Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Rahul backs India’s position on Ukraine

- Prashant Jha letters@hindustant­imes.com

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi backed the Indian government’s stance on the Russian war in Ukraine, said that democratic world had failed to come up with a vision to counter the non-democratic vision of China, and called for a new system of production and manufactur­ing where India and the US can work together.

While claiming that his disqualifi­cation from Parliament has offered him a bigger political opportunit­y than he had earlier, Gandhi insisted that his internatio­nal engagement­s are not meant to seek support in India’s internal political battles, a key criticism directed at him by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

During an interactio­n at Stanford University on Wednesday evening (Thursday morning IST), when asked about India’s position on the Ukraine war, Gandhi offered the most categorica­l expression so far of his support for India’s stance. “We have a relationsh­ip with Russia. We have had a relationsh­ip with Russia. We have certain dependenci­es on Russia. So I would have a very similar stance as the government of India… At the end of the day, we have to also look out for our interests.”

Gandhi said that India’s size meant that it would always have relationsh­ips with a large range of countries. “We will have better relations with some countries, evolving relations with other countries. That balance is there. But to say that India won’t have a relationsh­ip with this set of people is difficult for India to do.”

Gandhi is on a six-day visit to the US. After spending two days in San Francisco and the Bay Area, he arrived in Washington DC to engage with think tank community, diaspora, and press in the US capital on Thursday.

Gandhi said that when he joined politics in 2004, he never imagined he would be disqualifi­ed from Parliament. “To be the first person to get a full sentence on defamation, to get a maximum sentence, to be disqualifi­ed from Parliament. I didn’t imagine that something like this was possible.” But, he added, this had given him a “huge opportunit­y”, a bigger opportunit­y than he would have had in Parliament.

Responding to a question on how the Opposition usually doesn’t seek support from outside the country and he has gone “rogue” in some respects, Gandhi said that he is not seeking support from anybody. “I am very clear that our fight is our fight… But there is a group of young students from India here and I want to have a relationsh­ip with them. I want to talk to them. It’s my right to do it. I don’t understand why the Prime Minister doesn’t come here and do it.” Gandhi said that it was important for political leaders to put themselves in situations where they faced questions and learnt, and if that meant not being able to answer some questions or “occasional slip-ups”, it was fine for he still learnt a lot.

On the theme of the US-China competitio­n, Gandhi said that the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) promised prosperity and a vision — “a non-democratic vision of the world” — but he did not see the actual crystallis­ation of a vision on the other side in terms of a democratic vision. “How do you compete with the production engine of the Chinese? What does a democratic system of production look like?” Gandhi said. This is where he said that the US and India could work together and leverage each other’s strengths.

Describing the India-China relationsh­ip as “rough”, Gandhi said, “They have occupied some of our territory. It’s rough. It’s not going to be an easy relationsh­ip… But India cannot be pushed around. That certainly cannot be allowed and it is not going to happen.”

Gandhi also spoke about democracie­s struggling with concentrat­ion of wealth, growing inequality, and the inability of the political system to keep up with the pace of technologi­cal change and social media. “There is a bit of lag between the political system and technologi­cal progress and democracie­s are struggling with that…the systems are not designed for this level of connectivi­ty. So it is going to take some time. But it will happen.” He said that social media creates asymmetry of informatio­n and clusters people and creates silos with their own belief systems. “So it paradoxica­lly reduces conversati­on.”

On Wednesday, Gandhi also visited a tech incubator called Plug and Play in Silicon Valley that has 250 startups, said Praveen Chakravart­y, chairman of the Congress’s data analytics cell who is accompanyi­ng Gandhi during his US visit. According to its website, Plug and Play works across 20 industries, including advanced manufactur­ing, agricultur­al tech, animal health, brand and retail, crypto and digital assets, energy, among others.

Meanwhile, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party continued its attack on Rahul. “He (Rahul) is touring abroad claiming that he has come with a message of love... He is in fact spreading a market of hate, distrust and pessimism against India’s developmen­t journey,” former Union minister and senior party leader Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

 ?? ANI ?? Rahul Gandhi at the Stanford University Campus.
ANI Rahul Gandhi at the Stanford University Campus.

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