Last
week embattled Union Defence Minister George Fernandes gave his first detailed interview
after the Bhagwat sacking to India Today Editor Prabhu
Chawla and Deputy Editor Raj
Chengappa. Excerpts: What
is your objection to the opposition parties' demand for setting up a Joint Parliamentary
Committee (JPC) to go into the Bhagwat episode?
Why? What should Parliament examine? As far as the removal of a navy chief is
concerned, it is the prerogative of the executive. If they have charges against me,
specify them. They can't have a madman's ravings put down on a 10-rupee stamp paper,
endorse it and say it is an affidavit. The JPC must have an agenda which it will
investigate. It is not something to joke about.
The Opposition believes there are enough charges.
I presume it is because they see political possibilities in this whole thing. They
do not realise the damage they are causing to the nation's security. They are questioning
the integrity of officers. Forget George Fernandes; I am dispensable.
What are you referring to?
Well, you have a Deve Gowda who wakes up one morning and says we should not buy
T-90 tanks but T-72 tanks from Russia for reasons he is yet to explain. And in doing so he
questions the integrity of one of the finest officers in the Indian Army -- General S.S.
Mehta (who headed the army committee that recommended its purchase). If there was a
situation of conflict and we had to fight in the Rajasthan desert, General Mehta would
have led a corp with 1,000 tanks into action. If I have to make a choice between General
Gowda and General Mehta, I won't take a second look at General Gowda. General Mehta has
lived with tanks all his life. He and his men would have to fight, not Gowda's sons. We
are playing with our men's lives. Gowda wanted a JPC on me. They should have a JPC on him
if they wanted to have fun and games in security matters.
Bhagwat accuses you of being funded by foreign
agencies, for harbouring terrorists and abetting gun-runners, especially from Myanmar.
Who are these Burmese gunners I am supposed to be in cahoots with? If it is these
poor Burmese students who are staying at my house, Bhagwat doesn't even know they are
looked after by the UN High Commission for Refugees. The foolishness of the man has no
limits. If it is Tibet he is referring to, I have been a supporter of the Tibetan movement
since 1949 when Bhagwat was still wearing short pants. My concerns on Tibet are no
different from the country's concerns.
He said you were considered such a security risk the
prime minister did not take you into confidence about the nuclear tests before it was
conducted.
That is not true. I was briefed much before hand, before Bhagwat was told about it.
Why didn't you take action against Defence Secretary
Ajit Kumar in September last year when the three service chiefs said they had major
problems with him?
I had no reason to question his integrity, ability, experience or commitment. I
found nothing to make me believe the man was an ogre. After all even if we have
differences of opinion there is no reason to say throw this man out. We are not
schoolchildren. I told Kumar we had to run this thing together.
Bhagwat says that you gave him no reasonable warning
before sacking him.
When it became absolutely necessary to put things on record I wrote a letter to the
prime minister on August 28 in which I cited three or four instances of total defiance by
Bhagwat to comply with government decisions. The prime minister chose his principal
secretary (Brajesh Mishra) to tell Bhagwat to take care. Bhagwat even charged into my
office after that about the letter. I also wrote letters to the prime minister on November
5 and December 7 citing more examples of his stepping out of line.
What was the last straw?
One didn't need a last straw. In any other army or service on the first defiance he
would have been told to fall in line or get out. But I didn't do that. The real crunch
came in November. This is the most sensitive aspect of the whole thing which I cannot
speak about in the near future or even the distant future. It is not a fig leaf of
national security. It impinges on our short-term and, more than that, our long-term
security concerns.
Was it his unwillingness to implement the order
appointing Harinder Singh as deputy chief of naval staff that finally made you decide to
sack him?
I had not thought that he would take things to a point where he says a government
order is not implementable. When he took that position there was no turning back.
Was it the question of asserting civilian control
over the forces?
Bureaucracy is not exclusive to the civil service. You have bureaucracies in every
institution, including political parties. Civilian control in our case is control of the
executive wing of the government which is the cabinet. And in this case you have a defence
minister who wants information and is told by his chief of staff, "No, this
information can't be given to you".
Do you regret having delayed Bhagwat's sacking?
In hindsight, yes, I feel I should have done it much earlier. I sensed a certain
arrogance in the man. But I had not expected so much venom in him towards his own
subordinates. It was not just clear cases of defiance of authority. There is a total
violation of the Navy Act by him, he even lied to the Government. I had also not
anticipated the man could expose our security concerns and cause harm to the country. If
he had continued, the damage to the navy would have been beyond repair.
Why haven't you said all this before now?
It is hurting me because I had not opened my mouth. If I had said all this
on the day it happened, this man would not have had a place to hide. But I went by the
rules. I went by the law. And I took all the blows. Even now I refuse to answer sensitive
questions -- they can blow up a lot more things in the country and our relationship with
our neighbours. And Bhagwat seems to be keen on that. So whose game is he playing by
demoralising the forces?
Has this whole issue affected your functioning?
It has not affected my functioning. The Government is aware it is not George
Fernandes who is the target. It is the Government itself.
Did you offer to resign at any stage?
Why should I resign? The prime minister has not asked me to. He has categorically
said he supports me. |