and
Andrei Gromyko, Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union.
High Commissioner to the United Kingdom After India gained independence in 1947, Menon was appointed
High Commissioner of India to the United Kingdom, a post in which he remained until 1952. Menon's distrust of the West extended to the United Kingdom, and his opposition to British political manoeuvres led
MI5 to deem him a "serious menace to security". From 1929 onwards, Menon had been kept under surveillance, with a warrant to intercept his correspondence being issued in December 1933, identifying him as an "important worker in the Indian revolutionary movement". Clandestine surveillance intensified following Menon's 1946 meeting in Paris with
Soviet Foreign Minister
Vyacheslav Molotov, and Indian independence. In 2007, hundreds of pages of MI5 files documenting their coverage of Menon were released, including transcripts of phone conversations and intercepted correspondences with other statesmen and Nehru himself. In 1949, Menon was one of the drafters of the
London Declaration, along with Sir
Norman Brook, the British
Cabinet Secretary. The declaration recognised that India could remain in the
Commonwealth of Nations, despite becoming a republic. The declaration is considered the foundation of the modern Commonwealth. During his tenure as the high commissioner, Menon was accused of being involved in the
jeep scandal case, the first alleged case of corruption in independent India. In 1948, Menon had ignored protocols and signed a Rs 8 million contract for the purchase of army jeeps with a foreign firm for the
Indo-Pakistani war of 1947–1948. The deal was later rescinded by the Indian deputy High Commissioner in London due to the failure of the completion of the order. The investigation into the matter was closed in 1955 after nothing was found against anybody including Menon.
India's representative to the United Nations Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru with V. K. Krishna Menon (age 60) in United Nations in December 1956. In 1949, Menon accepted the command of the Indian delegation to the United Nations, a position he held until 1962. He headed India's diplomatic missions to the
United Kingdom and the
United Nations, and established himself in diplomatic matters including the
Suez Crisis. He engineered solutions to complex international political issues, including a peace plan for Korea, a ceasefire in
Indo-China, the deadlocked disarmament talks, and the French withdrawal from the UN over
Algeria. charting a third course between the US and the
Soviet Union. Menon was critical of the United States, and expressed sympathies with Soviet policies, earning the ire of many Indians by voting against a UN resolution calling for the USSR to withdraw troops from Hungary, although he reversed his stance three weeks later under pressure from New Delhi. In 1966, Indira Gandhi had consulted Menon for drafting a Vietnam plan which called for international efforts to rehabilitate
Vietnam,
Laos and
Cambodia and criticised the
United States for their role in the
Vietnam War.
China and the United Nations Menon also supported the admission of the People's Republic of China to the United Nations, which earned him the enmity of many American statesmen, including Senator
William F. Knowland. In 1955, Menon intervened in the case of several American airmen who had been held by China, meeting with Chinese premier
Zhou Enlai before flying to Washington to confer with and counsel American President
Dwight Eisenhower and Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles, at the request of British Prime Minister
Anthony Eden.
Nuclear disarmament Menon was an opponent of nuclear weapons, and partnered with many in his quest against their proliferation.
Suez Crisis During the
Suez Crisis, Menon attempted to persuade
Gamal Nasser to compromise with the West, and facilitated moving Western powers towards an awareness that Nasser might prove willing to compromise. During the emergency conference on Suez convened in London, Menon, invited by British Prime Minister
Anthony Eden, offered a counterproposal to
John Foster Dulles' plan for resolution, in which Egypt would be allowed to retain control of the Suez Canal. While known for his alignment with the British
Labour party and its
Commonwealth analogues, by the 1950s, world diplomats referred to Menon's allies, comprising
Eden, British foreign minister
Selwyn Lloyd, Canadian foreign minister and future premier
Lester Pearson, Australian foreign minister and future governor-general
Richard Casey, particularly to the fury of US Secretary of State Dean Acheson. Menon's proposal was estimated by US diplomats to have more support than the Dulles plan, and was viewed as an attempt to hybridise the Dulles plan with Egypt's claims. The Dulles plan passed, with Menon voting against, alongside Russia,
Indonesia and
Sri Lanka. Menon, however, softened his opposition in the final hours, leaving Soviet Foreign Minister
Dmitri Shepilov in contraposition.
