
Between the two, however, my call wouldn’t be that tough, or risky, if I chose “apolitical” Dr Singh’s claim over his then, very political prime minister’s.
The situation now is a little bit similar. What Manmohan Singh as prime minister is trying to do to our foreign policy, or rather the way in which India relates to the post-Cold War world, is comparable to what he did to its economy in 1991. The Left actually gets it when they say the nuclear deal is not just about energy, that it is a paradigm shift. There are aspects of this where they do not get it, but that is a different argument for another Saturday. The relevant issue now is that when Manmohan Singh pushes this “shift” in 2008, which course is his political leader of today going to choose? To use him as a convenient scapegoat if things go wrong, a sacrificial one if the party decides to retreat and bury the hatchet with the Left in his expendable, “apolitical” back, or embrace him with pride, protect him in this moment of change and challenge, and draw away the fire and the venom from him?
Sonia now faces one of those moments in a leader’s life when the choice is between statesmanship and cynical politicking. Some in her party are so sure of not winning, or even contesting another election that they would rather...


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