This essay examines Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s 1949 visit to the United States as an embodied display of postcolonial sovereignty at a key moment of Cold War geopolitics. We argue that Nehru leveraged Truman’s invitation to articulate his own view of India’s role on the Cold War world stage. Rather than adopting the standard bipolar framing of Cold War rhetorical discourse, we make the deliberate choice to read Nehru’s tour as he saw it: a strategic opportunity to secure US economic assistance, affirm India’s independence from British or American ideological influence, and express solidarity with oppressed peoples around the globe. Drawing on governmental and historical archives in New Delhi and Washington and press accounts from India, the United States, and beyond, we show how Nehru’s rhetorical movement through the United States disrupted Cold War scripts and foregrounded an alternative moral politics rooted in decoloniality, racial justice, and global cooperation.
Chari et al. (Wed,) studied this question.