- Impact of the Hindu-German Conspiracy
The
Hindu-German Conspiracy failed to engage popular support within India. However, it had a significant impact on Britain's policies both in the empire, as well as on her international relations. [Harvnb|Dignan|1971|p=57] Harvnb|Brown|1948|p=303] Harvnb|Majumdar|1971|p=xix] Harvnb|Dignan|1971|p=60] Harvnb|Cole|2001|p=572] The outlines and plans for the nascent ideas of the conspiracy were noted and began to be tracked by the British intelligence as early as 1911. Alarmed at the agile organisation, which repeatedly reformed at different parts of the country despite being subdued in others, the chief of Indian Intelligence Sir Charles Cleveland was forced to warn that the idea and attempt at pan-Indian revolutions were spreading through India "like some hidden fire".Harvnb|Hopkirk|2001|p=41] [harvnb|Hopkirk|1997|p=43] A massive, concerted and coordinated effort was required to subdue the movement. Attempts were made in 1914 to prevent the naturalisation ofTarak Nath Das as an American citizen, while successful pressure was applied to haveHar Dayal interned. [Harvnb|Dignan|1971|p=60] The conspiracy had been detected early by British intelligence, and had been the subject of strong British pressure from 1914.Background
World War I began with an unprecedented outpouring of loyalty and goodwill towards the United Kingdom from within the mainstream political leadership, contrary to initial British fears of an Indian revolt. India contributed massively to the British war effort by providing men and resources. About 1.3 million Indian soldiers and labourers served inEurope ,Africa , and theMiddle East , while both the Indian government and the princes sent large supplies of food, money, and ammunition. However,Bengal and Punjab remained hotbeds of anti colonial activities. Terrorism in Bengal, increasingly closely linked with the unrests in Punjab, was significant enough to nearly paralyse the regional administration.Harvnb|Gupta|1997|p=12] [Harvnb|Popplewell|1995|p=201] Also from the beginning of the war, expatriate Indian population, notably from United States, Canada, and Germany, headed by theBerlin Committee and theGhadar Party , attempted to trigger insurrections in India on the lines of the1857 uprising withIrish Republican , German and Turkish help in a massive conspiracy that has since come to be called theHindu German conspiracy Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=798] Harvnb|Hoover|1985|p=252] Harvnb|Brown|1948|p=300] This conspiracy also attempted to rally Afghanistan against British India.Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=788] A number of failed attempts were made at mutiny, of which the February mutiny plan and the Singapore mutiny remains most notable. This movement was suppressed by means of a massive international counter-intelligence operation and draconian political acts (including theDefence of India act 1915 ) that lasted nearly ten years.Harvnb|Hopkirk|2001|p=41] [Harvnb|Popplewell|1995|p=234]Political impact
The Conspiracy, judged by the British Indian Government's own evaluation at the time, and those of a number of contemporary and modern historians, was one of the most important events in the Indian movement and was one of the most significant threats to have faced the Raj in the second decade of the 20th Century. [harvnb|Sinha|1971|p=153] [harvnb|Ker|1917|p=]
In India
The conspiracy, especially in the scenario of the British war effort and the threat from the militant movement in India, was the major factor for the passage of the Defence of India Act of 1915. Among the strongest proponents of the act was
Michael O'Dwyer ,then the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab, and this was largely due to the Ghadarite movement.Harvnb|Popplewell|1995|p=175]It is now judged to have been the principal factor guiding British Political concessions as well as Whitehall's India Policy during and after
WW I , including the passage ofMontagu-Chelmsford Reforms . It has also been suggested by a number of historians that the events, especially in Punjab, in 1919 owed to a large extent to the Ghadarite movement or what was left of it, the presence of Pratap'sKabul mission in Afghanistan its overtures towardsBolshevik Russia , and the Raj's perception of its potential was a key factor, in spurring political progression in India.Harvnb|Lovett|1920|p=94, 187-191] Harvnb|Sarkar|1921|p=137] Harvnb|Tinker|1968|p=92] In 1917, theMontagu-Chelmsford Reforms initiated the first rounds of political reform in the Indian subcontinent. At the same time, a Sedition Committee chaired by Sydney Rowlatt, an English judge, was instituted in 1918 which evaluated the Indo-German-Ghadar link and the militant movement in India. On the recommendations of the committee, theRowlatt act , an extension of theDefence of India act of 1915 , was enforced in response to the threat in Punjab and Bengal.1919 was also the time that Indian troops were returning from the battlefields of Europe and
Mesopotamia to find India far removed from the ideals they fought for, and in the midst of an economic and political stagnation. [Harvnb|Sarkar|1983|p=169-172,176] The attempts of mutiny in 1915 and theLahore conspiracy trial s were still in public attention. News of youngMohajir s who fought on behalf of the TurkishCaliphate and later fought in the ranks of theRed Army during theRussian Civil War also began reaching India at this time.cite web
author = Swami P
publisher = The Hindu
