
As India8217;s global standing grows and its relations with all the major powers and key regions of the world acquire a new dynamism, curiosity about the Indian Foreign Service, that makes it all happen, has never been so high. Arguably no other civil service has left a larger mark on India8217;s public life than the IFS. One of its members, K.R. Narayanan, became the president of the Republic. K. Natwar Singh is currently the external affairs minister of India and yet another, Mani Shankar Aiyar, is the minister of petroleum. Two others, Brajesh Mishra and P.N. Haksar 8212; as principal advisors to Prime Ministers Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Indira Gandhi 8212; shaped India8217;s national policies well beyond diplomacy.
While the IFS has always been the most glamorous of India8217;s civil services, it also invites criticism for its starchiness, self-obsession and lack of strategic imagination.
Unlike many diplomats who tend to justify all of Indian diplomatic past, Dixit, the realist, has the ability to historicise failures and achievements of the service as a collective. By the time he concludes with a very confident note on the future of the IFS, Dixit has walked us through the fascinating story of a very important institution of modern India. For anyone remotely interested in Indian diplomacy and statecraft, Dixit8217;s volume is pure delight. That this is his last work adds a twinge of sadness. As the show goes on, Dixit will be long remembered 8212; not only for being one of its ablest diplomats but also for compensating, through his intellectual fecundity the government8217;s refusal to release any worthwhile information on India8217;s diplomatic history.