HomeNewsWorldRussia Ukraine conflict: The case for atmanirbharta

Russia Ukraine conflict: The case for atmanirbharta

The Ukraine war will change the world in fundamental ways. For a country like India, it becomes imperative now to develop its own systems and infrastructures that are immune to international bullying.

March 06, 2022 / 08:26 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
The Russia Ukraine conflict has exposed that the world is not flat, and there is no global village. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
The Russia Ukraine conflict has exposed that the world is not flat, and there is no global village. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

The war in Ukraine marks the end of “globalization” as we know it. I put that word within quote marks because it’s not just another English word, like the ones we try to crack every day on Wordle. It is a term that was invented with a specific meaning and intent and has been vigorously promoted for the last 30 years.

No sane person can feel anything but horror for the plight of Ukrainians as Russia pounds the country into submission. But we should also try to figure out the bigger picture and the lessons we should learn from what has been going on. Especially those of us who do not live in North America or the European Union—the “West”.

Story continues below Advertisement

It is suddenly clear (if anyone had any doubts about it) that for all the talk of a “global community”, racism never died. The world has seen many wars over the last two decades. In fact, right now, even as you read this, Yemen is being bombed into the Stone Age (and this has been going on for the last seven years), and Syrian families are risking their lives trying to escape the civil war, now into its 11th year. Very few even know; no one really cares; journalists and commentators have lost interest. And the Ukraine war has suddenly brought every Western media establishment bias out into the open.

These are some of the comments correspondents made on leading Western news channels: