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Now reading: Chapter 46 46: Aftershocks (2) from India 1947 : The Architect Of Superpower, a Action novel by DattebayoDude.

Washington reacted with the calculated ambiguity that would characterize Arican South Asia policy for the next eight decades.

The State Departnt issued a bland statent "noting" the accession and calling for "peaceful resolution of any disputes arising from the transition of power in British India." Behind the scenes, the reaction was more complex.

The classified cable traffic between the Delhi Embassy and the State Departnt — which RAW was now monitoring systematically through a combination of source intelligence and signals intercept — revealed a divided Arican establishnt.

The South Asia desk favored accepting the accession as a fait accompli and building a stronger relationship with what was clearly going to be a more powerful India.

The European desk worried about the precedent — if princely states could be absorbed through a combination of political pressure and military deploynt, what did that an for other post-colonial situations?

The Pentagon's assessnt was the most interesting.

A classified morandum from the Joint Chiefs' strategic planning division noted: "India's Kashmir operation demonstrates military planning and execution capabilities significantly above what was previously estimated.

The pre-positioning of forces, the coordinated political-military approach, and the speed of deploynt suggest a strategic competence that makes India a potentially significant factor in Asian security calculations."

They're impressed, Vikram thought. Warily impressed. They're recalculating India's strategic value — and its potential threat.

Moscow reacted with characteristic opacity on the surface and furious calculation underneath.

Pravda carried a brief report framing the accession as "an internal Indian matter" — a deliberately neutral position that told Vikram the Soviets were still deciding how to play the situation.

The Soviet calculation was complex: a stronger India could be a useful counterweight to Arican influence in Asia, but a too-strong India might resist Soviet influence as well.

Volkov, the NKVD officer in Delhi, had been frantically active since the Kashmir announcent — sending cables to Moscow, eting with Communist Party contacts, and attempting to assess the strategic implications through his network.

Kao's Volkov operation — the plan to turn the Soviet officer into an unwitting RAW asset — was proceeding on schedule, with the cutout Sengupta gradually building a social relationship with Volkov through academic circles.

China was the most interesting non-reaction. The Chinese Communists — still fighting their civil war against the Nationalists — had no official position on Kashmir.

But Vikram knew, with the certainty of hindsight, that Mao Zedong was watching. Kashmir's accession to India ant that Indian territory now bordered Chinese-claid territory in Aksai Chin and along the McMahon Line.

The strategic implications would beco apparent within a few years — when Mao consolidated power and turned his attention to Tibet.

That's the next front, Vikram thought. After Kashmir, after the economy, after independence — China.

The border that nobody is thinking about yet. The threat that will define India's strategic reality for the next century.

Vikram returned to Delhi on June 5th, leaving Kao in Kashmir to oversee the continuing military deploynt and intelligence operations.

The flight from Srinagar to Delhi — four hours in a rattling Dakota — gave him ti to think about the next phase of his grand strategy.

Bengal: secured. Kashmir: secured. The twin territorial crises that had crippled India in the original tiline had been resolved — imperfectly, but decisively — before independence had even arrived.

Now ca the harder challenges. The ones that couldn't be solved by political maneuvering or military deploynt.

The ones that required transforming the very foundations of Indian society and economy.

The economic debate with Nehru was reaching its critical phase. The three-month comparative study — Mahalanobis's planning model versus Vikram's hybrid model — was due in August.

Vikram had been working on his analysis in every spare mont, building the empirical case with the help of John Matthai and V.K.R.V. Rao.

But the Kashmir deploynt had consud most of his attention for the past two weeks, and the economic study had fallen behind schedule. He needed to catch up — fast.

He also needed to address several other priorities that had been simring on the back burner.

Patel's health. Dr. Rajeshwari Chatterjee had finally examined the Sardar during Vikram's absence in Kashmir.

Her preliminary report, conveyed through Kao's channels, was sobering: Patel showed signs of significant cardiovascular strain — elevated blood pressure, irregular heartbeat, and early indicators of the heart disease that, in the original tiline, would kill him in December 1950. Dr. Chatterjee had prescribed dietary changes, reduced stress, and dication — but Patel, characteristically, was ignoring most of her recomndations.

