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This is an archive article published on March 28, 2006

Thank God!

At last a Congress clarification on the PM8217;s foreign policy. Sonia says all the right things

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In launching what is clearly a not-so-gentle attack 8212; the Left appears to be the primary target 8212; against 8220;communalising India8217;s foreign policy8221;, Sonia Gandhi has chosen to end the Congress8217;s loud silences. This has been long overdue. For far too long the reluctance of the Congress to defend the diplomatic achievements of the Manmohan Singh government gave a free run to the Communist allies in defining the national discourse on external relations and put the prime minister in an unenviable position. Even as Manmohan Singh sought to end India8217;s long-standing nuclear isolation and repositioned India8217;s relations with the United States in national interest, the Communist allies accused the government of discarding India8217;s independent foreign policy.

Given the dismal foreign policy record of the Indian Communists, who consistently misread all great international issues since the 1940s, they had little credibility with those familiar with the history of Indian foreign policy. The political chutzpah of the CPM and CPI, which had never resisted the temptation to subordinate India8217;s national interests in the name of 8216;communist internationalism8217;, to preach the virtues of an independent foreign policy to the Congress, which ran the country for five of the last six decades, only underlined the contempt of the Left for the grand old party. By finally putting across a strong political defence of the Indo-US nuclear deal as well as the larger relationship with America, Sonia Gandhi has revealed the party now has the self-confidence to challenge the noisy Left on foreign policy.

The decision by the communist parties to tap into the Muslim resentment against the Bush Administration and pit it against the potential national gains from a new relationship with the United States is probably one of the most dangerous manoeuvres in India8217;s recent political history. That this move was aimed at undercutting the Congress8217;s attempts to woo the Muslim minority made it that much more difficult for the government to pursue what was right for the nation as a whole. Reaffirming the conviction that the minorities are no less patriotic than the majority, Sonia Gandhi insisted that religion cannot and should not be a 8220;matrix for national interest in a country as linguistically and religiously pluralist as India8221;. We could not agree more.

 

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