Tuesday, March 3, 2026

From Non-Alignment to Non-Intervention: India’s Quiet Surrender to Power

-Ramphal Kataria

Empire Without Apology, Republic Without Voice

India, Iran, and the Quiet Collapse of Strategic Autonomy

The Silence That Gave It Away

Empires announce themselves with bombs.
Client states announce themselves with silence.

When hospitals are flattened, when food is weaponised, when diplomacy is sabotaged mid-sentence, the question is not who fired the missile. The question is who looked away. In the contemporary world order, silence is not neutrality—it is alignment stripped of courage.

India once spoke in the language of refusal. Today, it speaks in ellipses.

This transformation did not arrive with tanks on the border or treaties signed at gunpoint. It arrived quietly: through omissions in speeches, abstentions in votes, careful phrasing in press releases, and an ever-tightening anxiety about displeasing power. India did not announce that it was surrendering strategic autonomy. It simply stopped exercising it.

The collapse has been gradual, procedural, and therefore harder to name. But its consequences are structural. A country that once helped define the moral vocabulary of the post-colonial world now struggles to articulate discomfort when that vocabulary is openly shredded.

This is not a story about ideology alone. It is a story about how hegemony now functions, how resistance is punished, how obedience is rewarded with dependency—and how India, under the leadership of Narendra Modi, has chosen alignment without leverage in a world that respects only those who can say no.

The World After Restraint

The post–Cold War era was sold as a triumph of rules. What it produced instead was a hierarchy of enforcement.

From Iraq in 2003 to Libya in 2011, Western interventionism already revealed the asymmetry: sovereignty for friends, devastation for adversaries. But even then, power felt obliged to pretend. Wars were justified with dossiers, sanctions with resolutions, regime change with humanitarian language.

That theatre has ended.

Under Donald Trump, coercion shed its disguises. Tariffs became weapons deployed by executive whim. Alliances were reduced to transactions. International institutions were mocked as obstacles rather than arbiters. Even traditional allies—Europe, Canada, Japan—were bullied publicly, sanctioned economically, threatened strategically.

Trump did not invent this order. He merely made it explicit.

Power no longer seeks legitimacy; it demands obedience. The grammar of global politics has shifted from persuasion to punishment. Compliance is rewarded with temporary reprieve. Resistance is met with sanctions, isolation, destabilization, or war.

This is not chaos. It is disciplined domination.

Iran and the Crime of Refusal

Iran occupies a singular position in West Asia not because it is uniquely aggressive, but because it is uniquely insubordinate.

It refuses to host American military bases.
It refuses to subordinate its foreign policy to Washington.
It refuses to accept Israel as the region’s unquestioned military supervisor.

For this refusal, Iran has endured decades of sanctions, covert operations, cyber-attacks, assassinations of scientists, and open regime-change rhetoric. This pattern predates any single administration. It has been articulated—sometimes bluntly, sometimes diplomatically—across U.S. presidencies, Israeli leaderships, and Western policy think tanks.

It is essential to be precise. Claims circulating online about assassinations of Iran’s supreme leadership or a February 2026 “decapitation strike” remain unverified. Treating them as fact weakens critique and invites dismissal.

But the strategic objective is not speculative.

The playbook is familiar:

1. Diplomatic isolation

2. Economic strangulation

3. Provocation through sanctions and covert action

4. Internal destabilization

5. Installation of a compliant order

This has never been solely about nuclear weapons. It is about who controls West Asia’s energy flows, trade routes, and political orientation. Iran’s persistence disrupts a regional architecture designed for Western convenience.

That is its real crime.

Selective Sovereignty and the Logic of Immunity

Sovereignty in the modern world is conditional.

States that host U.S. bases enjoy security guarantees regardless of their internal repression. States that refuse are disciplined regardless of their treaty compliance. The message is brutally consistent.

Nuclear-armed Israel faces no sanctions.
Iran, a signatory to international treaties, faces endless punishment.
International law applies only to adversaries.