Speech on Kashmir On 23 January 1957 Menon delivered an eight-hour speech defending India's stand on
Kashmir. To date, the speech is the longest delivered in the
United Nations, covering five hours of the 762nd meeting on 23 January, and two hours and forty-eight minutes on the 24th, concluding with Menon's collapse on the Security Council floor. During the filibuster, Nehru went onto consolidate Indian power in Kashmir. Menon's defence of Indian sovereignty in Kashmir enlarged his base of support in India, and led to the Indian press dubbing him the "Hero of Kashmir".
Minister of Defence Krishna Menon became a member of the
Rajya Sabha in 1953 from Madras. In 1956, he joined the Union Cabinet as Minister without Portfolio and was made
Minister of Defence in April 1957, after winning the North
Mumbai seat to the
Lok Sabha. Menon developed India's domestic military-industrial complex and educational systems. During his reign as defence minister, India saw establishment of the
Sainik Schools, the
Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO), and other defence and military institutions, while professionalizing the
National Cadet Corps and similar entities. Menon brought with him a degree of governmental, public, and international attention that India's military had not previously known. He suspended the seniority system within the army, replacing it with a merit-based method of promotion, and restructured much of India's military command system, eventually leading to the resignation of the Chief of the Army Staff, General
K.S. Thimayya.
Congo Crisis In 1960, Menon remarked on Congo crisis that freedom for African countries meant not only political independence but also the right to be able to develop economically and defend themselves from subversion from both inside and outside the country. Menon criticized the
Belgians for not providing military training to the Congolese before leaving the country. In 1961, Nehru sent an
Indian Army brigade of about 4,700 troops for the
United Nations Operation in the Congo.
Annexation of Portuguese India The
annexation of Goa was linked with the 1961 elections to the Lok Sabha. Menon addressed the issue of Indian sovereignty over the Portuguese colony of
Goa, in a partial reprise of his earlier defence of
Kashmir. In New York, Menon met US Ambassador and two-time presidential candidate
Adlai Stevenson behind closed doors, before meeting with President
John F. Kennedy, who had expressed his reservations about Menon's anti-imperialism during the state visit of Nehru. Menon lectured Kennedy on the importance of US-Soviet compromise, before returning to India. On 17 December 1961, Menon and the Indian Army overran Goa, leading to Western condemnation. Menon dismissed the admonishments of Kennedy and Stevenson as "vestige(s) of Western imperialism". Indian annexation of Goa had subtle ramifications throughout Asia, as in the case of Indonesian president
Sukarno, who refrained from invading the Portuguese colony of
East Timor partially from fear of being compared to Menon. The invasion also spawned a complex mass of legal issues relating to differences between eastern and western interpretations of United Nations law and jurisdiction.
The Sino-Indian War In 1962 China attacked India, leading to the
Sino-Indian War, and a temporary reversal in India's non-aligned foreign policy. On 14 October, about 6 days before the war, Menon gave a speech in
Bangalore where he announced that India would fight "to the last man, to the last gun". Menon was criticised both inside and outside parliament for his handling of the conflict. The Indian government's analysis, the
Henderson Brooks–Bhagat Report remains classified. Menon believed that Pakistan – not China – is the real threat on the border. Menon was held responsible for India's lack of military preparation to repel China in the full-scale war to the extent that Indian politicians invested more effort in getting Menon removed than in actually waging war. Menon had resigned on 31 October 1962 as Minister of Defence. Nevertheless, Menon remained a counselor to Nehru and continued to assist the Indian government with foreign policy. ==Elections==