Jaishankar Slams Rahul Gandhi Over China Policy Remarks, Says ‘I May as Well Go to the Original Source…’

External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar.  (Image: EAM Jaishankar's Twitter)

External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar. (Image: EAM Jaishankar’s Twitter)

Jaishankar was referring to Gandhi’s meeting with the Chinese ambassador during the Doklam crisis to hit out at Gandhi’s statement against him at an event held by Indian Journalist’s Association in London

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Saturday launched a scathing attack against Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s “does not understand the China threat” remark and quipped that he would have “offered” to take classes but he discovered the latter was taking lessons from the Chinese ambassador.

“I would have offered to take classes on China from Rahul Gandhi. But I discovered that he was taking classes on China from the Chinese ambassador. So I asked myself that I may as well go to the original source and talk to them,” Jaishankar said at the ‘Foreign Policy of Modi Government’ event in Mysore.

Jaishankar was referring to Gandhi’s meeting with the Chinese ambassador during the Doklam crisis to hit out at Gandhi’s statement against him at an event held by Indian Journalist’s Association in London in March.

“When asked about military threats facing India,” the former Congress president had said, “You have to deal with military threats militarily. But you have to understand the nature of the threat, and you have to respond to the nature of the threat. I had one conversation with the foreign minister in my view, he doesn’t understand the threat.”

Collective Responsibility to Maintain India’s Strong Position Abroad

Speaking at the event, the external affairs minister emphasised the need for a collective responsibility to maintain India’s strong position abroad. “Unfortunately, foreign policy has also become an arena. I am not innocent and I am not saying that there should not be politics. Today I am in politics. I know everything in politics is political. But I think on certain issues, we have collective responsibility to behave in a way in which we do not weaken our collective position abroad,” he said.

He cited an example of a bridge built by the Chinese on Pangong Tso, stating that the area had been occupied by them in 1962. He mentioned the issue of so-called model villages built on areas lost before or during the 1962 war.

Jaishankar expressed his disappointment in reducing serious conversations on China to a mere slanging match. He did not attribute any political colour to the issue and called for a collective responsibility to have a serious China conversation with different viewpoints.

“What has happened has happened. It’s our collective, I would say failure or responsibility. I do not necessarily attribute political colouring to it. I would like to see is actually a serious China conversation. I’m prepared to accept that there are different viewpoints on that, but if you reduce it to kind of slanging match, what can I say after that?” he said.

In March, Jaishankar criticised Gandhi for his comments about China during the India Today Conclave in New Delhi.

The minister had said that it doesn’t make sense when people who are friendly towards China suddenly try to act tough on China. Jaishankar further pointed out that Gandhi had spoken admiringly about China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), even comparing it to the Yellow River in China. “He compares, very poetically, I must say, the BRI with the Yellow River in China gushing forward. The BRI goes through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. It violates our national integrity and sovereignty. He doesn’t have a word to say about it,” he had said.

Meanwhile, Gandhi has been vocal about his criticism of the BJP-led Centre’s handling of the Idnia-China border issue. He has criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s statement that “nobody has entered India territory,” following the scuffle in Galwan Vally in 2020 was an invitation for China to repeat its actions. “The Prime Minister’s statement that nobody has entered our territory shows that he does not understand the threat because the message to China with that statement is that they can do it again,” Gandhi had said.

‘If I have a good guest, I am a good host’: Jaishankar on Pak FM Bilawal

The External Affairs Minister Jaishankar also spoke his interaction with Pakistan Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation Foreign Ministers’ meeting in Goa, saying he was a “good host to a good guest.”

Jaishankar pointed out that Pakistan conducts terrorism and asserts its right to do terrorism. The minister said Pakistan is a member of SAARC that doesn’t follow basic rules of international relations, supporting terror and blocking connectivity. He added that it’s not in India’s interest to be locked into perpetual hostility with Pakistan and that India needs to draw and stand by its red lines.

Jaishankar emphasized that if a neighbor attacks India’s city, “it shouldn’t be business as usual.”

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