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Manmohan Parties on

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Ishan
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Posted on Friday, September 03, 2010 - 07:49 pm:       


Ruj:


 

Vjavasi
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Posted on Friday, September 03, 2010 - 07:07 pm:       


Ruj:

anna..ee paper enti..nijame rasthunada.sattire aa??






naaku adhe ardham kaala....sattire anukuntunna
 

Ruj
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Posted on Friday, September 03, 2010 - 06:49 pm:       


Vjavasi:



anna..ee paper enti..nijame rasthunada.sattire aa??
Congress, the worst thing ever to happen to Bharat
 

Vjavasi
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Posted on Friday, September 03, 2010 - 06:39 pm:       

http://expressbuzz.com/opinion/columnists/manmohan-parties-o n/203741.html

Manmohan parties on

Aditya SinhaFirst Published : 03 Sep 2010 11:29:00 PM ISTLast Updated : 04 Sep 2010 12:08:22 AM IST

Last night I was a guest at 7 Race Course Road, the official residence of our invertebrate prime minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, where he threw a party to celebrate the recent passage in Parliament of the nuclear liabilities Bill. To my surprise, it was a wild and crazy get-together. The champagne sloshed around like monsoon waters on a Delhi road; there was blaring music by the talentless schmucks of our entertainment industry; and the women were as classy as IPL cheerleaders. In short, it was almost as vulgar as Vijay Mallya.


I asked the PM whether it was appropriate to be indulging in such wasteful conspicuous consumption at a time when ordinary citizens were plagued by crushing inflation, rotting foodgrain, rising petrol prices, an uncertain global economic outlook, Maoist violence, Kashmiri uprising, and Suresh Kalmadi. “Relax yaar,” the PM said, thumping my back. “I’m also practicing austerity by serving champagne in paper cups. Woo-hoo! Have a Patiala peg.”

“But what’s there to celebrate?” I asked, ignoring the fact that champagne is rarely served in pegs. “After all, the Americans are still muttering about the Bill’s failure to give blanket protection to suppliers in case a foreign-contractor-built nuclear plant blows up and kills millions of impoverished Indians. And it isn’t as if any plants are going to pop up in the next decade or so. And who knows? Maybe we’ll have the Koreans build them instead of the French or the Russians or the Americans.”

“You sound just like Montek,” the PM replied. “You worry too much.”

Just then we were joined by Planning Commission deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia. “The reason the PM is immersed in a celebratory mood,” he somberly explained, “is that it no longer appears as if he will be removed from office anytime soon, contrary to the speculation that he would not last out the calendar year.”

“You’re just saying that because his boss Sonia Gandhi hasn’t started setting the stage for a transfer of power to a new PM,” I pointed out. “But may I remind you that the Congress president is fully capable of springing a last minute surprise, as was the case in selecting President Pratibha Patil.”

“What gave you the idea that becoming the PM of India depended on Indians, even naturalised ones?” Montek said. “I’m talking about America. If you want to be prime minister of India, you have to be in the good books of the Americans. Just look at the BJP’s Arun Jaitley.”

“What are you talking about?” I asked, wondering whether Montek had too much champagne or if it was just a matter of his turban being tied too tightly.

“You may recall that when the Bill came back from the parliamentary standing committee, the Congress let it be known that since objectionable clauses were being altered as per the BJP’s initial objections, the BJP had verbally assured its support to the Bill,” Montek said. “That was Jaitley’s doing as Leader of Opposition. He’s been keen on the Bill from the beginning as he wants to demonstrate to the Americans that he is reliably pro-US and thus PM material in case the NDA comes to power, since he knows the Americans are still wary of Narendra Modi.”

“But his support didn’t work at that time,” I pointed out.

“Yes, there was too much opposition in the party to bailing the government out,” Montek said. “Jaitley had taken his party’s support for granted.”

“That’s a typical Rajya Sabha politician’s tactical mistake,” I said. “But you’re talking of something in the distant future, if the NDA or some other non-Congress-led front manages to capture power after the 2014 elections. What about 2011 or 2012? Won’t someone from within the Congress take over from Dr Singh then?”

“You mean like Rahul Gandhi?” Montek said, beginning to laugh. “No chance.”

“The Americans are totally dismissive of Rahul,” the PM whispered, cutting in. “They think that he’s beginning to take a stand on issues, but on the wrong side. Like in Orissa recently, when he exhorted tribal youth to stand up to large corporations like Vedanta. This really does not give the Americans confidence.”

“But Sir,” I whispered back. “Surely the Americans must know that Rahul is merely posturing for political purposes. That’s why he’s not in government. Like his mother, he can take left-of-centre stances on issues that may seem contrary to the actions of your right-of-centre government.”

“It’s not just his bleeding heart pretensions,” the prime minister said. “The Americans don’t think he’s capable of taking the correct stand on Kashmir and Pakistan, which is going to be important to their Af-Pak policy in the years to come. Look at Rahul’s pal Omar Abdullah. He has single-handedly created a new generation of separatists, and this time there’s a strong Islamist streak. How are these youth icons supposed to fix problems so that the Americans can pursue their Muslim world policies?”

“On Pakistan, the Americans aren’t sure if Rahul has the wherewithal for meaningful engagement,” Montek butted in. “Plus, he’s 40 and still unmarried, which in America is not the sign of a man interested in stability.”

“So I’m going to be PM for some more time to come,” Manmohan Singh said, pumping his fist. “Yea, baby!”

“Maybe the Americans will ask Priyanka to be the next PM,” I suggested.

“Don’t be absurd,” Montek snapped. “That will never happen because her husband is obviously itching to turn into another Asif Ali Zardari.”

“Surely there must be another candidate from the Congress party?”

“Like who, Pranab Mukherjee? Sonia will never let that happen. P Chidambaram? He’s so full of hot air that he’s going to float off into the clouds one of these days. S M Krishna? Not even if he gets a new set of wigs,” the prime minister said.

“But you’re saying this as if Sonia will willingly do anything that the Americans want,” I protested.

“Of course she will,” Montek said. “The kind of corruption that her party has engaged in has given the Americans a large Damocles’ Sword to hang over her head. Don’t you remember Paul Volcker’s report on the Oil-for-Food scandal? Or the scams in the current Commonwealth Games?’

Just then the PM’s smart-phone rang. “Hello Obama-ji,” he shouted into the mobile. “Yes, we are also looking forward to your visit.”

“See what I mean?” Montek said with a wink. “From commander-in-chief to commanche-in-chief, everything is, as the Americans say, hunky-dory.”

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