Analysis
	Congress Government Betrays Election Mandate
		
	
	The people of India voted  		in the Congress Government in the General Elections a few months back  		for a second tenure hoping that not only would they be able to steer the  		Indian economy through the global economic crisis but also that India's  		international image and standing would grow as a rising global power.  		The Indian people had to choose between two second bests as Dr Manmohan  		Singh was by no means a charismatic national leader. Nor did the  		Congress Party enjoy an overwhelming lead in national politics. The  		Congress Government has betrayed the Indian peoples mandate as the  		common man is reeling under rising prices of essential commodities. In  		the few months of the second tenure of the Congress Government India's  		international image stands gravely affected where there is a widespread  		perception that the Congress Government has outsourced its foreign  		policy to Washington.
Nothing is more galling for any right-thinking Indian than to be a mute  		spectator to the way the Indian Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh and  		his advisors capitulated to United States pressures to accommodate and  		factor-in in Indian foreign policy formulations, Pakistan's blackmailing  		demands so that Pakistan makes attempts to assist the United States in  		its war on Al Qaeda.
The question that arises is as to how Dr Manmohan Singh and his Congress  		Government are so emboldened to proceed nonchalantly on the course of  		not electing to forge a bi-partisan consensus on crucial foreign policy  		issues especially where vital Indian national security interests are  		involved in relation to USA., China and Pakistan; nor is the  		Parliament's approval taken on critical issues like resumption of a  		dialogue with Pakistan without that nation refusing to take any action  		against Mumbai 9/11 terrorists as was demanded by the Congress  		Government.
The Congress Government spokespersons take refuge in the argument that  		there is no provision in the Indian Constitution making it mandatory for  		the Government to take Parliament's approval on foreign policy issues or  		any agreements with foreign governments. Technically, they may be  		correct but it is very much against the conventions set by earlier Prime  		Ministers who sought to take the Parliament into confidence and  		attempted a bi-partisan consensus on foreign policy issues.
It is high time that the Parliament is seized of this issue and  		legislation is brought and passed to make it mandatory to get the  		Parliaments approval on all vital and critical foreign policy issues and  		agreements.
Fortunately, Indian public opinion after more than 60 years is no longer  		without strength potent enough to force the Indian Government in power  		to reverse its decisions which run contrary to Indian public opinion  		sentiments. It has happened in the present case too where Dr Manmohan  		Singh was led to sign the infamous Sharm-al Sheikh Joint Statement where  		the Indian Prime Minister in his wisdom proceeded to concede that  		India-Pakistan Dialogue would be resumed without it being made  		contingent on Pakistan making good on its pledges to bring Mumbai 9/11  		terrorists to book.
The public outcry against the Indian Prime Minister's ill-advised  		concession to Pakistan forced the Congress President and the Congress  		Government to retreat from the position the Prime Minister had adopted  		at Sharm-al Sheikh. It has now at various levels declared that the  		Dialogue cannot be resumed unless India's demands on terrorism are met  		by Pakistan.
The Congress Government it is hoped would learn the appropriate lessons  		that Indian public opinion cannot be ignored on critical foreign policy  		issues pertaining to USA, China and more especially Pakistan.
The Congress Party seems to have misread its mandate in the last General  		Elections. The Indian people had not given it a blank cheque to run this  		country. It should have been read as a qualified mandate and that  		mandate should not have been betrayed by adopting foreign policy stances  		as per personal predilections but guided by India's national security  		interests and by Indian public opinion sentiments.  		
	
	09-Aug-2009
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		Dr. Subhash Kapila					
		
		
	 
	
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