Cuba remains sanctioned six decades after its revolution. Venezuela faces perpetual destabilization. The rhetoric changes; the hierarchy does not.

What distinguishes Israel in this system is not merely its power, but its immunity.

Civilian deaths are explained away. Hospitals are reclassified. Starvation becomes collateral. No red line survives contact with alliance.

Israel functions here not only as a state, but as a forward operating base—performing tasks Western powers prefer not to execute directly: pre-emptive strikes, targeted assassinations, perpetual militarization.

Impunity is not accidental. It is structural.

India’s Moral Capital—Before It Was Spent

India once mattered in world affairs not because it was rich or powerful, but because it was credible.

Under Jawaharlal Nehru, India helped build the Non-Aligned Movement, rejecting the idea that newly independent nations must choose between empires. This was not idealism. It was strategic realism for a decolonized world.

Article 51 of the Indian Constitution committed the republic to international law, sovereignty, and peace. For decades, this commitment shaped practice: balanced relations with Iran and Arab states, calibrated engagement with Israel, and unwavering support for Palestine.

India was among the first countries to recognize Palestine as a state. Yasser Arafat was welcomed in New Delhi as the representative of a legitimate struggle, not dismissed as a diplomatic inconvenience.

Iran, too, occupied a place of trust. When resolutions against India loomed at the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Tehran intervened quietly. This was not transactional diplomacy. It was political memory rooted in shared resistance to domination.

The Modi Doctrine—Alignment Without Leverage

Under Narendra Modi, India’s foreign policy did not merely shift tone; it shifted allegiance.

The 2017 visit to Israel broke decades of calibrated distance. Engagement itself was not the problem. Uncritical embrace was. Public praise replaced strategic balance. Silence replaced discomfort.

When Modi addressed Israeli leadership in Knesset, there was no mention of Gaza’s civilian dead. No acknowledgement of starvation as policy. No unease at the destruction of hospitals and schools. These omissions were not accidental. They were deliberate signals.

Foreign policy is not only what is said. It is what is withheld.

Iran, meanwhile, saw India reduce oil imports under U.S. pressure, recalibrate connectivity ambitions, and retreat into procedural neutrality. Strategic autonomy became a slogan rather than a posture.

Strategic Autonomy as Performance Art

India today insists it is neutral. In practice, it aligns structurally while avoiding accountability for that alignment.

Statements are scrubbed. Votes are calibrated. Condemnations are selective. Silence aligns neatly with power.

This is not realism.
It is policy timidity disguised as pragmatism.

India has not gained leverage from compliance. It has gained expectations of obedience. Strategic autonomy, once surrendered, is not restored through rhetoric or branding.

A country that once shaped debates now fears displeasing capitals it once challenged.

The Economic Discipline of Obedience

Hegemony does not operate only through bombs. It operates through balance sheets.

Sanctions discipline markets before they discipline states. Energy dependence becomes leverage. Trade threats become policy tools. Countries learn to self-censor long before coercion is explicit.

India’s recalibration of energy sourcing under pressure—moving away from discounted oil in favour of costlier, politically approved alternatives—illustrates this dynamic. Compliance is framed as prudence; its costs are socialized domestically through inflation and insecurity.

Obedience is never free. It is merely deferred.

The Regional Vacuum and China’s Gain

As India retreats from strategic risk, others advance.

Connectivity projects stall. Influence erodes. Neighbours recalibrate. China fills the vacuum not because it is benevolent, but because it is present.

Strategic autonomy is not preserved by declarations. It is preserved by choices that incur cost. India increasingly avoids those choices.

The result is a republic that speaks loudly of civilisational confidence while shrinking diplomatically.

Silence as Complicity

There are moments when neutrality collapses under moral weight.

When civilians are starved, when diplomacy is deliberately sabotaged, when international law is mocked openly, silence ceases to be prudence. It becomes participation.

