THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary- February 24, 2018 - Topic 1
Virtue
of reticence
Army chief General Bipin Rawat’s comments about
an “inversion in demographics” and a “planned migration” from Bangladesh into
the Northeast are unusual by any standards. India’s service chiefs have a long
and healthy tradition of keeping away from political subjects in their public
comments.
But at a seminar in Delhi this week, General Rawat strayed into
political commentary when he talked about issues of religious identity,
demographics, and India’s relations with its neighbours. He said that migration
from Bangladesh into India is driven by two factors. The first is the acute
pressure on land in Bangladesh. “The other issue,” he said, “is planned
immigration which is taking place because of our western neighbour… It is the
proxy dimension of warfare.” This strategy, he went on, is supported by “our
northern neighbour”. The references were clearly to Pakistan and China. Such
departures from a tradition of being reticent, if not totally silent, are rare.
But it is exactly this self-restraint that has served both Indian democracy and
the military well. India’s success in keeping the Army out of politics,
compared to most other countries that gained independence from colonial rule in
the mid-20th century, has in fact been the subject of scholarly research.
In turn, the neat separation has allowed the Army
to maintain its professionalism and retain public trust even as it is
frequently called upon to assist the administration in times of communal strife
and subregional insurgencies. This arrangement has also inhibited governments
from bidding the Army to do their politically expedient tasks. It is a balance
that must hold, and this is why General Rawat’s possibly off-the-cuff
observations on foreign policy and domestic politics were unfortunate. There is a risk of hostile
rejoinders from India’s regional rivals. It also risks reactions from home,
which have already come in the form of a sharp response from the All India
United Democratic Front. Its chief Maulana Badruddin Ajmal, who was reacting to
General Rawat’s comment that the AIUDF in Assam was growing at a faster clip
than the Bharatiya Janata Party did, charged him with straying from his
constitutional remit. The head of another political party tweeted that it is
not the job of the Army to comment on political matters. This is not the first
time that General Rawat’s comments have evoked a response from political
quarters. Last month, the Jammu and Kashmir education minister reacted when
General Rawat criticised government schools in the State for mounting two maps,
“one of India and the other of J&K”. Even if such remarks were made in good
faith, the point is that they can result in needless controversies that do
nothing to promote the Army’s strong and fully deserving image of an
institution that is above politics.
Vocabulary
Inversion: the action of inverting
something or the state of being inverted.
Example: The inversion of the normal
domestic arrangement
Synonyms: everting, anastrophe, upending
Migration: movement from one part of
something to another.
Example: There is virtually no cell
migration in plants
Tradition: the transmission of customs
or beliefs from generation to generation, or the fact of being passed on in
this way.
Example: Every shade of color is fixed by
tradition and governed by religious laws
Synonyms: historical
convention, unwritten law, mores, oral history
Unusual: not habitually or commonly
occurring or done.
Example: The government has taken the
unusual step of calling home its ambassador
Synonyms: strange
Antonyms: usual, common, wonted, chronic
Acute: having or showing a
perceptive understanding or insight: shrewd.
Example: An acute awareness of changing
fashions
Synonyms: astute, shrewd, sharp, sharp-witted, razor-sharp
Antonyms: dull, noncrucial, pointless, degenerative, unperceptive
Reticent: not revealing one's thoughts
or feelings readily.
Example: She was extremely reticent about
her personal affairs
Synonyms: reserved, withdrawn, introverted, inhibited, diffident, shy
Antonyms: self-assertive, assertive, self-asserting, voluble
Strife: angry or bitter disagreement
over fundamental issues; conflict.
Example: Strife within the community
Synonyms: conflict, friction, discord, disagreement, dissension
Antonyms: armistice, concord, peace, suspension
of hostilities
Expedient: convenient and practical,
although possibly improper or immoral.
Example: Either side could break the
agreement if it were expedient to do so
Synonyms: convenient, advantageous, in
one's own interests
Antonyms: impolitic, inadvisable, inexpedient
Stray: move away aimlessly from a
group or from the right course or place.
Example: I strayed a few blocks in the
wrong direction
Synonyms: wander off, go
astray, get separated, get lost; digress
Antonyms: continual, found
Controversy: disagreement, typically when
prolonged, public, and heated.
Example: He sometimes caused controversy
because of his forceful views
Synonyms: disagreement, dispute, argument, debate, dissension
Deserve: worthy of being treated in a
particular way, typically of being given assistance.
Example: The deserving poor
Synonyms: worthy, meritorious, commendable, praiseworthy, admirable
