Celebrating the achievements of PM (Dr.) Manmohan Singh
In early 2004,
Gone was the weak kneed Vajpayee (of the infamous Kargil debacle, and the famous Kandhar and bus trip successes), to be replaced by the strong and dynamic Manmohan Singh -- the man who unleashed liberalisation in
With
Does Manmohan Singh deserve all the credit?
Success, as they say, has many fathers. Failure is an orphan.
So it is with Dr. Singh's successes.
Many have sprung from the woodwork to claim credit for our PM’s success. Some say… “aah it was the communists that forced ... err encouraged... him to do that”, or “Sonia madame must have said so” or “this is the peril of a coalition”.
This is blatantly unfair, for at least two reasons:
First: Manmohan Singh is the Prime Minster of India. This isn’t some badly run business we’re talking about: this is the Government of India, a well run ship with a clear strategy. Further, these are not petty gains but dramatic victories. In a well run organisation, none of these can happen without strong leadership.
Second: It is unfair to blame leaders for failures but look elsewhere to celebrate success. If Bush gets the blame for having trigger happy deputies (e.g. Rumsfeld?), Manmohan Singh must get credit for the achievements of his team.
This set of essays begins with foreign policy, where arguably, the successes have been most spectacular (though his achievements in the field of minority development, educational excellence may be considered equally dramatic).
First fix your neighbours: Successes in Foreign Policy
No single area captures the statesmanship of Our Prime Minister like his achievements in the field of Foreign Affairs. In particular, his handling of
Highly successful sale of Indian security interests to Pakistan
Since being appointed PM (he was never elected, but what do people know about leadership?) Dr. Singh has superlatively handled our nasty neighbor,
But we are getting ahead of ourselves here. So we will start from the beginning.
As a first gesture, on coming to power, Dr. Singh immediately scuttled POTA (Prevention of Terrorist Activities Act). POTA was a draconian legislation that had allegedly offended the human rights of several terrorists. Some say this was at the behest of the Leftists, Madame Sonia, others; but the rightful credit must go to the man in charge.
Dr. Singh then established a most innovative solution for reducing terror: forming a joint terrorism reduction network with
They will see for example, how foolish terrorists left behind evidence trails that allowed Indian police to trace them back to
Manmohan has ensured that these efforts for efficiency are not hampered by Indian red tape and bottlenecks that habitually obstruct economic activity. Several jobs are actively being created in
With this masterstroke, painted across a global canvas (India, Havana, elsewhere), Manmohan has bested Chamberlain in negotiating “peace in our lifetimes”, against a remarkably hostile enemy.
Given the time constraints, Dr. Singh had to move quickly, ignoring Parliament in the process. Which is fine: after all, decisive leadership never works on consensus!
See the following references for more details:
“Annual reports” on the robust growth of terrorism:
An encouraging 2004:
http://www.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=32957
A better 2005:
http://www.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=52485
A spectacular 2006:
http://www.expressindia.com/messages.php?newsid=75101
Man of action:
PM ignores prejudiced Police briefings (what do our Cops know? They’re lazy, corrupt and communal)
http://www.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=74764&headline=7/11~Probe:~
Instead of indulging in this nonsense, the Mumbai police should think creatively and establish a joint “crime reduction commission”. Imagine how powerful that would be: the men in khaki and the sundry dons of Mumbai sitting across the table defeating crime! Alas our cops know nothing, and are lazy, corrupt and communal.
Making it happen in
http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20060925&fname=parthasarathy&sid=1
http://ia.rediff.com/news/2006/sep/18raman1.htm?q=np&file=.htm
Coming next: Towards a nuclear and bright India
If the masterly handling of
I will post this article over the next few days.
4 comments:
Hmmmm. Interesting flavor to the piece. But the ppl you want to 'awaken' might miss the punch and those that get it...well you'd be preaching to the choir, if you see what I mean.
Call it accepting defeat too early...but the folks you are targeting this to...this fervor is like a hop. Great for 10 mins to an hour...any more and it becomes priapism. But a good piece. I like........I like
Appearance related comment (the content is great as always): The white on black makes it difficult to read, unless that is a metaphor for something. A smaller nitpick: A typo in your headline (celebrating).
Soniya
thanks for dropping in..
You clearly like reading between the lines.. metaphor... hmm... the only one that comes to mind is a schoolteacher (white chalk on a black board)!
Im still getting a hang of this blog stuff so will fix the formatting
good one, adheet. keep going -- there are a lot more skeletons in them there cupboards.
one suggestion: write a series of blog posts instead of adding on to one. this ways the reader knows what you have just added.
good references to the severe erosion in india's competitive position over the UPA regime's term.
ironic, isn't it: politics sucks, but economics is doing well? as usual, the pols are able to go out and give away what others have labored mightily to build up: be it soldiers, entrepreneurs, or scientists.
rajeev
Post a Comment