The princely states. Kashmir was the most dramatic case, but over 500 princely states needed to be integrated into the Indian Union before independence.

non was handling most of this through diplomatic channels, but several holdouts — Hyderabad, Junagadh, and a few smaller states — would require more forceful approaches. Vikram needed to prepare strategies for each.

The military. Indian forces in Kashmir were performing well, but the broader military establishnt was still organized along colonial lines — designed for imperial policing rather than national defense.

A fundantal restructuring was needed, and Vikram had ideas about how to do it that were several decades ahead of current military thinking.

Nuclear capability. Homi Bhabha, the brilliant physicist who would lead India's nuclear program, was already working at the Tata Institute of Fundantal Research in Bombay.

In the original tiline, India's nuclear program had proceeded slowly, producing its first nuclear test only in 1974 — twenty-seven years after independence.

Vikram intended to accelerate that tiline dramatically.

So many fronts, he thought, looking out the Dakota's window at the Indo-Gangetic plain stretching to the horizon.

So many battles. And only one of .

Delhi welcod him back with its usual combination of chaos and charm.

The city was buzzing with independence preparations — flags being sewn, speeches being drafted, ceremonies being planned.

The air was thick with anticipation and anxiety. In less than ten weeks, the British would leave and India would be on its own.

Vikram went directly to North Block, where non was waiting with a stack of files and a expression of barely contained urgency.

"Three things," non said before Vikram could even sit down.

"Go ahead."

"First: Nehru has read your Kashmir report. He's... complicated about it.

He's pleased that Kashmir is secured but troubled by the military deploynt — he thinks it was too aggressive, too unilateral, and sets a dangerous precedent for dealing with princely states."

"It sets a precedent for dealing with existential threats to national security. There's a difference."

"I know that. You know that. Nehru doesn't see it that way. He's concerned about India's international image — he doesn't want India to be perceived as a military aggressor."

"India is not an aggressor. India responded to a legal accession request—"

"I know the argunt, Rathore. I helped draft it. But Nehru's concerns are genuine, and you'll need to address them. He wants to et with you tomorrow."

"Fine. Second thing?"

"Hyderabad. The Nizam is making noises about independence. He's appointed a new governnt under Qasim Razvi and the Razakars — Islamic militants who are terrorizing the Hindu population. This is going to beco a crisis within months."

Vikram nodded. In the original tiline, Hyderabad had been integrated through Operation Polo — a military action in September 1948 that had been delayed far too long, allowing the Razakars to commit widespread atrocities.

He intended to accelerate that tiline as well.

"I'll prepare an assessnt. Hyderabad needs to be handled quickly — before the Razakars can build strength and before the Nizam can secure international support for independence."

"Third thing," non said, and his expression shifted. Sothing more personal. More concerned.

"What?"

"Patel's health. Dr. Chatterjee's full report arrived this morning. It's not good, Rathore."

non handed him a sealed dical file. Vikram opened it and read.

The report was thorough and alarming. Patel's cardiovascular system was under severe strain.

His blood pressure was dangerously elevated. His heart showed signs of enlargent — a condition called cardiogaly that indicated chronic overwork of the heart muscle.

Dr. Chatterjee noted "evidence of previous minor cardiac events — possibly undiagnosed heart attacks — that have weakened the myocardium."

Her conclusion was blunt: "Without significant lifestyle changes — reduced workload, improved diet, regular dication, and adequate rest — the patient is at high risk of a major cardiac event within two to three years. The prognosis without intervention is poor."

Two to three years, Vikram thought, his stomach clenching. In the original tiline, Patel died in December 1950 — three and a half years from now.

Dr. Chatterjee's assessnt is consistent. Without intervention, we lose him on schedule.

But with intervention...

"non sahab, I need to discuss this with Patel directly.

He needs to take Dr. Chatterjee's recomndations seriously — not as dical advice but as a matter of national security."

"Good luck with that. The man considers rest a form of treason."

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