India’s hesitation to name injustice does not protect it. It diminishes it.

Great powers do not respect silence. They exploit it.

Conclusion: From Bridge to Spectator

India was once a bridge between worlds—between North and South, power and principle, realism and restraint.

Today, it risks becoming a spectator in a history written by others.

The tragedy is not that empires behave imperially.
The tragedy is that a civilization forged in resistance now hesitates to say no.

India does not need to be anti-American or anti-Israeli. It needs to be pro-sovereignty, pro-law, pro-itself.

Foreign policy without autonomy is administration.
Silence without neutrality is submission.

History will not ask whether India was powerful.
It will ask whether India was present.

Footnotes

1. United Nations General Assembly voting records (2000–2024) on Israel–Palestine, Iran sanctions, and humanitarian ceasefire resolutions.

2. U.S. Treasury Department sanctions archives on Iran (OFAC), multiple years.

3. Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) texts and U.S. withdrawal statements, 2018.

4. Public speeches and visit transcripts of the Indian Prime Minister’s 2017 Israel visit (MEA archives).

5. Indian Constitution, Article 51: Directive Principles of State Policy (Ministry of Law & Justice).

6. NAM founding documents and Bandung Conference records (1955).

7. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch reports on Gaza civilian casualties and blockade impacts (2023–2025).

8. Memoirs and diplomatic histories referencing India–Iran coordination within the OIC framework (1990s).

9. Energy import data from India’s Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, annual reports.

10. International Court of Justice (ICJ) provisional measures and advisory opinions on Gaza (2024).

 

 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

From Non-Alignment to Strategic Subordination: India’s Foreign Policy Drift in an Age of War, Coercion and Moral Abdication

-Ramphal Kataria

When Silence Becomes Policy: India, Gaza and the Abdication of Moral Power

For much of its post-independence history, India’s foreign policy was animated by a rare ambition: to exercise power without domination, and influence without coercion. It spoke the language of law when others spoke the language of force; it invoked solidarity when great powers invoked inevitability. This was not naïveté. It was strategy.

Today, that inheritance lies in visible disrepair.

India’s abstentions on Gaza, its diplomatic proximity to Israel amid mass civilian death, its silence as war redraws West Asia, and its compliance with American economic and strategic pressure together mark a rupture—quiet, calibrated, but profound. What is unfolding is not a series of tactical adjustments, but a structural drift away from strategic autonomy towards something closer to strategic subordination.

This is not merely a story about Israel or Palestine. It is a story about what India has chosen to become.

The Architecture of Moral Power

India did not stumble into non-alignment; it built it. Under Jawaharlal Nehru, foreign policy was conceived as an extension of anti-colonial ethics. The newly independent Indian state rejected the Cold War’s forced binaries not because it feared choosing sides, but because it refused the premise that domination was the natural order of international politics.

The Non-Aligned Movement—crafted alongside Yugoslavia, Egypt, Ghana and Indonesia—was never about neutrality. It was about autonomy: the right of post-colonial states to make decisions unencumbered by imperial vetoes. India’s support for Palestine flowed directly from this worldview. New Delhi opposed the 1947 UN Partition Plan, recognized the Palestine Liberation Organization early, and later recognized the State of Palestine without hesitation. For decades, India voted with mechanical consistency in favour of Palestinian self-determination—even while maintaining discreet, low-profile ties with Israel.

This balance—engagement without endorsement—was the signature of Indian diplomacy. It allowed India to deal with power without surrendering principle.

The Breaking of a Consensus

That consensus began to fracture in the mid-2010s.

India had normalized relations with Israel in 1992, but for over two decades, no Indian prime minister set foot in Tel Aviv. That changed under Narendra Modi, whose 2017 visit to Israel was framed as “de-hyphenation”—the claim that India’s relations with Israel would no longer be tethered to Palestine.

In practice, de-hyphenation did not produce balance; it produced hierarchy.

