through leftist academic circles in Delhi.

He's heard my na, Vikram thought. The Soviets are curious about who's behind the Bengal proposal.

That's both a risk and an opportunity.

The opportunity was the Volkov operation that Kao had proposed — turning the Soviet officer into an unwitting RAW asset.

The risk was that Soviet attention, like British attention, could expose the organization before it was strong enough to withstand exposure.

Multiple hunters circling the sa prey, Vikram thought. The British. The Soviets.

And sowhere in the background, Jinnah's people, trying to understand who is systematically dismantling their dream of Pakistan.

The Muslim World. Reports from Kao's limited but growing network of contacts in the Middle East indicated that the Bengal proposal had attracted attention in Cairo, Baghdad, and Ankara.

The Arab League, still in its infancy, had issued a statent expressing "concern over any attempt to divide the Muslim community of the Indian subcontinent" — a vaguely worded declaration that Vikram interpreted as support for Jinnah's position without explicitly condemning the Bengal proposal.

More interesting was the reaction from Turkey. The Turkish governnt, under President İnönü, had been following Indian developnts closely — Turkey's own experience of post-imperial nation-building made it a natural observer of India's transition.

The Turkish Ambassador in Delhi had reportedly expressed private interest in the Bengal model as a potential frawork for managing minority rights — a perspective that Vikram noted for future diplomatic use.

Suhrawardy, forced into the public eye by the press leak, responded with characteristic political agility.

On April 22nd, he published an open letter in the Amrita Bazar Patrika — one of Bengal's most respected newspapers.

The letter, written in elegant Bengali prose that was subsequently translated into English and Urdu for wider distribution, stopped short of formally endorsing the Indian frawork but laid out, with unmistakable clarity, the case for Bengal's unity:

"Bengal is not rely a geographical expression or an administrative convenience. Bengal is a civilization — a civilization of poets and scholars, of farrs and rchants, of Hindus and Muslims who have lived together for centuries in a shared embrace of this sacred land.

We share a language that is the vessel of our collective soul. We share a literature that speaks to the deepest aspirations of our people.

We share a love of this river-crossed, monsoon-blessed, eternally fertile earth that transcends the artificial divisions imposed upon us by those who do not understand us.

I call upon all Bengalis — Hindu and Muslim alike — to consider carefully whether our future is best served by unity or by division.

Whether our children will prosper more as citizens of a strong, united Bengal within a democratic India, or as inhabitants of a divided land, torn from their brothers and sisters by a line drawn on a map by n who have never walked our fields or sung our songs."

The letter was a political earthquake.

It didn't commit Suhrawardy to anything specific — no formal endorsent, no explicit break with the Muslim League, no binding agreent.

But its tone was unmistakable. The imagery, the emotion, the appeal to Bengali identity over religious identity — all of it pointed in one direction. Suhrawardy was moving toward India.

The Bengali Muslim street responded with a surge of energy that surprised even Vikram.

Mass etings in Dhaka, Chittagong, and Sylhet — organized by Hashim's networks within the Bengal Muslim League — passed resolutions calling for "Bengali self-determination" and "unity of the Bengali nation."

Students at Dhaka University demonstrated in favor of a united Bengal, carrying banners that read "BENGAL IS ONE" in both Bengali and English.

In Calcutta, the response was equally dramatic.

Hindu and Muslim community leaders held joint press conferences — sothing almost unthinkable in the poisoned atmosphere that had followed the Great Calcutta Killings.

The Statesman reported on a remarkable scene at a public eting in College Street: "For the first ti in recent mory, Hindu and Muslim Bengalis stood together on the sa platform, speaking the sa language — literally and figuratively — about a shared future."

Vikram read these reports with fierce, barely contained satisfaction. The Bengal piece is falling into place.

Suhrawardy is committing publicly. Hashim is working behind the scenes. The Bengali street is moving.

The international community is watching with growing interest.

But we're not there yet. Suhrawardy hasn't formally signed anything. Jinnah's faction is fighting back. Blackwood is hunting us. And Kashmir is still unsecured.

On April 23rd — the day before Vikram's scheduled eting with Sarojini Naidu — two developnts arrived within hours of each other, one bringing vindication and the other bringing alarm.

The vindication ca from an unexpected quarter. Edwina Mountbatten had read Vikram's paper — "The Forgotten Half: Won's Economic Participation as the Foundation of National Developnt" — and had been sufficiently impressed to discuss it at length with her husband.

According to Kao's source in the Viceregal household, Edwina had told Mountbatten: "This young man Rathore sees India's future more clearly than anyone I've t here. His economic ideas are twenty years ahead of current thinking. Jawaharlal should et him."

Mountbatten, ever attentive to his wife's opinions — and shrewd enough to recognize that Edwina's judgnt of people was often better than his own — had apparently agreed.

Through back channels, he had suggested to Nehru that "a young Congress economic thinker nad Rathore" might be worth consulting on developnt policy.

The Edwina channel is working, Vikram thought. She's impressed. She's influencing Mountbatten.

And Mountbatten is influencing Nehru. The indirect approach is paying off faster than the direct Naidu route.

The alarm ca from Kao's evening intelligence report, delivered via their coded system.

BLACKWOOD ACTIVE. ARRIVED DELHI APRIL 21. ESTABLISHED BASE AT BRITISH HIGH COMMISSION. HAS REQUESTED ACCESS TO ALL IB FILES ON CONGRESS LEADERSHIP — SPECIFICALLY PATEL'S RECENT ACTIVITIES AND ASSOCIATES. HAS ASKED ABOUT "UNUSUAL INTELLIGENCE PATTERNS" IN INDIAN POLITICAL OPERATIONS. ASSESSNT: HE IS LOOKING FOR ORGANIZED INTELLIGENCE CAPABILITY. HE IS LOOKING FOR US.

Below this, Kao had added a personal note:

BLACKWOOD IS GOOD. BETTER THAN CRAWFORD BY AN ORDER OF MAGNITUDE. RECOMND WE PREPARE EXPOSURE MANAGENT PROTOCOLS IMDIATELY. THE QUESTION IS NO LONGER WHETHER HE FINDS SOTHING — IT'S WHAT HE FINDS AND HOW WE CONTROL THE NARRATIVE WHEN HE DOES.

Vikram sat in his small room in Chandni Chowk, reading the ssage by lamplight, and felt the familiar cold weight of strategic reality settling on his shoulders.

Multiple fronts. Multiple threats. Multiple opportunities. All converging simultaneously, demanding his attention, his judgnt, his ability to hold contradictory priorities in his mind and act on all of them without letting any single one consu him.

Bengal — almost won. Kashmir — not yet begun. Nehru — access opening. RAW — being hunted. Blackwood — closing in. Punjab — about to bleed. International opinion — shifting in our favor. Jinnah — dying but dangerous.

He pulled out his notebook and wrote a single line at the top of a fresh page:

The next thirty days will determine everything.

Then he began preparing for tomorrow's eting with Sarojini Naidu — the eting that would, if everything went according to plan, open the door to Jawaharlal Nehru.

The last piece of the political puzzle. The most brilliant, most frustrating, most consequential leader India would ever produce.

Tomorrow I charm a poetess, Vikram thought, setting down his pen. Tonight I plan for war.

And in between, I try to save four hundred million people from the consequences of their own leaders' worst instincts.

He blew out the lamp and lay on his cot, listening to the sounds of Old Delhi settling into sleep around him. The call of a night watchman.

The distant bark of a dog. The faint, haunting notes of a sitar being played sowhere in the labyrinth of lanes and courtyards.

One nation, he thought. One people. One chance.

Tomorrow, the ga continued.

To be continued..

Please add it to collections and vote your power stones

Add it to collections

Vote your power stones

Comnt your thoughts for the engagent

[END OF CHAPTER 24]

You are reading India 1947 : The Architect Of Superpower Chapter 24 24: The Weight Of Nations (3) on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

MILF Paradise System cover
Trending now

MILF Paradise System

BeingOtaku ·Fantasy

[Warning:MatureContentR-18]LotsofMelons.OnlyNTRNetori-NoNetorare.Alexwasnineteen,acollegestudent,andapparentlytheuniversedecidedtocursehim…withasys...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.