Fundamentalist Christian churches and remote-controlled NGOs are  the new WMDs – workers of mass disruption who are working in sync with their  Western backers to weaken India economically and socially. Their first big hit:  the Kudankulam nuclear plant.
On the night of June 20, 2011 a  Tupolev-134 jetliner with 43 passengers and a crew of nine took off from Moscow  for Petrozavodsk, about 950 km to the north. Midway through the flight, the  plane lost altitude and crashed onto a highway in the northern republic of Karelia.
The passengers killed included  Sergei Ryzhov, the chief designer of the light water nuclear reactors built by  Russia in various countries, including Kudankulam in India. In fact, the entire  leadership of the reactor design unit of Russia’s state nuclear corporation was  wiped out. The cause was of the crash was never satisfactorily established.
The tragedy, however, did not stop  Russia from completing Ryzhov’s unfinished job in Kudankulam. By the end of the  year two reactors were set to go critical.
Fission is back in fashion
  The allure of the atom is very  strong in India  where blazing economic growth is creating an unprecedented demand for power. If  the country hopes to grow at a rate of 8 percent over the next 25 years, which  will lift its entire population to middle class status, then India must  triple its energy supply. Nuclear power alone can meet these goals, and end India’s  overdependence on oil from the unstable Gulf region.
Sounds like a good plan, but  the problem is that’s not how the West sees it. The re-emergence of a fiercely  independent India  has long worried the West, but things are now getting out of hand. India is not only  refusing to play according to the Western script, it is publicly tangoing with  the Russians. That’s when the West switches to Plan B – put India back in  the box.
WMDs – workers of mass disruption
  India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh can be  accused of many things – that he is a puppet of the Gandhi family; he speaks too  little and when he does say something it’s boringly banal; he has no opinion on  anything. But nobody can accuse Singh of being prone to outbursts.
  Which is why his allegation  that American-funded NGOs are behind the protests at Kudankulam is entirely  credible. He also accused American and Scandinavian backed outfits of trying to  derail India’s  biotech farming sector.
Unlike the ceaseless flogging  of the “foreign hand” by late Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in the 1970s,  Singh’s allegation was backed by solid evidence ferreted out by Indian  intelligence. His office revealed that the protests at the Kudankulam nuclear  plant were orchestrated by NGOs and churches, which were bringing in truckloads  of paid protestors (of which there is never a dearth in India). These outfits  were in turn being funded by foreign sources.
Within days India cancelled the  licences of three NGOs; 77 more NGOs are on a watch list, and the Home Ministry  confirmed most were from the US and the European Union. In 2010, US-based NGOs  accounted for one-third of the foreign funds worth Rs 90,000 million to Indian  NGOs.
Subverting India  – in the name of God
  The nexus between Western  governments, evangelist churches and NGOs has happened because they work best  as a pack. Their targeting of India  started in earnest with the election of George W. Bush as US President.
  In February 2002, Bush set up  the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives in the White House. His agenda  was to promote government aid to churches, Christian faith-based organisations  and charities.
Bush was paying back a favour –  a favour so huge he would do anything in return. Despite losing the popular  vote to Al Gore, Dubya was elected president mainly due to the support from far  right Christian evangelists who run huge transnational missionary organisations  (TMOs).
According to V.K. Shashikumar’s  expose in Tehelka magazine, “In the decade 1990-2000 these TMOs were running a  global intelligence operation which was so complex and sophisticated that in  terms of its scale, magnitude and intensity of coverage, the real short-term  and long-term implications from the point of view of India's territorial  integrity and national security, were indeed frightfully staggering. This  operation has succeeded in putting in place a system in India which enables the US government to access any  ethnographic information on any location virtually at the click of the mouse.  This network in India,  established with funding and strategic assistance from US-based TMOs, gives US  intelligence agencies virtually real time access to every nook and corner of  the country.”
Organisations like the  International Mission Board, Southern Baptist Convention, Christian Aid, World  Vision, Seventh Day  Adventist Church  and multi-billion enterprises run by evangelists and demagogues like Pat  Robertson, Billy Graham and Roger Houtsma were running a coordinated conversion  campaign in India  under the banner of AD2000 from 1995 to 2000.
What has made things easier for  the missionaries is the opening up of India to US businesses. Billy Graham and  his ilk openly admit that they dispatched spying missions to India. Just as  Joshua sent out the spies to survey the land and report on its condition before  the children of Israel moved out in obedience to God's command, many more  missionaries and Christian workers are finding research information invaluable  in laying their plans, says the AD2000 document.
We want your soul, and your country
  This church-state nexus has  been brilliantly documented by British-born academic Iain Buchanan in his book,  The Armies Of God: A Study In Militant Christianity, in which he talks about  the rise of US evangelism as a force in global affairs.
He looks at the imperial  relationship between Western and non-Western countries, and the main players in  the process of evangelisation. In an interview to Yogesh Pawar of India’s DNA newspaper, Buchanan said, “Deep in Washington,  self-professedly Christian pressure groups have both a highly influential  membership and a powerful grip on policy. The network of evangelical influence  goes far beyond this: there are scores of such groups at work in Congress, the  military, and departments of state. All act to connect politics, business, the  media, and the military with one another in pursuit of a common vision of a  Christian American dominion over the world.”