Israel was elevated to spectacle—hugged, photographed, celebrated. Palestine was reduced to abstraction—invoked rhetorically, sidelined diplomatically. When Gaza descended into humanitarian catastrophe—mass civilian death, starvation, the collapse of hospitals—India chose abstention. Not opposition. Not even condemnation. Abstention.

Gaza, once central to India’s moral vocabulary, had become diplomatically inconvenient.

This silence was rendered starker by India’s proximity to the government of Benjamin Netanyahu, even as Israel faced unprecedented legal scrutiny at the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court. India is not a party to the ICC, but it remains bound by customary international law and by the ICJ’s authority. Abstention, under these conditions, is not neutrality. It is evasion.

War Without Law

The broader international context only sharpens the indictment.

West Asia today is defined by the collapse of legal restraint. The escalating confrontation between Israel and Iran—punctuated by direct strikes and US involvement—has normalized a doctrine long familiar to imperial history: preventive war dressed as self-defence.

The United States, particularly under Donald Trump, has played a decisive role in this erosion—walking away from multilateral agreements, imposing extraterritorial sanctions, and reviving regime-change rhetoric with alarming ease. Even allegations of extraordinary actions against foreign leaders—hotly debated in diplomatic and legal circles—point to a deeper reality: international law now bends openly before power.

India’s response to this moment has not been resistance, or even principled dissent. It has been silence—carefully worded, studiously non-committal, diplomatically safe.

This is a striking reversal for a country that once insisted on UN primacy and non-intervention as foundational norms.

Iran and the Price of Compliance

Nowhere is this reversal clearer than in India’s retreat from Iran.

For years, Iran anchored India’s regional strategy. Energy imports, connectivity projects, and the Chabahar port offered India strategic depth—access to Afghanistan and Central Asia without passing through Pakistan. Under sustained American pressure, India dramatically reduced Iranian oil imports and slowed its engagement with Chabahar, despite earlier waivers.

The message was unambiguous: India’s strategic choices were now subject to American approval.

This compliance has been justified as pragmatism. But pragmatism without leverage is submission.

The Economics of Unequal Partnership

The asymmetry extends beyond geopolitics into trade.

Despite rhetoric of partnership, the United States has repeatedly subjected India to unilateral tariffs, market-access demands, and coercive trade negotiations. Even when US courts or political shifts softened tariff regimes for other countries, India often remained an exception—expected to open its markets without reciprocal concessions.

This is not the behaviour of an equal partner. It is the logic of hierarchy.

Foreign policy, once anchored in autonomy, now appears filtered through Washington’s preferences—on oil, on trade, on war.

What Replaced Strategic Autonomy?

Three forces have driven this transformation.

First, an ideological reorientation that privileges civilisational alignment over universal ethics has narrowed India’s diplomatic imagination. Second, the over-personalisation of foreign policy—summitry, symbolism, spectacle—has displaced institutional consistency. Third, security anxiety, particularly vis-à-vis China, has nudged India towards a single-patron model, despite history’s warnings.

The Non-Aligned Movement was born precisely from the recognition that great powers do not act as benevolent guarantors. India appears to have forgotten why it once knew this.

How the World—and Indians—See It

Internationally, India’s credibility as a moral voice of the Global South has eroded. Comparisons with Brazil and South Africa are instructive. All face US pressure. None have India’s demographic or economic weight. Yet both have maintained clearer positions on Palestine, international law, and Gaza.

Domestically, the response is fractured. Official narratives celebrate “strategic realism.” But among academics, civil society, and large sections of the diaspora, India’s Gaza silence and Israel alignment register as a moral rupture. The dissonance between India’s anti-colonial self-image and its present conduct grows harder to ignore.

Foreign policy, once a source of pride, has become a site of ethical discomfort.

From Voice to Echo

India stands at a crossroads. The question is no longer whether it can balance values and interests. The question is whether it still believes values are interests.

