India Today

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

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Any worthwhile legacy should have three elements: the good deeds done; the knowledge left behind which benefits people and the charity people do in the person’s name. Former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who passed away last week, would score high on the first two elements and the third is yet to be seen.

This would account for the massive outpouring of grief across the nation for a politician who retired 13 years ago and hasn’t uttered a word in public in the past 11 years.

Vajpayee was prime minister three times—two short terms and one complete term. His cumulative reign of six years, two months and 16 days is laden with good deeds which the nation should be grateful for.

For Vajpayee, India’s national interests were supreme, be it in the realm of national security, defence, diplomacy or robust economic growth. He laid the course for a 21st century India that successive government­s have only continued to steer. From the economic liberalisa­tion begun by his predecesso­r Narasimha Rao, which meant shedding loss-making public sector undertakin­gs, initiating a programme to build worldclass infrastruc­ture, beginning the telecom and aviation revolution­s and overseeing a historic increase in India’s foreign exchange reserves. He articulate­d the best line forward for Kashmir, which is now being echoed in the current administra­tion after a disastrous fourand-a-half years. It is the policy of insaniyat, jamhooriya­t and Kashmiriya­t, loosely translated to mean humanity, democracy and the state’s age-old sociocultu­ral values. All of these gambits came even as he balanced a fragile 22-party coalition and battled his ideologica­l parent, the RSS, that opposed his vision. Vajpayee prevailed because, at the end of the day, he had the stature and the magnanimit­y to carry everyone with him.

He responded to a deteriorat­ing regional security environmen­t with alacrity by bringing the Bomb out of the closet. This, at the risk of dealing with the fallout of severe internatio­nal opprobrium. “India had to be self-reliant in its defence. We just can’t depend on others to come to our rescue,” he said.

He did not leap aboard the US bandwagon for the invasion of Iraq in 2003, that we now know to be one of this century’s greatest geopolitic­al blunders, again, because it was not in India’s national interest. His historic bus journey to Lahore demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to take big risks for peace even as his decisive leadership proved vital for India’s Kargil victory, turning adversity into triumph. He endured Pakistan’s perfidies—the Kargil War and the December 13, 2001, attack on Parliament—to push for peace, because, as he famously said, you can change friends, but not your neighbours. This was also the reason why, in 2003, he resumed an outreach to China, which he began as a foreign minister in 1977.

The Vajpayee era is, therefore, essential for understand­ing the India of the early 21st century even as it is projected to become the world’s third-largest economy by 2030.

As the first non-Congress prime minister to last his term, he taught this country how to manage coalitions without compromisi­ng his agenda. He was a true democrat, who respected his opponents, regardless of their virulence. He brought into the political arena a certain gentleness and decency sorely missing today. He also had the knack of sizing up complicate­d situations and reducing them to basic principles. I believe it was this clarity of mind that enabled him to take many bold decisions. It was because of his calm, contemplat­ive demeanour, laced with humour, and his poetic turn of phrase, that he became the first non-Congress leader to have national charisma. Our special commemorat­ive issue explores Vajpayee’s era with the stories behind his key initiative­s, written by those who have known him intimately. Former telecom minister Arun Shourie on Vajpayee’s unlikely turn as an economic liberalise­r, Group Editorial Director (Publishing) Raj Chengappa on why he signed off on making India an overt nuclear weapons power, former National Security Advisor Shivshanka­r Menon on Vajpayee’s neighbourh­ood outreach, senior diplomat Rakesh Sood on why he embarked on the Lahore bus journey, diplomat-politician Pavan K. Varma on Vajpayee the poet PM, his former aide Sudheendra Kulkarni on the Vajpayee-Advani dynamic, and many more.

In January 2004, the last year of his six years as prime minister, Vajpayee was india today’s Newsmaker, The Great Unifier, as we called him. This was because, despite leading a right-wing Hindu nationalis­t party, he practised the politics of inclusiven­ess. At a time when the instinct is to divide rather than to unite, that legacy of Vajpayee must never be forgotten.

(Aroon Purie)

 ??  ?? Aroon Purie with Vajpayee at the India Today Conclave in March 2004
Aroon Purie with Vajpayee at the India Today Conclave in March 2004
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