Unit 2.4 The Road to Independence (COMPLETE) Flashcards

1
Q

Why did Japan act as a significant threat of invading India during WW2?

A
  • Japan declared an aim of freeing Asians from European rule.
  • Malays and Burmese welcomed the invading troops as liberators.
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2
Q

What did Viceroy Linlithgow confess to not having enough of during the Japanese invasion of Asia and what did he suggest to try and help?

A
  • The situation in Asia was so desperate that Linlithgow confessed that he did not have sufficient armed forces in India to hold out against a Japanese landing on the Cuttack coast and could not prevent an advance into Orissa.
  • All he could suggest in response to a potential land-borne invasion through Bengal was a scorched earth policy.
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3
Q

When was the sea-borne threat to India removed?

A
  • Only removed when the US Navy defeated the Japanese at the Battle of the Coral Sea at the beginning of May 1942.
  • However, the fear of land-borne invasion, and the Japanese and German forces linking up in the Middle East still remained.
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4
Q

Who was Cripps and how did he come to be appointed?

A
  • Churchill appointed Sir Stafford Cripps to lead a delegation to India in order to secure full Indian cooperation and support for the war effort.
  • The British government recognised that in order to gain support some sort of offer of self-determination would be necessary.
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5
Q

What worked in favour of Sir Stafford Cripps?

A
  • He was a Labour Party Minister.
  • A friend of Nehru and Gandhi.
  • Personally sympathetic to Indian aspirations.
  • Well known and liked in Congress circles.
  • When he arrived in New Delhi on the 23rd March 1942 there was much optimism from Indians.
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6
Q

Why was the Cripps Mission ‘doomed’?

A
  • What Cripps had to offer was not what Congress wanted to hear.
  • He came to offer what only the British government believed to be a bargain.
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7
Q

What did Cripps offer on behalf of the British Government?

A
  • Suggested that once the war was over there would definitely be a new constitution for India and the 11 provinces would get a say in their province.
  • In the meantime, during the war, there would be a temporary interim government to which all parties were offered to join.
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8
Q

What did the British offer in return for the Indians accepting their ‘bargain’?
(Cripps Mission)

A
  • Indian parties were invited to join in an interim government of national unity under the viceroy and his Council, which would operate until the end of the war.
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9
Q

What was Gandhi’s reaction to the 1942 Cripps Mission?

A
  • Gandhi was furious and suggested that Cripps took the first plane home if this was all he had to offer.
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10
Q

What was Congress’ reaction to the 1942 Cripps Mission?

A
  • Congress rejected the first part of the bargain. They were not willing to agree to a situation where states were allowed to opt out of a united India.
  • Congress were willing to join the proposed interim government provided it behaved like the Westminster one, with the Viceroy acting as Prime Minister and with the defence ministry under the control of an Indian.
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11
Q

What was the Muslim League’s reaction to the 1942 Cripps Mission?

A
  • Jinnah was ready to accept the Cripps bargain because of its implication that a separate state wouldn’t be a problem.
  • However, he would also have to reject it if the Muslim League was to remain part of the constitution-making process.
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12
Q

What were the successes of the Cripps Mission?

A
  • Congress was willing to join the proposed interim government provided it behaved like Westminster.
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13
Q

What were the failures of the Cripps Mission?

A
  • Cripps mission was doomed because what he had to offer was not what Congress wanted.
  • Cripps flew home to Britain on the 12th of April empty-handed.
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14
Q

How did the British respond to the failure of 1942 Cripps Mission?

A
  • Linlithgow stepped up press censorship and intercepts Congress communications.
  • By the summer of 1942, the British government was aware that a new campaign of civil disobedience was being planned.
  • Planned to arrest all of Congress and deport them to Uganda, with Gandhi being sent to Adan.
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15
Q

Why did Linlithgow’s plan to deport Congress leaders to Africa collapse?

A
  • The governor of Aden said if it was implemented he would object strongly to the presence of Gandhi in Aden.
  • Linlithgow’s plan was indicative of the level of panic felt in Whitehall.
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16
Q

What differences in opinion existed in Congress following the failed 1942 Cripps Mission?

A
  • Gandhi wanted Congress to support a new satyagraha campaign. He argued that since Japan’s aggression was aimed at the British, if India became free they could make peace with Japan.
  • Congress disagreed, particularly Nehru as he didn’t want Congress to be affiliated with fascism.
17
Q

How did Congress react to the failed 1942 Cripps Mission?

A
  • On the 8th of August 1942, Congress officially sanctioned Gandhi’s satyagraha and his ‘Quit India’ campaign was launched.
18
Q

What were the successes of Gandhi’s ‘Quit India’ campaign?

