http://blog.tehelka.com/dont-belittle-the-army-mr-rambo-nambo/

Don’t belittle the army, Mr Rambo-NaMbo
[image: Priyanka Chaturvedi]
Priyanka Chaturvedi <http://blog.tehelka.com/author/priyankachaturvedi/> June
27, 2013


The news this week that no one would have possibly missed and debated is
the one that appeared in a leading national daily. The headline
shouted<http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-06-23/india/40146385_1_uttarakhand-cm-vijay-bahuguna-narendra-modi>,
“Narendra Modi lands in Uttarakhand, flies out with 15,000 Gujaratis”.
Clearly, Mr Modi’s propaganda machinery was at work again and NaMo *bhakts* on
social media were lapping it up – he was the biggest superhero this
country, nay this planet, nay this universe had ever seen. But neither Mr
Modi nor his *bhakts* realised the true implication of what they were
boasting about. It took only a tweet and Facebook
update<https://www.facebook.com/Indianarmy.adgpi/posts/141162616080376>
from
the official account of the Indian Army’s Public Information wing to drive
home the truth. It informed the country that the brave soldiers of our
army, after putting their lives at grave risk and deploying many
helicopters and other resources, had rescued only 18,930 persons till then.
When someone who has pretensions of being a national leader behaves in a
manner which demoralises and belittles our brave soldiers, it is
unforgivable.

Moreover, what does it say of a man whose so-called “Mission 15,000” is
restricted only to Gujaratis? Isn’t the very thought behind such blatant
discrimination polarising itself? What happened to all the rhetoric of
‘India First’ and ‘*Bharat mata ka karz*’?

The moment the truth
<http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130625/jsp/frontpage/story_17045317.jsp#.UcmyjqzLeue>about
the Rambo-NaMbo act came to light, his supporters came up with another
excuse – it was only a newspaper report. This was also repeated by his
party president. This is a classic example of something called ‘plausible
deniability’ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plausible_deniability> – a
political term that says a leader can do something which will be easily
denied or blamed on others. Rather ironically, for someone so quick to come
up with a media statement on things absolutely unconnected to Gujarat, Mr
Modi couldn’t come up with a statement refuting the fanciful tale. That
itself proves who was behind the spin which belittled the valiant efforts
of our soldiers.

This is, however, not the first time Mr Modi has belittled the army. When
the UPA government with its deft diplomacy forced the Chinese to lift their
tents and move out of Depsang in Ladakh, Mr Modi claimed
that<http://www.dailypioneer.com/todays-newspaper/modi-tears-into-weak-govt-for-foreign-fiascos.html>
Indian
army had withdrawn from its posts to secure Chinese withdrawal. Last week,
one of Indian Army’s senior-most officers, the General Officer
Commanding-in-Chief, Northern Command, Lt General KT Parnaik’s media
interaction<http://www.dnaindia.com/india/1849300/report-no-compromise-was-made-to-end-stand-off-with-china-army>
showed
that Mr Modi was lying about the army: “Ultimately, the whole issue was
resolved with the Chinese reverting to the pre-April 15 situation. In doing
so, no compromise was made. We didn’t give in to any of their unusual
demands. No structures were destroyed.” We all know whom the country will
believe here: a vainglorious megalomaniac or one of our most respected
Generals.

With a title like *Feku* already to his credit, it is one thing to
blatantly lie about your party’s senior-most leader blessing your
anointment to the party’s campaign committee chairmanship, when that leader
resigns the very next day. It is one thing to lie about $450 billion of
foreign investment coming to Gujarat when the real figure is 0.5% of it. Or
lie about being invited by the government of Oman, forcing the Oman
government to issue a public notice that the visit is to a private
multinational company. Or lie about being pro-reforms while opposing every
reformist move of the government, from FDI in retail to reduction of fuel
subsidy. All that is still fine. But lying about the Indian Army is not.
The country’s most-respected and cherished institution, nourished by the
glorious sacrifices and unparalleled valour of our soldiers, doesn’t need
to be belittled at the altar of naked political ambition.

*(The views expressed in this column are the writer’s own)*


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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