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Atal Bihari Vajpayee: A giant in Indian politics (Profile)
New Delhi, Mar 27
In the six decades he was in
electoral politics, the now ailing Atal Bihari Vajpayee, presented the
Bharat Ratna on Friday, catapulted from one who lost one election after
another to a colossus who eventually became India’s only non-Congress
prime minister to last a full five years in office.
In the short
but tumultuous period he presided over the destiny of the world’s
largest democracy, Vajpayee - the consummate politician - stunned the
world by making India a declared nuclear state in 1998 and then almost
went to war with Pakistan before making peace in the most dramatic
fashion.
In the process, Vajpayee’s popularity came to match that
of Indira Gandhi - a woman he admired for her guts even as he hated her
politics. He also became the country's best known national leader after
Indira Gandhi and her father Jawaharlal Nehru - until Narendra Modi
stole the show in 2014.
Always seen as a moderate in a party
where some other leaders espoused Hindutva ideology, the bachelor
politician was often called the “right man in the wrong partyâ€.
Success
didn’t come easily for Vajpayee, who was born on Christmas Day in 1924
in Gwalior into a family of moderate means. His father was a teacher.
Vajpayee would later recall his early brush with poverty.
Vajpayee
did his Masters in Political Science, studying at the Victoria College
in Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh and at the DAV College in Kanpur in Uttar
Pradesh, where he first contested - and lost - elections on behalf of
the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the Bharatiya Janata Party's predecessor. By
then he had embraced the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS).
But
even as he struggled to win electoral battles, his command over Hindi,
his ability to agree-to-disagree, and his envious oratory brought him
into limelight in a manner that it could never fade away.
His
first entry into parliament was in 1962 through the Rajya Sabha. It was
only in 1971 that he won a Lok Sabha battle. He was elected to the Lok
Sabha seven times in all - and to the Rajya Sabha twice.
Vajpayee
spent months in prison when Indira Gandhi imposed Emergency Rule in
June 1975. When the Janata Party took office in 1977, dethroning the
Congress nationally for the first time, he became the foreign minister.
The
lowest point in his career came when he lost the 1984 Lok Sabha
election, that too from his birthplace Gwalior. And the BJP he led ended
up with just two seats in the 545-member Lok Sabha. In no time,
Vajpayee was eclipsed by his long time friend L.K. Advani.
Although
they were the best of friends publicly, Vajpayee never fully agreed
with Advani's advocacy of Hindutva. When Hindu mobs razed the Babri
mosque in 1992, his was a lone voice in the Hindu nationalist pantheon
who didn't sound happy. When Hindu hardliners celebrated, Vajpayee was
full of personal remorse and called it the "worst miscalculation".
It
was precisely this persona of Vajpayee - one merged in Hindutva yet
seemingly not wholly willing to bow to it - that won him admirers
cutting across the political spectrum. This trait made him the prime
minister when BJP's allies concluded they needed a moderate to steer a
hardliner party widely seen as pro-Hindu.
Vajpayee proved to be
an astute politician, at times seen as a statesman. He combined the
compulsions of politics with his BJP's rightwing ideology but would
seldom budge from the USP of his high ethical pedestal.
His first
stint as prime minister in 1996 lasted 13 days, from May 16 to 28. The
second one ran for 13 months, from March 19, 1998. But he learnt his
lessons from failures to preside over a National Democratic Alliance
(NDA) that took office on Oct 13, 1999, and completed a five-year term.
His was the first multi-party coalition in India to do so.
His
government tested a nuclear device in May 1998, a little over a quarter
century after the first such explosion when Indira Gandhi was prime
minister. In doing this, and despite global censure, he thrust India
into the nuclear club - until then restricted to a privileged few. It
was an action that finally resulted in the path-breaking India-US
nuclear deal of 2008.
In 1998, Vajpayee launched a widely
acclaimed diplomatic initiative by starting a bus service between New
Delhi and Lahore in Pakistan. Its inaugural run in February 1999 took
Vajpayee to Pakistan. The service was suspended after the 2001 terror
attack on Indian parliament that nearly led to war between India and
Pakistan.
The freeze between the two countries, including an
eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation on the border for nearly a year, was
finally cracked in the spring of 2003 when Vajpayee, while in Kashmir,
extended a "hand of friendship" to Pakistan.
That led to a
historic summit in January 2004 with then president Pervez Musharraf in
Islamabad, a remarkable U-turn after the failed summit in Agra of 2001.
Vajapyee
was not known as "Atalji", a name that translates into unyielding, for
nothing. He could go against the grain of his party if he saw it deviate
from its path. There were times when Vajpayee would withdraw into a
shell, due to disagreements with party colleagues, at times forcing them
to mollify their icon.
His critics insisted that Vajpayee was
only an expedient mask for the Hindutva ideology his party espoused. As
prime minister he rebuked his then BJP chief minister Narendra Modi in
Gujarat as hundreds died in a communal conflagration in 2002. But he
defended him at a party meet days later.
Vajpayee wrote several
books and Hindi poetry. He was a master of pauses, an expert at evading
replies, often shrugging off tough posers with a huge laugh, a cold
stare or a long pause.
When he stepped down in May 2004 after an
election that he was given to believe he would win, it marked the end of
a long and eventful political career. Almost since then, Vajpayee has
suffered from frail health, so much so that the Bharat Ratna was on
Friday taken to his house and given to the bed-ridden man.