logo
Manmohan Singh always acted on 'Nation First'; didn't go to Pakistan as he felt it wasn't right: Sachin Pilot

Manmohan Singh always acted on 'Nation First'; didn't go to Pakistan as he felt it wasn't right: Sachin Pilot

Hindustan Times01-05-2025
Former prime minister Manmohan Singh always acted on the principle of 'Nation First' in his long political career and did not visit Pakistan during his prime ministerial tenure as he felt it was not right, senior Congress leader Sachin Pilot said on Thursday.
Pilot said the list of those who went to Pakistan is long and includes the likes of former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, former deputy PM LK Advani and current PM Narendra Modi, but does not include Singh and former Congress president Sonia Gandhi.
He made the remarks at an event at the India Islamic Cultural Centre in remembrance of Manmohan Singh, where the likes of former deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Congress leader Rajiv Shukla, ex-MP Shahid Siddiqui and media advisor to Singh, Pankaj Pachauri, spoke.
Singh's daughter and historian Upinder Singh, and IICC President and former Union Minister Salman Khurshid were also present on the occasion.
Pilot said a lot of credit for India emerging as a nuclear power goes to Singh because he took a political stand and risked his government for the nuclear agreement with the US, because he thought it was best for the country.
"Rajiv (Shukla) ji said he (Singh) could not go to Pakistan, visit his village, who was stopping him? Many times invitation would have come, but he did not go because he felt that it was not right to go," Pilot, who served as a minister in Singh's UPA-II government, said.
"Who all went to Pakistan? I don't want to go into that in detail, as it is a long list. Advani ji went, Vajpayee ji went, Modi ji went, but Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan Singh are not there on that list. It is easy to say 'Nation First' but very difficult to act upon, and Dr Singh did in his long political career," Pilot said.
He said Singh treated him as an equal member of the team when he was a junior minister.
"It was such a privilege to work with a person who treated you as an equal member of the team. If PM gives so much space and respects other people's views, it gives a different message," he said.
Pilot said people should also not forget that socialist policies were introduced during his tenure, such as the loan waiver, MGNREGA and poverty alleviation.
"These days, we are seeing what has come of the so-called scams and talk of presumptive loss. The whole country is seeing what he did as a nationalist," he said.
Pilot recalled Singh's remarks on the 1984 anti-Sikh riots and asked which PM had courage to say 'I hang my head in shame' and that this should not have happened.
In his remarks, Shukla said Singh took action against Pakistan in the aftermath of the Mumbai attacks, but did not propagate it.
Pachauri said he never used to bring religion into the work of the country.
Singh, 92, passed away at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences here on December 26, 2024.
He was the PM for two terms in the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government from 2004 to 2014. As finance minister under former Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao, he was the architect of economic reforms in 1991 that changed the course of India's economic trajectory.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ministers allotted night shifts as UP Assembly begins 24-hour session on ‘2047 vision'
Ministers allotted night shifts as UP Assembly begins 24-hour session on ‘2047 vision'

Indian Express

time10 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Ministers allotted night shifts as UP Assembly begins 24-hour session on ‘2047 vision'