url=http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl1422/14220500.htm
title= Jallianwala Bagh revisited
date=November 1 ,1997
accessdate=2007-10-07] The Russian Revolution had also cast its long shadow into India. [harvnb|Sarkar|1983|p=177] It was also at this time thatGandhi , till then relatively unknown in the Indian political scene, began emerging as a mass leader.Afghanistan
Ominously, in 1919, the
third Anglo-Afghan war began in the wake of AmirHabibullah 's assassination and institution ofAmanullah in a system blatantly influenced by theKabul Mission . In addition, in India, Gandhi's call for protest against theRowlatt act achieved an unprecedented response of furious unrest and protests. The situation especially in Punjab was deteriorating rapidly, with disruptions of rail, telegraph and communication system. The movement was at its peak before the end of the first week of April, with some recording that "Practically the whole of Lahore was on the streets, the immense crowd that passed through Anarkali was estimated to be around 20,000." In Amritsar, over 5,000 people gathered at Jallianwala Bagh. This situation deteriorated perceptibly over the next few days.Michael O'Dwyer is said to have been of firm belief that these were the early and ill-concealed signs of a conspiracy of a coordinated uprising around May, on the lines of the1857 revolt , at a time when the British troops would have withdrawn to the hills for the summer. TheAmritsar massacre , as well as responses preceding and succeeding it, contrary to being an isolated incident, was the end result of a concerted plan of response from the Punjab administration to suppress such a conspiracy succeeding. [Harvnb|Cell|2002|p=67]James Houssemayne Du Boulay is said to have ascribed a direct relationship between the fear of a Ghadarite uprising in the midst of an increasingly tensed situation in Punjab, and the British response that ended in the massacre.Harvnb|Brown|1973|p=523]Lastly, the British efforts to downplay and disguise the nature and impact of the revolutionary movement at this time also resulted in a policy designed to strengthen the moderatist movement in India, which ultimately saw
Gandhi 's rise in the Indian movement.Harvnb|Popplewell|1995|p=4]International relations
The conspiracy influenced a number of aspects of
Great Britain 's international relations, most of all theAnglo-American relations during the war, as well as, to some extent, the Anglo-Chinese relations. After the war, it was one of the issues that influenced Anglo-Japanese relations.Anglo-US relations
By 1916, majority of the resources of the American department of the British Foreign office were related to the Indian seditionist movement. Before the outbreak of the war,
Cecil Spring-Rice , the Ambassador to United States at the time of the war, is known to resisted theBritish Foreign Office from making this a diplomatic issue.Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=800] Spring-Rice's dispatches cite concerns with regards to American tolerance of the Anarchist movements in American soil, the American government's inactions despite concrete knowledge (in Spring-Rice's opinion) of the conspiracies, as well as concerns regarding the image of Britain in American public opinion if she is seen to persecute oppressed people. Further, Spring-Rice was particularly wary of the Wilson administration's political commitments, especially given that theUnited States Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan had authored eight years previously a pamphlet highly critical of the "British rule in India", which had been classified as seditionist by the Indian and Imperial governments.Harvnb|Fraser|1977|p=260] Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=804] Following Bryan's departure, theSecretary of State for India , the Marquess of Crewe, attempted to persuade Spring-Rice to raise the issue in front of the United States government. American authorities in Philippines were also more cooperative at this time that assured Britain of for knowledge of any plans against Hong Kong. Following the conclusion of theLahore Conspiracy trial , and as more evidence of German complicity came afore, Foreign SecretaryEdward Grey was forced to override Spring-Rice's concerns. In February 1916, the concerns of the British government regarding the conspiracy and German complicity were officially presented to the American government.However, although the new Secretary of State,
Robert Lansing , was initially as uncooperative as Bryan, the first investigations of the conspiracy opened with the raid of the Wall Street offihttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Impact_of_the_Hindu-German_Conspiracy&action=editEditing Impact of the Hindu-German Conspiracy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediace of Wolf von Igel, seizing papers that were later presented as evidence in theHindu German conspiracy trial . To much chagrin of the British government, however, it was not pursued further at the time. The issue precipitated a more general Anglo-American neutrality dispute, aggravated by belligerent preventive measures taken by the British far-eastern fleet on the high seas that threatened the sovereignty of American vessels. The seizure of German and Turkish passengers from the American vessel "China" by the "HMS Laurentic" at the mouth of theYangtze River and the following argument by the British government that the seized planned to foment armed uprising in India provoked outrage from the American government, followed by a number of incidences including the SS "Henry S" incidence. The U. S. Atlantic Fleet dispatcheddestroyer s to the Philippines. The relations were strained when in May 1916, the British government decided to relax its aggressive policy and seek cooperation with the US. The "China" prisoners were released that month, but relations did not improve before November that year, with a number of exchanges through the rest of 1916.The issue was ultimately addressed by
