[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Congress leader Rahul Gandhi today asked External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar to teach the PM “a little bit about diplomacy” while thanking him for “covering up” for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “incompetence” reflected in his ‘Abi baar Trump Sarkaar’ remark at the “Howdy, Modi!” event in Texas Houston.
Modi’s remark, Rahul Gandhi said, had caused serious problems with the Democrats for India.
“Thank you Mr. Jaishankar for covering up our PM’s incompetence. His fawning endorsement caused serious problems with the Democrats for India. I hope it gets ironed out with your intervention. While you’re at it, do teach him a little bit about diplomacy,” Gandhi wrote on Twitter.
He tagged a news report with his tweet, quoting Jaishankar as saying that what the prime minister had said at the “Howdy, Modi!” event in Houston recently should not be misinterpreted.
Earlier today, Jaishankar said PM Modi’s remark should not be misinterpreted as endorsing Trump’s re-election bid when he used the term “Ab ki baar Trump sarkar” at his mega “Howdy, Modi!” event in the US last month. Jaishankar said Modi used it only to refer to what Donald Trump had used during his presidential campaign.
Jaishankar, who is on a three-day visit to Washington D.C., said India has a “very non-partisan” approach to the domestic politics in the US.
When asked about the implication of PM Modi using the slogan in his Houston address, Jaishankar said, “No, he did not say that.”
“I think, please, look very carefully at what the prime minister said. My recollection of what the prime minister said was that candidate Trump had used this (“Ab Ki Baar Trump Sarkaar”). So PM is talking about the past. I don’t think we should, honestly, misinterpret what was said. I don’t think you’re doing a good service to anybody,” Jaishankar said in response to the question.
“I mean, he (Modi) was pretty clear what he was talking about. He was saying, this is what you said as a candidate, which showed that you were trying to, (connect with India and its people even as a candidate),” Jaishankar said, urging the journalist to be accurate. “We have a very nonpartisan (approach to domestics US politics). So, our sort of approach to whatever happens in this country is their politics, not our politics,” Jaishankar said.
Addressing the Indian diaspora in Texas during the ‘Howdy, Modi’ event, PM Modi hailed Trump saying he admires him for his “sense of leadership, a passion for America, a concern for every American and a strong resolve to make America great again”.
“The words of candidate Trump, ‘Abki Baar Trump sarkar’, rang loud and clear. And his celebration of Diwali in the White House lit up millions of faces with joy and appreciation,” Modi had said while introducing Trump. This was the first time that both the leaders were sharing the stage together.
PM Modi’s remarks came under sharp criticism from Congress who accused him of violating India’s foreign policy of not interfering in the domestic elections of another country. In a series of tweets, Congress senior spokesperson Anand Sharma had said Modi was in the US as India’s prime minister and not a star campaigner in the US elections.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]