The Hindu February 2, 2015
By
T.P.Sreenivasan
Every
two years, sometimes more often, national media regales the readers with
stories on making and unmaking of Foreign Secretaries. No other post, not even
that of the Cabinet Secretary, attracts such national attention and interest.
The post has an aura of brilliance, political acceptability, high visibility
and also vulnerability. It is a position that legends are made on. But becoming
Foreign Secretary and staying there for a full term are Herculean tasks. But
there are also instances, in which unsuspecting officers are plucked out of
their comfortable perches in Beijing, Islamabad and Dublin and installed in the
hot seat. Some are born Foreign Secretaries, some achieve the job and some have
the job thrust upon them.
The
glamour of the Foreign Secretary is not as real as it is made out to be. The
pressures and tension emanating from above and below are such that the person
can hardly savour the power and the glory. As the interface between the
bureaucracy and the politicians, he is buffeted by both constantly. The Foreign
Service is highly competitive, if not combative. Its leader needs to have three
pairs of hands, like gods and goddesses, one to implement orders from above,
one to hold on to his chair and one to do his work. Any slackening of the hands
will bring instant retribution, often undeserved and unjust. Two years of such
tension is the reward for brilliance, manipulation or chance, one of the many
ways to secure the post. Former Foreign Secretaries are a happier lot than the
incumbents.
Any
analysis of past appointments will defy any theory about the selection of
Foreign Secretaries. Seniority has been the decisive factor in the largest
number of appointments. But there have always been ways to get around it by
rearranging the jigsaw puzzle and placing senior people in attractive posts
abroad. Merit, subjective at every stage, is a nebulous factor. The rank
allotted by the UPSC, by the most objective and diligent process. has been in
play only in some cases. To secure blue eyes, you need to be not only in the
eyes of the politicians, but also on their side. Instances of officers at the
top swinging from one political ideology to another to earn merit are not rare.
Good officers have fallen by the wayside and some have made it with poor
credentials. But the record of selection of Foreign Secretaries in the past presents
a picture of near perfection in a majority of the cases. The percentage of
aberrations is not higher than in the making of Prime Ministers or selection of
Nobel Peace Prize laureates.
The
unmaking of Foreign Secretaries presents a more complex picture. The most
celebrated case was the unprecedented sacking of a Foreign Secretary at a press
conference by the Prime Minister. The last straw in that case was a factual
issue as to whether the Prime Minister would visit Pakistan or not. The Prime
Minister not only contradicted the Foreign Secretary, but also promised the
nation a new Foreign Secretary. But it was well known that the chemistry
between Rajiv Gandhi and A.P.Vekateswaran was not the best even before the
latter was appointed Foreign Secretary. He was appointed because of his
reputation and popularity in the service itself. “Let us have a bash at it!”,
he is supposed to have said, while handing him the post. His removal was a
foregone conclusion and the favourite of the Prime Minister was all set to take
over, but the heat of the moment forced the Prime Minister to appoint the senior
most officer in the service in his place. That was the only time the Foreign
Service openly revolted against a decision of the Prime Minister.
The
removal of Jagat Mehta by Charan Singh involved issues of foreign policy rather
than personal predilections. Jagat Mehta’s rise from High Commissioner in
Tanzania to Foreign Secretary was meteoric, primarily because Indira Gandhi,
who discovered his potential. But her successors and finally she herself felt
that his vision was not in keeping with the dictates of the times. Jagat Mehta
anticipated much of the evolution of Indian foreign policy, like the reduction
of the rigidity of our nuclear policy and the engagement with the United States
and China. He had nothing against the Soviet Union, but his stress on other
relationships set the Kremlin on fire and the heat was felt in New Delhi, when
the Soviet lobby took up the cudgels against him. The fiasco in Lusaka
involving his candidature for the post of the Secretary General of the
Commonwealth speeded his removal, but it was done in a clandestine manner. He
was repeatedly told that his letter of resignation was not accepted, but his
successor, Ram Sathe, was informed of his choice through unconventional
communication channels not accessible to the serving Foreign Secretary. Indira
Gandhi herself cancelled a posting the previous Government had promised him and
he stayed on in the service as an officer on special duty as a disciplined
soldier till he retired. His vindication came when Atal Behari Vajpayee honoured
him with a Padma Bhushan many years later.
The
politically savvy and shrewd SK Singh fell victim to his own feeling of
invincibility, which prompted him to make an enemy of Inder Gujral at a time
when the latter’s rise was not anticipated by anyone. He tried to smoothen
ruffled feathers and to work for the new dispensation, but he was quietly
removed with the promise of a political appointment, which did not materialize
till the Congress Party returned to power.
The
most recent “curtailing” of a Foreign Secretary’s term and the appointment of
another two days before his retirement are illustrative of the mix of the many
factors, which lead to such decisions. Both of them are extremely competent and
both, having benefitted from political patronage, must accept its shifting
sands.
Neither
the climb up the precarious rock of bureaucratic heights nor the descent is an
easy ride for anyone. The satisfaction and pride come only when one gets back
to the earth unscathed and looks at the path traversed. The journey to the
pinnacle of the Foreign Service has more than its share of storms and
avalanches. The added hazard is that the post of the Foreign Secretary is
constantly under scrutiny because of his high profile and visibility. Making
and unmaking of Foreign Secretaries will continue to baffle the public and
frustrate the aspirants and incumbents, but the method in the madness will
surface over the passage of time.
No comments:
Post a Comment