William G. E. Wiseman , head of British intelligence in the US, who passed on details of a bomb plot directly to theNew York Police by passing diplomatic channels. This led to the arrest of Chandra Kanta Chuckrevarty. As the links between Chuckervarty papers and the Igel papers became apparent, the investigations by Federal authorities ultimately expanded to cover the entire conspiracy. , with the US agreeing to pass on evidence so long as Britain did not seek admission of liability for Breaches of Neutrality. At a time that diplomatic relations with Germany were deteriorating, the Foreign office directed the Embassy to cooperate with the investigations. These ultimately resolved the Anglo-American diplomatic disputes just as America entered the war. [Harvnb|Dignan|1971|p=]ino-English and Anglo-Japanese relations
Through 1915-16, China (along with Indonesia) formed one of the major bases for the conspirators, and significant efforts were made by the British Government to coax China into the war to attempt to control the German and Ghadar intrigues.This would also allow free purchase of arms from China for the Entente powers.Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=802] However, Yuan's proposals for brining China into the war were against Japanese interests and gains from the war. This along with Japanese support for Sun Yat Sen and rebels in Southern China laid the foundations of deterioration of Anglo-Japanese relations as early as 1916.Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=803] After the end of the
Great War , Japan increasingly became a haven for radical Indian nationalists in exile, who were protected by patriotic Japanese societies. Notable among these includedRash Behari Bose ,Tarak Nath Das ,A M Sahay as well as others. The protections offered to these nationalists effectively prevented British efforts to repatriate them and became a major policy concern. [Harvnb|Dignan|1983|p= ] [Harvnb|Brown|1986|p=421]Indian independence Committee
The IIC was formally disbanded in November 1918, with most of its members becoming closely associated with
Communism and theSoviet Union .Harvnb|Strachan|2001|p=815]Bhupendranath Dutta andV.N Chatterjee arrived inMoscow in 1920. Narendranath Bhattacharya, under a new identity ofM.N. Roy was amongst the first Indian communists and made a memorable speech in the second congress of theCommunist International that rejected Leninist thesis and foreshadowedMaoist peasant movements.Harvnb|Tinker|1968|p=92,93] Chatterjee himself was in Berlin till 1932 as the general secretary of theLeague Against Imperialism and was able to convinceNehru to affiliateIndian National Congress with the league in 1927.He later fledNazi Germany forSoviet Russia but disappeared in 1937 under Stalin'sGreat Purge .Harvnb|Fraser|1977|p=269]Ghadar Party
The Ghadar Party, suppressed during the war, revived itself in 1920 and openly declared its communist beliefs. Although sidelined in California, it remained relatively stronger in East Asia, where it allied itself with the
Chinese Communist Party .Harvnb|Deepak|1999|p=441]Later efforts
Although the conspiracy failed during
World War I and the movement suppressed at the time with a number of its key leaders hanged or incarcerated, a number of prominent Ghadarites also managed to flee India to Japan and Thailand. The concept of a revolutionary movement for independence also found a revival amongst later generation Indian leaders, most notablySubhas Chandra Bose who, towards the mid-1930s began calling for a more radical approach towards colonial domination. DuringWW II , a number of these leaders were instrumental in seeking Axis support to revive such a concept. [Harvnb|Lebra|1977|p=23] [Harvnb|Lebra|1977|p=24] Bose himself, from the very beginning ofWW II actively evaluated the concept of revolutionary movement againstthe Raj , interacting withJapan and subsequently escaping to Germany to raise an Indian armed force, theIndische Legion , to fight in India against Britain.cite web
author = Thomson M
publisher = bbc.co.uk
url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3684288.stm
title= Hitler's secret Indian Army
date=September 23 ,2004
accessdate=2007-09-02] He would later return toSouth East Asia to take charge of theIndian National Army which was formed following the labour of exiled nationalists, efforts from within Japan to revive a similar concept, and the direction and leadership of people like Mohan Singh,Giani Pritam Singh ,Rash Behari Bose . The most famous of these saw the formation of theIndian Independence League , theIndian National Army and ultimately theArzi Hukumat-e-Azad Hind inSouth East Asia . [Harvnb|Fay|1993|p=90] [cite web
author =
publisher = National Archives of Singapore| url=http://www.s1942.org.sg/s1942/indian_national_army/revival.htm| title= Historical Journey of the Indian National Army
date= 2003
accessdate=2007-07-07]Notes and references
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