This is the main purpose of this civil service meeting, the subtext is to get money! Practicing the mission that the British Empire would never surrender until the last drop of blood was drained from India.
This is certainly no problem, most of the senior officials believe that this matter is not difficult to do, only the top officials of Mumbai and Bengal province expressed the hope that the Congress Party in this matter to give a clear statement of support.
It is not necessary to mention the Bengal province, which is only two years after the famine, to support Burma's war effort, and the Bengal province, which is very close to Burma, must bear the heavy burden, which needs the support of the Indian elite.
That is to say, the full support of the Congress Party. British India and the Congress Party did not have an amicable relationship, and were wary of and used each other, bearing in mind that Burke, a senior Bengali official, also spoke up and said, "In fact the mutinies created by Indian soldiers, although all were quickly suppressed, are a trend that has to be feared."
As early as July 1942, the Congress Party made a plea to the British authorities for full independence, and the document it drafted stated that mass disobedience was about to break out if Britain did not accede to its demands. The Bombay meeting of the Congress Party Central Committee then passed the "Quit India Resolution", marking the official beginning of the Quit India Movement. The movement was massive, initially through peaceful demonstrations, denial of authority and undermining of the British war effort, followed by massive protests throughout India and calls for workers to go on collective strikes.
Meanwhile, the Japanese occupation of Burma posed a threat to British India, which at the time really took the many people in British India by surprise, but it was good that the movement was eventually put to rest.
"Alan, there's something moving in Hyderabad." Sir Barron turned his head and rushed to Alan Wilson, hoping to get good news from him.
"Sir Barron, judging from the Hyderabad Tudor, and the other small Tudor states that have been subdivided, there is no doubt that the monarchs of these Tudors are still very supportive of the Viceroyalty and the administration of British India." Alan Wilson stood up and reported in a moderately sized voice, "I believe that most of the native states, too, have always regarded British India as an important force in securing order in South Asia, and they are not the same as the Congress Party and the PML-N."
Sir Barron nodded, then John stood up and said, "The Junagadh Toa, as well as the Toa on the west coast, are likewise calm and much more at ease than many of the areas where the Congress Party has established influence."
"So it seems things aren't too bad!" Sir Barron nodded, then said worriedly, "There is another problem that has not yet arisen, but we must be on guard, and coming up with an early solution is what the Governor General expects of us. How to deal with the Indian National Army?"
A silence greeted Sir Barron, the dawn of victory was not far away, but the problems that were about to arise were more difficult than the others. The Indian National Army was a military organization established by Chandra Bose, an army that began with mainly British Indian prisoners of war captured by the Axis powers, but later many Indians from Japan-controlled Malaya and Burma also volunteered to join the organization.
The organization's goal was to liberate India from Britain, so it assisted the Japanese in the Battle of Imphal against the British Indian Army during the Japanese occupation of Burma in World War II.
Chandra Bose, although he joined the Axis side, did have a great reputation in later times, and the portrait has been hung with Gandhi and Nehru, so you can imagine his own position in India.
How to face this anti-British armed force, although no one first speaks, but all in the heart of Chandra Bose and the entire Indian National Army hate to kill.
"It is still war time and it is too early to talk about it, but if this issue comes up. Using Indian soldiers to watch over these soldiers of the so-called National Army is not a good idea." Burke, a senior official of the Bengal province, spoke up, "Many Indian soldiers with these Axis-leaning soldiers are likely to contribute to the spread of dangerous ideas, which is not good for the British Empire."
"In fact, they could be allowed to stay inside Burma, which would isolate them. For most of the Indian National Army soldiers, we can of course not exist, as for how the Burmese treat them, we can not care and do not ask, wait for a few years, it is completely irrelevant to us, post-war reconstruction, restore production so many things, even if we forget these people is also very normal, is not it?"
Allen Wilson followed the words of the senior official of the Bengal province, turned around and continued, "As for Chandra Bose himself, I certainly hope that he died directly in the middle of the war, but the war is not yet over, can first ignore him."
Allen Wilson proposed to throw the tens of thousands of prisoners of war of the Indian National Army into Burma to fend for themselves, without any need to escort them back to India. He still knows something about Burma, the first major ethnic group in Burma, the Burmese, and the vast majority of ethnic groups, and the Indians have little friendship at all, and the religion is different, Burma is Buddhist, India is Hinduism.
Do not think that Buddhists must be very peace-loving, Chinese Buddhists are also three Wu Yi and Buddhists after in-depth exchanges, Buddhism only after the great enlightenment to become Buddha. Myanmar Buddhism has never been extinguished, now as much as the murder and fire.
And because of the political status of British India and human resources, resulting in the British Empire in the management of colonies, the general use of South Asians to govern other colonies, red-headed San's big name is known even in the Magic City lease. Not to mention the other British colonies!
British colonial India and Burma period. After the occupation of Burma, a large number of Indians were moved into Burma. At that time, Indians not only had an economic advantage, but also once occupied stronger political resources, and were opposed to the local Burmese in terms of religion, race and interests, and it was inevitable that hostility and conflicts would arise between the two sides. The post-colonial Burmese government has been unfriendly to Indians, for example, by not allowing them to join the military and by suppressing related cultural practices.
Alan Wilson believed that these prisoners of war of the Indian National Army, once they fell into the hands of the Burmese, as long as the British civil servants in the doing did not about to forget them, the probability of the Burmese would make these enemies of the British Empire worse than death.
Upon hearing this, Sir Barron asked meaningfully, "Oh? Will something so natural happen?"
"Maybe it will, many local forces we can not understand all, once provoked, may make irrational things." Ellen Wilson shrugged and laughed in an uncertain tone.
"Oh, that's quite a surprise." Keane, a high official of the United Provinces, sighed heartily, with a few moments of contemptuous disdain, "It's kind of a good thing, isn't it, that the whole Indian population is breeding like cockroaches, even if they can't even eat, the more they have to mate moment by moment, and everywhere they go is an endless crowd."