In trading principled autonomy for calibrated silence, India risks becoming what it once resisted: a secondary power echoing the priorities of larger states. Strategic autonomy—India’s greatest diplomatic asset—cannot survive selective lawfulness, moral ambiguity, and coerced alignment.

The cost of this shift will not only be measured abroad, in lost credibility. It will be felt at home, in the quiet erosion of the principles that once allowed India to speak to the world with confidence, dignity, and authority.

Endnotes

1. Jawaharlal Nehru, The Discovery of India (Oxford University Press, 1946).

2. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181 (II), 1947.

3. Government of India, MEA archives on recognition of the PLO (1974) and the State of Palestine (1988).

4. International Court of Justice, Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Advisory Opinion, 2004.

5. Amnesty International, Israel’s Apartheid Against Palestinians (2022).

6. Human Rights Watch, A Threshold Crossed (2021).

7. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Gaza Situation Reports (2023–2025).

8. MEA statements on Iran oil imports and Chabahar port (2021–2024).

9. US Trade Representative, tariff and trade policy statements concerning India (2018–2025).

10. Vijay Prashad, The Darker Nations (New Press, 2007).

11. Frédéric Halliday, The Middle East in International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 2005).

 

Friday, February 27, 2026

Judicial Integrity, Classroom Silences, and Constitutional Ironies

-Ramphal Kataria

When the Guardian Becomes Silent: Judicial Power, Pedagogy, and Constitutional Decline

Abstract

The recent suo motu intervention by the Supreme Court of India to stay a Class VIII NCERT textbook chapter referring to judicial corruption has reopened an unresolved constitutional question: how should judicial accountability be discussed, and by whom? While the Court justified its action on pedagogical grounds and the need to protect public faith in the judiciary, this episode reveals a deeper and more troubling asymmetry. Over the past decade, the Court has shown marked restraint or delay in adjudicating issues involving executive power, minority rights, electoral integrity, and constitutional secularism, while simultaneously exercising exceptional urgency to protect its institutional image. This article situates the NCERT controversy within the Constituent Assembly’s vision of judicial independence, analyses recent constitutional jurisprudence, and compares India’s experience with that of the United States and the United Kingdom. It argues that judicial legitimacy depends not on insulation from criticism, but on consistent counter-majoritarian conduct. The growing gap between constitutional promise and judicial practice has generated a genuine apprehension among citizens that judicial independence is being selectively deployed.

Keywords:  

When the Watchdog Looks Away

The recent controversy surrounding a Class VIII social science textbook published by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has exposed not merely a pedagogical misjudgment, but a deeper constitutional anxiety. The Supreme Court of India, taking suo motu cognizance of a chapter referring to judicial corruption, banned the book, calling the inclusion a “well-orchestrated conspiracy.” The NCERT apologized; the Union Education Minister promised accountability. Formally, the episode ended there.

Substantively, it did not.

This incident re-ignited an old but unresolved question: who guards the guardians, and where may that question be asked?

 

I. Judicial Authority and the Fragility of Public Faith

Courts do not command armies, nor do they control budgets. Their authority flows from two sources alone: the Constitution and public trust. The Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed that judicial legitimacy rests on confidence rather than coercion. Yet, that same Court has also held that narratives which scandalize the judiciary can corrode this trust.

The position — that adolescents are not an appropriate forum for discussions on judicial corruption — is not unreasonable. Children require civic education before civic scepticism. However, the problem lies not in what was barred, but in what is tolerated elsewhere.

If judicial corruption is deemed too corrosive for a textbook, why is judicial passivity in the face of constitutional erosion rarely treated with equal urgency?

II. The Constituent Assembly’s Warnings: Power Without Accountability

The framers of the Constitution were acutely conscious of judicial fallibility. During the Constituent Assembly debates, B. R. Ambedkar repeatedly warned against hero-worship of institutions:

“If things go wrong under the Constitution, the reason will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is that Man was vile.”