So what does this mean for a  targeted country? Quite simply, the US  won’t stop at proselytizing for that would only be the gain of intangible Third World souls. “In addition, there must be  infiltration of every sector of influence in a society, from religious groups  to government departments to local charities to private business, in ways which  blur the line between Christian indoctrination and secular change,” says Buchanan.
Local collaborators
  Evangelicals thrive on  suffering and disaster. India-born evangelist K.P. Yohannan welcomed the  tsunami of 2004 as “one of the greatest opportunities God has given us to share  his love with people”. He wasn’t the only one expressing such sentiments. The  tsunami in India was indeed a windfall for many American churches which poured  in untold billions of dollars to convert large numbers of poor fisher folk in  the Kudankulam area.
Flashpoints like Kudankulam are  excellent for creating martyrs – a key ingredient for conversion in the  evangelists’ scheme of things. American evangelists have a continually updated  list of names said to identify martyrs in any given district of India, and this  heroism is publicized as a mark of honour for the local villages to emulate.  This database is a veritable machine for generating misinformation about  Christian deaths that could be blamed on others. Often deaths may have been  entirely unrelated to religion. It wouldn’t be surprising if five years from now  a ‘St Kudankulam’ appears in Indian Christianity’s pantheon.
Targeting Russia
  The protests and roadblocks in  Kudankulam are also directed against Russia. The plan was that the  Russians would get tired of waiting around and pack up their bags and leave. Not  only would the sterile concrete and steel edifice become a symbol of victory  for the protestors, it would also be a stark reminder to Russia of the perils of doing business with India.
However, the Russians refused  to be bated (unlike the British who launched into an orgy of hate-India  theatrics when their Typhoon fighter aircraft was rejected). Russia’s ambassador in India, Alexander M. Kadakin, an Indophile with a  deep emotional attachment to the country, understands the predicament India  currently faces. In fact, he can see a parallel in this Christian-American-NGO  nexus back home.
The West’s invasion of Russia’s  near abroad, Bulgaria’s NATO membership and the bombing and subsequent division  of tiny Serbia are all visible aspects of the embattled state of Orthodox  Slavs. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union  in 1991, the West has attempted to destroy the Russian Orthodox Church, a key pillar  of Russian nationalism. The Roman Catholic Church sees a huge opportunity for  conversions in the CIS region, with the Vatican sending in its stormtroopers to  go out and bring Russia  into the Catholic fold.
Fission and friction
  So what happened to Plan A? That  was the Nuclear Suppliers Group, a cartel of 46 mostly Western countries, which  controls the export of nuclear fuel, equipment and technology. Hastily set-up  in 1974 as a response to India’s  atomic bomb test earlier that year, it has since then tried to stymie India’s nuclear  ambitions.
Today, the NSG is an idea whose  time has gone. Interestingly, it includes members like New Zealand, Latvia  and Austria  – countries that don’t even possess nuclear technology. For more than three  decades the NSG has practised a form of nuclear apartheid designed to exclude India from the  high table. For close to four decades, this cartel imposed all sorts of  sanctions, including denial of travel visas to Indian nuclear scientists to  member countries.
It is ironic that the NSG’s  growing irrelevance started after yet another atomic explosion by India, in  1998. When the leading cartel members realised they could not stop India’s N-bomb but could make some money in India’s nuclear  power market, the apartheid crumbled.
The problems, however, didn’t  end there. Even as the India-US civil nuclear deal opened a market for equipment  and technology estimated at $175 billion, the US found itself shut out while the  Russians were already close to completing two reactors at Kudankulam.
This nuclear heartburn is the  reason why the Russian-built plant is being targeted. It is because the US is not able  to compete on even terms that it has called in the dirty tricks department. (The  crash of the Tupolev-134 carrying Ryzhov and 42 other nuclear scientists and  engineers could well be a Western job.)
As Russians, Chinese and other  emerging nations descend on Delhi to trade, barter and talk, the US finds  itself increasingly marginalised. And that is why America is using every tool at its  disposal – including missionaries and NGOs – to stay in the game.
Time to end the siege
  With India’s power shortage reaching crisis  proportions, people have little tolerance for anti-nuclear protestors,  especially those caught in bed with their Western masters.
Hindu nationalists are getting aggressive  seeing this brazen attack on a symbol of India’s progress. With nationalist  party workers attacking a group of rent-a-crowd protestors last week, there is  now the real possibility of this becoming a religiously tinged law and order  issue.
India can either let Western  detritus dictate terms over a $3 billion plant or give them the marching orders.  How the country’s leadership acts will decide if power goes to people’s homes –  or whether it will empower the enemy of the people.
This story was first published  atwww.indrus.in
(About the author: Rakesh Krishnan Simha is a New Zealand based  writer and a columnist with Russia  Behind the Headlines. He has previously worked with Businessworld,  India Today and Hindustan Times, and was news editor with the Financial  Express.)
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