A
  • Gandhi encouraged local people to lead their own satyagrahas.
  • Attacked Europeans (1000 deaths and 3000 injuries were directly linked to the Quit India Campaign).
  • Attacked strategic locations.
19
Q

What were the failures of Gandhi’s ‘Quit India’ campaign?

A
  • Took Congress 3 months to decide what they were going to do.
  • Gandhi and Nehru were arrested and imprisoned.
  • Thousands of local activists were rounded up and imprisoned.
  • Failed to come up with any pressure on the British.
  • Congress were not able to get the Army on their side as the Army remained entirely loyal to the Raj.
  • The campaign had not attracted support throughout India and had instead brought detention, despair and death.
20
Q

When does Wavell become Viceroy of India?

A
  • October 1943.
21
Q

What actions did Wavell take when he became Viceroy of India?

A
  • Started his time in office by touring the subcontinent on a fact-finding mission. Travelling as far as 1500km a week.
  • He focussed particularly on troubled areas trying to allay fears, settle disputes and boost morale.
22
Q

How did Wavell help the Indian cause?

A
  • Reinstated regular meetings of the 11 governors of the provinces of British India.
23
Q

Why was Wavell reinstatement of regular meetings of the 11 governors of provinces so significant?

A
  • Enabled the Government of India to present the British government with coherent advice and a unified point of view.
  • Also made it more difficult for the British government to dismiss the views of provincial governors out of hand.
24
Q

What caused the 1943 Bengal Famine?

A
  • Poor harvests.
  • Distribution failures.
  • Loss of imports.
  • Wartime price inflation.
  • Severe weather conditions.
  • The crop yield in 1943 was the worst that century and the recorded annual death rate rose to 1.9 million.
25
Q

What happened during the 1943 Bengal Famine?

A
  • Estimated that 1-3 million died.
  • Price of rice increased ten fold.
  • There was extreme begging and homelessness.
  • Fears of a potential Japanese invasion encouraged hoarding on the part of those who could afford to buy.
26
Q

How did the British government respond to the Bengal Famine?

A
  • Wavell took immediate action to coordinate rationing and to try to stop profiteering, diverting troops from the war effort to do so.
  • Churchill originally refused to divert shipping supplies and said the famine was a ‘statistical invention’.
27
Q

How did the Muslim League respond to the famine?

A
  • Jinnah accused the British government of incompetence and irresponsibility.
  • He pointed out that Churchill’s government wouldn’t have lasted five minutes if the people had been dying of starvation on the streets of London as they were on the streets of Calcutta.
28
Q

How did Congress respond to the famine?

A
  • Congress blamed the crisis on the diversion of foodstuffs to British troops.
29
Q

Why was it so difficult for Wavell to get grain to India?

A
  • Churchill was so focussed on the war effort that he only listened to the advice he wanted to hear.
  • Wavell’s request for a guaranteed million tons of grain throughout 1944 was met with an offer of 250,000 tons and a request for Indian rice.
30
Q

How many tons of grain had Wavell extracted by June 1944.

A
  • By June 1944 Wavell had extracted 450,000 tons of grain from a reluctant government.
31
Q

Why were Britain now prepared to agree to a settlement?

A
  • Britain was now indebted to India for the goods and services they borrowed to help with the war effort.
  • Terrorist activity and unrest in India.
32
Q

What major change did Wavell propose?

A
  • That a new executive council (as proposed within the Cripps Mission) would be nearly comprised fully of Indians (excluding the Viceroy and the Commander in Chief).
33
Q

Why did it seem unlikely that Congress would be happy with Wavell’s new proposal?

A
  • Parity with Muslims would, in their view, inflate the importance of the Muslim constituency in India.
34
Q

When was the Simla Conference?

A
  • 25th June 1945.
35
Q

Why did the 1945 Simla Conference take place?

A
  • To discuss Wavell’s new proposals.

- Congress leaders were released from prison so that they could attend.

36
Q

Who attended the 1945 Simla Conference?

A
  • Gandhi, Jinnah, Nehru and Azad.
37
Q

Who was Azad and why did Jinnah dislike him?

A
  • Muslim president of Congress.

- Jinnah saw him as a ‘token Muslim’.

38
Q

Why was the 1945 Simla Conference adjourned?

A
  • The conference reached a deadlock about how new Muslim members would be chosen.
  • Jinnah suggested that they should be nominated by the Muslim League.
  • Congress could not accept such a restriction, maintaining that, as Congress was an inclusive party, Muslims should be able to represent Congress as well as the Muslim League.
39
Q

When was the 1945 Simla Conference adjourned?

A
  • Wavell adjourned the Conference on the 14th of July, having been unable to break the deadlock.