Judicial independence, Ambedkar clarified, was never meant to imply judicial infallibility. Articles 124–147 establish the Supreme Court; Articles 32 and 226 empower it as the protector of fundamental rights. But nowhere does the Constitution grant it moral immunity.

Minority rights, particularly under Articles 14, 15, 21, 25–30, were framed precisely because majoritarian impulses could capture institutions — including courts. The Assembly debates reflect deep anxiety that constitutional guarantees must not depend on the ideological disposition of judges.

III. Sardar Patel, the Sub-Committee, and the Myth of Homogeneous Nationalism

It is historically inconvenient but constitutionally vital to recall that the Advisory Committee on Fundamental Rights and Minorities was steered by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel — now routinely projected as a symbol of cultural majoritarianism.

Patel, in the Assembly, defended group-differentiated protections for minorities as essential to national unity. The safeguards he endorsed were not acts of appeasement but of constitutional realism. That same Constitution now witnesses judicial reluctance to robustly enforce these protections when they intersect with executive ideology.

IV. Landmark Judgments and the Perception of Alignment

Several recent decisions have generated a widespread — and dangerous — public perception that the Supreme Court has become ideologically accommodative rather than constitutionally adversarial:

Article 370 (2019): The abrogation of Jammu & Kashmir’s special status was upheld despite unresolved questions on federalism, consent, and constituent power.

Ayodhya (2019): While legally reasoned, the judgment openly acknowledged illegality yet rewarded it with restitution, unsettling the rule-of-law principle.

Electoral Bonds (delayed adjudication): Years of silence allowed opacity in political funding to flourish before eventual intervention.

Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA): Despite clear implications for Articles 14 and 21, the matter remains pending as ground realities altered irrevocably.

Justice delayed here was not justice denied — it was justice neutralized.

Timeline: Judicial Deference vs Intervention (2014–2026)

Year

Event

Judicial Posture

2014

Hate speech petitions post-election

Deference/ delay/ silence

2016

Demonetisation challenges

1Deference/ delay/ silence

2017

Right to Privacy judgment

Intervention / Assertion

2018

Tehseen Poonawalla (lynching)

Intervention / Assertion (weak enforcement)

2019

Ayodhya verdict

Deference/ delay/ silence

2019

Article 370 abrogation

Deference/ delay/ silence

2020

Prashant Bhushan contempt

Intervention / Assertion

2020–22

CAA challenges

Deference/ delay/ silence

2023

Article 370 upheld

Deference/ delay/ silence

2024

Electoral Bonds struck down

Intervention / Assertion (delayed)

2026

NCERT textbook ban (suo motu)

Intervention / Assertion

 

Pattern:
Intervention peaks when institutional authority is questioned; restraint dominates when executive power is implicated.

V. Selective Urgency: Hate Speech, Surveillance, and Silence

When petitions concerning hate speech by constitutional functionaries, mass surveillance, or communal violence reach the Court, deferment often becomes the norm. The statement that the Supreme Court is “not a political playground” sits uneasily with Article 32, which Ambedkar called the “heart and soul of the Constitution.”

Ironically, the same Article has been invoked expansively to stay UGC guidelines or executive policies that inconvenience the state less.

This asymmetry fuels the public belief that judicial discretion is no longer ideologically neutral.

VI. Contempt as a Shield, Not a Scalpel

India’s contempt jurisprudence reveals a troubling pattern:

E.M.S. Namboodiripad (1970): Criticism imputing motives punished.

Arundhati Roy (2002): Symbolic imprisonment for questioning institutional conduct.

Prashant Bhushan (2020): Tweets treated as an existential threat to democracy.

Yet, political leaders who undermine courts through legislative circumvention or public defiance often escape similar scrutiny.

Justice Krishna Iyer’s caution in Mulgaokar — that contempt power must be exercised sparingly — appears increasingly forgotten.

