We can only hope that the inept
handling of the Pathankot terror attack is the worst breach of national
security and dignity that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his BJP can inflict
on the nation. However, the progressive scale of ineptitude that has been on
display doesn't give much hope.
For too long, it was not clear if all
the terrorists had been taken out.Indian Express reported there was
a blast even while defence minister Manohar Parrikar arrived at the base.
Before that:
o The finance minister got into the act
saying the siege was over; his statement was followed by reports of more
gunfire.
o The home minister put out a tweet
announcing the end of the attack and then deleted it.
o The prime minister was purveying wisdom
on yoga and Hinduism.
o The defence minister was in Goa,
meddling in its seaside politics.
Maybe the terrorists died laughing?
With the BJP, garish spectacle triumphs
over quiet diplomacy. In February 1999, Atal Bihari Vajpayee took a bus to
Lahore with the famous Bollywood actor Dev Anand in tow and signed the Lahore
Declaration. In May that year, India faced the Kargil war. With Modi, the
Pathankot terror attack came just a few days after his PR stopover in Pakistan.
Meanwhile, the mainstream media
appeared clueless, reporting every leak from the multiple agencies in charge,
sowing confusion all around.Television news simply passed off everything as
breaking news. The more "intrepid", not wanting to dig and delve into
the hard story, went after the human angle: interviewing grieving relatives of
the soldiers who were killed, calling them "bravehearts" like
medieval Scots and "martyrs" like Islamic fundamentalists.
The newspapers were no better: they simply
bought whatever line the government put out and played up the sentimental angle
of sacrifice for the nation.
In the event, the social media, some
uncompromising publications like The Hindu and The
Telegraph and a number of hardnosed commentators nailed the truth.
Many questioned the national security adviser's decision to deploy the Defence
Security Corps (DSCs) comprising retired soldiers to assist the National
Security Guard at Pathankot. There was widespread derision of Mr Modi's
preoccupation with yoga and Hindu temples and the now-familiar loose-lipped
syndrome of his ministers.
Mr Modi and his party have failed every
test of serious governance so far. Remember: climate doesn't change, people
grow older. Or, Ganesha's elephant head is proof there were plastic surgeons in
those ancient days. Or, India can never abuse nature: earth is our mother; moon
is our "mama", echoing a popular Bollywood song of the 1950s.
This government is also demonstrably
incompetent. Never mind Pathankot, even in Parliament, where it commands a
majority in the lower house, Mr Modi has been unable to get anything done.
Plus, he has suffered significant political defeats in Delhi and Bihar. Now
there's virtually no hope the BJP can win a majority in the upper house through
2019.
As such, the first-ever majority
government since the 1980s finds itself stymied.
Mr Modi's belligerence swayed many away
from their normal predilections to vote for him in 2014; hence, the majority.
Cocky in victory, he denied Leader of Opposition status to Sonia Gandhi,
president of the Indian National Congress. As such, his no-holds-barred
approach permitted no negotiation and compromise with the opposition, a sine
qua non of democracy.
In just 18 months, he has shown he is
simply not prime ministerial material. Never mind his own obvious shortcomings,
including gaffes about the flag in Japan and the national anthem in Russia, his
cabinet is a distressingly low on intellect and ethics.
The much-admired campaign in 2014
beguiled the electorate: there was dog-whistle rhetoric about Hindutva; a
slanderous paid media campaign against a government that delivered a decade of
unprecedented prosperity and social welfare; a quixotic promise of a golden
age.
There's one more thing in play: during
the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, Mr Modi, then Gujarat chief minister, showed up
outside the Oberoi Hotel to castigate the government as soft and directionless.
This was while security forces were still battling the terrorists. In
stark contrast, there has been no politicking by the opposition in the matter
of Pathankot.
Mr Modi's future suddenly seems to be
limited. The narrative of good governance is shown up as "a tale told by
idiots, who strut and fret their hour upon the stage, full of sound and fury,
signifying nothing".
(An
edited version of this post will appear in Dailyo.in, January 2016.)