The 24-hour marathon session of both Houses of the Uttar Pradesh Legislature to debate a 'Vision Document 2047' began at around 11.30 am on Wednesday amid protests by the Opposition, which first demanded the Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath-led government's reply on the fulfillment of promises made in the BJP's 'Sankalpa Patras', or manifestos, ahead of the 2017 and 2022 Assembly polls. Some members of the Opposition also demanded a longer Monsoon Session, which is being held across four days and began on Monday, rather than a 24-hour-long session that goes through the night. However, the BJP government has put in place a detailed plan to ensure the continuous presence of MLAs, MLCs and ministers by dividing them into groups and assigning each a three-hour slot over the course of the session. Sources in the government said while all legislators are expected to attend the session till 6 pm, several ministers have been assigned slots for the late night hours to ensure attendance and continuity through the session. Starting 6 pm on Wednesday in the Legislative Assembly, four ministers – Sugarcane Development and Sugar Industry Minister Laxmi Narayan Chaudhary, MSMEs and Textiles Minister Rakesh Sachin, Minister of State (MoS) for Excise and Prohibition Nitin Agarwal, and MoS for Rural Development Vijay Laxmi Gautam – have been assigned the three-hour slot till 9 pm. The next group of ministers, expected to be present from 9 pm to 12 am, include Higher Education Minister Yogendra Upadhyaya, MoS for Skill Development Kapil Dev Agarwal, MoS for Food and Civil Supplies Satish Chandra Sharma. Then on Thursday, four ministers will attend from 12 am to 3 am – Science and Technology Minister Anil Kumar, MoS for Transport Dayashankar Singh, MoS for Food Security and Drug Administration Dayashankar Mishra and MoS for Public Works Department Brajesh Singh. From 3 am to 6 am, which would be considered the most difficult slot, a group of eight ministers has been assigned so in the case of any absences there are enough ministers to represent the government. These ministers include Labour Minister Anil Rajbhar, MoS for Sports Girish Chandra Yadav, MoS for Agriculture Baldev Singh Olakh, MoS for Jal Shakti Dinesh Khatik, MoS for SC/ST Welfare Sanjeev Gond, Jal Shakti Minister Ramkesh Nishad, MoS for Labour Manohar Lal, and MoS for Forest and Environment K P Malik. Then, from 6 am to 9 am, five ministers have been assigned – Tourism and Culture Minister Jayveer Singh, Industrial Development Minister Nand Gopal Gupta, MoS for Basic Education Sandeep Singh, MoS for Stamp and Registration Department Ravindra Jaiswal and MoS for Energy Somendra Tomar. From 9 am to 11 am, Agriculture Minister Surya Pratap Shahi, Fisheries Minister Sanjay Nishad, MoS for Secondary Education Gulab Devi and MoS for Higher Education Rajni Tiwari will be present. Similarly, groups of three ministers each have also been given three-hour time slots in the Legislative Council from 6 pm on August 13 to 11 am on August 14. While 28 ministers have been assigned slots in the Assembly, 18 ministers will be in attendance in the Legislative Council. In the Assembly, there will be 10 Cabinet ministers and 18 MoS, including those with independent charges. Only two of these ministers – Sanjay Nishad of the NISHAD Party and Anil Kumar of the RLD – belong to non-BJP parties. The ministers have been asked to present the '2047 vision' for their respective departments during the session, which UP Parliamentary Affairs Minister Suresh Khanna said was the first of its kind in any state after Prime Minister Narendra Modi pledged to make India a developed nation by 2027. In response to the Opposition's demand for the government's reply on how many of its poll promises were fulfilled, Khanna said that voters brought the BJP-led government back to power with a majority in 2022 based on the 2017 and 2022 manifestos.

Conduct SIR across the country, not selectively in poll-bound states: Abhishek Banerjee
Conduct SIR across the country, not selectively in poll-bound states: Abhishek Banerjee

Hans India

time13 minutes ago

  • Hans India

Conduct SIR across the country, not selectively in poll-bound states: Abhishek Banerjee

Kolkata: Trinamool Congress General Secretary and the leader of the party in the Lok Sabha, Abhishek Banerjee, has dared the BJP-led Central government to immediately dissolve the Lok Sabha and conduct Special Intensive Revision (SIR) by the Election Commission of India (ECI) across the country and not selectively in poll-bound states. Using his social media handle, Banerjee said people of the country have been betrayed after the Election Commission claimed the voters' list in various states is filled with irregularities. "The EC has stated that the voter lists across various states on the basis of which the GENERAL ELECTIONS were held barely a year ago in 2024 are FAULTY and riddled with IRREGULARITIES," he said. "If that is indeed the case, and if the GoI agrees with the EC's assessment, then the first step towards conducting a genuine SIR and STANDING ON MORAL HIGH GROUND is the IMMEDIATE DISSOLUTION OF LOK SABHA. If one truly supports the idea of SIR, then as per the EC's own statement - THE PEOPLE OF THIS COUNTRY HAVE BEEN BETRAYED," said the Trinamool Congress leader. He also urged the Election Commission to conduct SIR across the country. "Also, If the new CEC is truly as competent as claimed, then the SIR should be implemented across the country, not selectively in poll-bound states," he said. Banerjee on Tuesday said the SIR proposed by the ECI was acceptable only if the current Parliament is dissolved. He said that if he agreed that SIR was necessary since there were manipulations in the voters' list, then it should also be accepted that the last Lok Sabha elections were conducted with that manipulated voters' list. "So the current Parliament should be dismantled. Since the Prime Minister and the Union Home Minister were elected by that manipulated voters' list, they should also resign. In the meantime, there were Assembly elections in some states, with a manipulated voters' list. So the Assemblies in those states should also be dismantled,' Banerjee told media persons outside the Kolkata Airport. He said that legal action should be initiated against former Chief Election Commissioner Rajiv Kumar since, under his leadership, such elections with a 'manipulated voters' list were conducted. The ECI on Monday issued a fact-check dismissing as 'incorrect' statements issued by agitating Opposition leaders over alleged "voter list manipulation".