VII. The NCERT Ban and the Larger Silence on Historical Revisionism

If judicial corruption is unfit for textbooks, what of historical distortion?

Mughal erasure

Sanitisation of communal violence

Canonization of ideological figures like Savarkar

Replacement of historiography with mythology

Petitions challenging such curricular interventions are routinely dismissed as “policy matters.” The contrast is stark: the Court intervenes to protect its own image but defers when constitutional secularism is diluted.

VIII. Comparative Constitutionalism: India and the US and UK

A revealing contrast emerges when compared with the Supreme Court of the United States. Even amid ideological polarization, the Court has recently constrained executive overreach — including tariff-related assertions of authority by Donald Trump, arguably one of the most powerful executives of the modern era.

In India, by contrast, judicial deference has often preceded constitutional adjudication.

Comparative Table: Judicial Independence in India, the US, and the UK

Dimension

India

United States

United Kingdom

Apex Court

Supreme Court of India

Supreme Court of the United States

Supreme Court of the United Kingdom

Appointment Mechanism

Collegium system (judicial self-selection); opaque, non-codified

Presidential nomination + Senate confirmation (political but transparent)

Judicial Appointments Commission (independent statutory body)

Security of Tenure

Until 65 years; removal only by impeachment

Life tenure; removal by impeachment

Until mandatory retirement (70–75); removal by Parliament

Contempt Powers

Broad, undefined; includes “scandalising the court”

Extremely limited; strong First Amendment protection

“Scandalising the court” abolished in 2013

Response to Executive Overreach

Often deferential or delayed (Article 370, CAA, electoral bonds)

Increasingly assertive even against strong executives

Traditionally restrained but institutionally independent

Public Criticism of Judges

Frequently met with contempt proceedings

Fully protected as free speech

Permissible unless it interferes with justice

Perceived Independence (Global Indices)

Declining; concerns of executive alignment

Polarised but institutionally resilient

High institutional trust

Judicial Review Culture

Expansive in theory; selective in practice

Robust and adversarial

Constitutional but restrained

 

IX. The Final Irony: From Instrument to Target

The ruling establishment has frequently benefited from judicial restraint, delay, or endorsement. Yet today, it appears willing to let the judiciary absorb public anger — as seen in the NCERT episode — portraying courts as fragile institutions needing protection from scrutiny.

This is the deepest irony:
an institution used to legitimize power is now portrayed as endangered by critique.

Conclusion: The Common Citizen’s Anxiety

The average citizen does not demand a perfect judiciary. They demand a courageous one.

Judicial integrity is not preserved by silencing uncomfortable truths in textbooks, nor by wielding contempt as a deterrent. It is preserved when courts speak most clearly when power is loudest.

The NCERT episode is not an aberration; it is a symptom. The deeper crisis lies in the selective deployment of judicial authority — assertive when institutional image is questioned, restrained when constitutional guarantees are hollowed out. Democracies do not collapse when courts are criticized. They weaken when courts fear criticism more than power.

Children may not be the right audience for debates on judicial corruption.
But if adults are left with no credible forum either, democracy itself becomes the casualty.

As Ambedkar warned, constitutional failure is rarely textual.
It is institutional — and ultimately, moral.

References 

1. Constituent Assembly Debates, Vols. VII & IX.

2. Constitution of India, Articles 14, 15, 21, 25–30, 32, 124–147.

3. S. P. Gupta v. Union of India (1981) Supp SCC 87.

4. S. Mulgaokar, In re (1978) 3 SCC 339.

5. E.M.S. Namboodiripad v. T.N. Nambiar (1970) 2 SCC 325.

6. In Re: Prashant Bhushan (2020) SCC OnLine SC 646.

7. M. Siddiq v. Mahant Suresh Das (2019) 18 SCC 1.

8. In Re: Article 370 (2023).

9. Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (as amended).

10. Crime and Courts Act, 2013 (UK).