A plane tale from the past
This is a story from the summer of 1996 that I had salted away for my memoirs, but am tempted to tell now because it may have some relevance to the muddying politics of these times. I do, however, seek forgiveness if any of the eminent cast of characters still prefers that the story isn't told.
You might remember how a little controversy had started to build in the last days of the Narasimha Rao government when, with election campaign in full swing, the Sukhoi-30 deal was signed with the Russians and, as you would expect, The Indian Express broke the story (scooped by Amitav Ranjan, now senior assistant editor). There were immediate protests from the BJP. This was after all a caretaker government. Then, surprisingly, the BJP stepped back.
I got a call one morning from Jaswant Singh to talk about the Sukhoi story. What did I think about the deal, he asked. Did I suspect there was a scam, like Bofors? I told him I had heard no such thing and that my friends in the IAF thought this was a great aircraft. He then asked me if I would see Mr Vajpayee (then leader of the Opposition) to talk more about this. The same afternoon, I got a call from Vajpayee's home to see him at breakfast the next morning. But before I get into the meat of our discussions that morning, I can't avoid the temptation of mentioning what I — and all animal lovers would understand why — found the highlight of that meeting, Vajpayee lovingly, and generously, buttering a crisp toast and feeding it in small pieces to his favourite pomeranian, while exploring the possibility of a scandal bigger than Bofors.
His question, briefly, was as follows. The lame-duck Congress government had sealed the deal in its last days in an unseemly hurry. It was also his 'information' that the government had paid an advance of around $350 million to the Russians without any final price settlement. Why such an unusual rush? Did the Congress want to collect a kickback in the last, cash-and-carry phase of its government? He said he had heard that the Express knew more about this, or if not, could I have it looked at more closely? He said his apprehension was that "if it is a good plane, unsubstantiated talk of a scam should not scuttle the deal." At the same time, knowing the very venal ways of the Rao government, and circumstantial evidence in the case, you naturally suspected a kickback.
We checked out our usual sources and suspects and it did not seem that the decision, though hasty, was mala fide. The BJP too kept quiet, Rao's Congress was defeated anyway, and Vajpayee's coalition government was sworn in, although it lasted only 13 days.
It was towards the last couple of days of that government that Jaswant Singh called me to chat on the sidelines of a public function. "That Sukhoi story," he said, "is actually nothing." Having been in government now, they had been able to look at the files and it was a clean deal and the haste, if any, was in a larger national interest, so it would be better to forget all about it. He wouldn't tell me what that "larger" national interest was. I did find out later, but for that juicy little tidbit you have to read this article for a little bit longer.
The scene now shifts to the IAF mess on New Delhi's Zakir Hussain Marg, a few months later, and we pick up the thread of that Sukhoi story again. Now Gowda's coalition was in power and Mulayam Singh Yadav was the defence minister. His ministry had organised a small dinner for him to meet senior editors at the IAF's showpiece mess in Delhi (you can't miss it as you drive past, that's the building with a MiG and a rare HF-24 Marut, the only home-built supersonic fighter of '60s vintage, displayed in its lawns). Mulayam's defence ministry had just finalised the Sukhoi order. I stole a discreet moment to ask him if he had looked at the Sukhoi deal closely, because it was signed in such haste, there was a large, arbitrary advance involved, and because the top leaders of the BJP were at one stage suspicious about it.
"I know, I know, Jaswantji and Atalji had brought this up with me," he said. Then he went on to describe in detail how, before the final deal was signed, he had actually invited Vajpayee and Jaswant to South Block to have a detailed presentation on the deal given to them. He said they had suggested changes in the deal documentation, including the provision of a sovereign guarantee from the Russian government that no kickbacks were paid and, should any be discovered any time in future, they would reimburse the amount to the Government of India. (I later checked this with Jaswant Singh who confirmed it.) Then Mulayam said with a lot of delight: "They came to my office, we settled everything, but you people never found anything out." That conversation ended with Mulayam telling me triumphantly, and repeatedly, "Dekha, media fail ho gaya (see, the media failed to find out)."
We had failed, alright, to find out such a marvellous story, of how arch-rivals Mulayam and the BJP had actually exchanged notes on such a sensitive issue behind closed doors. Though late, it was still a great story, I thought, and so asked Ritu Sarin, the head of our investigative bureau, to find out more and, sure enough, she landed up at Jaswant Singh's office to check. At which point I once again got an invitation to Vajpayee's house. This time, the point was simple. Could the Express avoid this story please? Because if it was published, it might hamper our ability to communicate across party lines even on issues of such sensitivity and national interest. These are days of bitter, ideological politics, but governing India is serious business, he said, or something to that effect.
Now the mystery of what exactly that "larger" national interest was that had led to such haste and a large advance payment in the last days of the Rao government. It seems that Yeltsin had told Rao that he, too, was heading for elections, that the Sukhoi factory happened to be in his constituency, was too broke to even pay salaries to its staff and if India could pay it that advance it would work like magic in his election campaign. That advance was, therefore, a political deal between the big boys, to be adjusted in the final pricing later. It was a conscious, diplomatic decision, cleared by Rao (who, in retirement many years later, confirmed this to me with a wicked smile), and executed by none else than the then finance minister, Manmohan Singh.
Now, go over this story carefully, underline the cast of characters: Rao and Manmohan, Vajpayee and Jaswant, Mulayam Singh Yadav — and you know why it is relevant today. Rao took an incredibly bold decision (given the Bofors background) which the BJP, locked in a bitter electoral battle with him, was suspicious of, but did not make an issue of, in the national interest. When the BJP found the real reason (the Yeltsin request) they kept quiet — they in fact said Rao's government had handled it masterfully. Then Mulayam Singh, whose entire politics is based on anti-BJPism, was large-hearted enough to open the files to its leaders and take their advice, again in the national interest. In one story, therefore, you had the top leadership of all three major political groups — bitter enemies — involved. Yet they talked, shared confidences, and did the right thing by their nation. Now compare that with the lack of communication, even social graces, the general antagonism in our politics through this past month, and you know why that Sukhoi story is so relevant, and worthy of recall. If some harmless journalistic confidences are broken in the process, I stand guilty, but I think I should be forgiven.
Write to sg@expressindia.com
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