Inside Trump's $175 Billion Golden Dome Missile Defence System
Inside Trump's $175 Billion Golden Dome Missile Defence System

NDTV

time28 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Inside Trump's $175 Billion Golden Dome Missile Defence System

The Trump administration's flagship Golden Dome missile defence system will include four layers -- one satellite-based and three on land -- with 11 short-range batteries located across the continental US, Alaska and Hawaii, according to a US government slide presentation on the project first reported by Reuters. The slides, tagged "Go Fast, Think Big!" were presented to 3,000 defence contractors in Huntsville, Alabama, last week and reveal the unprecedented complexity of the system, which faces an ambitious 2028 deadline set by US President Donald Trump. The system is estimated to cost $175 billion, but the slides show uncertainties still loom over the basic architecture of the project because the number of launchers, interceptors, ground stations, and missile sites needed for the system has yet to be determined. "They have a lot of money, but they don't have a target of what it costs yet," said one US official. So far Congress has appropriated $25 billion for Golden Dome in Trump's tax-and-spend bill passed in July. Another $45.3 billion is earmarked for Golden Dome in his 2026 presidential budget request. Intended as a multi-layered missile defence shield for the United States, Golden Dome draws inspiration from Israel's Iron Dome, but is significantly bigger due to the geography it will need to protect and the complexity due to the varied threats it will face. According to the slides, the system architecture consists of four integrated layers: a space-based sensing and targeting layer for missile warning and tracking as well as "missile defence" and three land-based layers consisting of missile interceptors, radar arrays, and potentially lasers. One surprise was a new large missile field - seemingly in the Midwest according to a map contained in the presentation - for Next Generation Interceptors (NGI) which are made by Lockheed Martin and would be a part of the "upper layer" alongside Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) Aegis systems which are also made by Lockheed. NGI is the modernised missile for the Ground-Based Midcourse Defence (GMD) network of radars, interceptors and other equipment - currently the primary missile defence shield to protect the United States from intercontinental ballistic missiles from rogue states. The US operates GMD launch sites in southern California and Alaska. This plan would add a third site in the Midwest to counter additional threats. Other technical hurdles the slides identified included communication latency across the "kill chain" of systems. Contractors such as Lockheed, Northrop Grumman, RTX, and Boeing have a variety of missile defence systems. Notably, the slides did not mention Elon Musk's SpaceX, which was part of a bid for Golden Dome contracts alongside software maker Palantir and defence systems manufacturer Anduril. The Pentagon said it is gathering information "from industry, academia, national labs, and other government agencies for support to Golden Dome" but it would be "imprudent" to release more information on a program in these early stages. One key goal for Golden Dome is to shoot targets down during their "boost phase," the slow and predictable climb through the Earth's atmosphere of a missile. Rather, it seeks to field space-based interceptors that can more quickly intercept incoming missiles. The presentation highlighted that the United States "has built both interceptors and re-entry vehicles" but has never built a vehicle that can handle the heat of reentry while targeting an enemy missile. The last lines of defence dubbed the "under layer" and "Limited Area Defence" will include new radars and current systems like the Patriot missile defence system and a new "common" launcher that will launch current and future interceptors against all threat types. These modular and relocatable systems would be designed to minimise reliance on prepared sites, allowing for rapid deployment across multiple theaters. Space Force General Michael Guetlein, confirmed last month to lead the Golden Dome project, has 30 days from his July 17 confirmation to build a team, another 60 days to deliver an initial system design, and 120 days to present a full implementation plan, including satellite and ground station details, people briefed on a memo signed by Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth have told Reuters.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store