Bring
White Paper on KGB
disclosures : Advaniji
BJP
President Shri L.K. Advaniji has taken Congress-led UPA Government
to task by voicing people's anger on links of corruption between
Russian Secret Agency KGB, CPI and successive Congress Governments
from 1950s to 1980s.
Taking
immediate action on this serious issue, Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee,
Shri L.K.Advani and Shri Jaswant Singh, sent a joint letter
(see opposite page) to PM Manmohan Singh on September 23,
2005. In it, they expressed concern about the serious damage
to our nation's good name and urged PM to rebut strongly if
these allegations were false. They also requested the PM to
initiate a public inquiry.
When
PM did not bother to reply for ten days, Shri L.K.Advani decided
to inform the people by issuing a Statement in a Press Conference
on October 2, 2005, and releasing that letter to media. Shri
Advaniji also demanded that Congress-led UPA Government bring
out a White Paper in a given time-frame, to uncover the truth.
|
It
is today (October 2, 2005) more than a week that Shri A.B. Vajpayee,
Shri Jaswant Singh and I had addressed a joint letter to Prime Minister
Dr. Manmohan Singh expressing our concern over the disclosures made
in the KGB papers, and urging a public inquiry into the allegations
levelled.
We
felt that the issues raised by these revelations go well beyond individuals
or even parties. Some of the charges made are such that the reputation
of our entire Country gets sullied in the process.
As
there has been no response from the Prime Minister till date, I am
today releasing the text of the letter to the media.
The
UPA establishment, till now, has chosen either total reticence or
blatant evasion with regard to the revelations made in volume II of
Mitrokhin Archives, originally tilled: "The world was going our
way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World".
It
will be less than honest and far from convincing to sidetrack these
allegations as having been fabricated by an individual or any conspiring
power.
Letter
to Prime Minister
Dear
Dr. Manmohan Singh,
No
doubt you have seen reports that have appeared internationally,
also in the national media regarding certain disclosures made
by the KGB papers. These are broadly of two kinds? one, contained
in the book 'The Mitrokhin Archive? II : The KGB and the World',
which is not yet available on the stands in India but is accessible
through website and which has two if not more chapters specific
to India. The other kind of material is memoirs of former
Soviet officials, who have given voice to what they did including
payments of monies to various citizens of India. Such allegations
are contained in 'The Mitrokhin Archives -- Volume II', as
also in the papers of I.A Benediktov.
I
am sure you will agree that the issues raised by these disclosures
go well beyond individuals, or even particular political parties
only. The allegations are such that virtually all of India
gets charged, the name of our country getting sullied in the
process.
That
in essence, is our concern, the nation's good name, particularly
when it is said that 'India was the easiest country for KGB
operatives to penetrate'.
We
write this letter to you in the hope that you will take it
in the light in which it is written. The central question
here, along with the good name of the country, is about the
image of public life, also the imperative need of rebutting
robustly such allegations as are false.
May
we therefore, request you to please initiate such public inquiry
in the matter as would clear the situation at the very earliest,
say in not later than four weeks. In addition it would be
worthy of your consideration to encourage the political parties
concerned to also file suits for defamation in the appropriate
courts of law, should these allegations, be held by them as
untrue.
We
are sure you will appreciate the intent of this letter. After
waiting for a suitable period for your reply, we will release
this letter to the Press.
With
regards,
Yours
sincerely,
Atal
Bihari Vajpayee
Lal Krishan Advani
Jaswant Singh
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During
the Cold War era, Soviet Russia was our close friend. And it is certainly
a blot on the fair name of our country to be told by the leading Intelligence
Agency of that Country that India those days was a " country
open for sale " or " a model of KGB infiltration into the
third world".
The
UPA Government has a responsibility to come clean on this issue that
has scandalised the country. The official secrecy of the country seems
to have been seriously breached at that time. The PMO, the Defence
Ministry and even the Intelligence Bureau appear to have been penetrated.
It
is alleged that during 1975, the year of the infamous Emergency, a
total amount of 10.6 million roubles (more than £ 10 million
in then prevailing exchange rates) were spent by KGB on influence
operations to support Mrs. Gandhi, and to undermine her political
opponents.
The
KGB papers have further alleged that in the 1977 elections, there
were 21 non-communist politicians, including four Union Ministers,
whose elections were subsidised by KGB.
Indeed,
the charge that in 1978, KGB was running over 30 agents in India,
10 of whom were Indian intelligence officers is a matter of great
concern, if true.
Another
area of concern in this context is the influence the KGB came to wield
on the Indian press. By 1973, it is claimed the KGB had as many as
10 leading Indian newspapers and one leading wire service on its pay-
rolls. This must be fully investigated, our "freedom of speech"
is the issue.
Of
course, Leaders of the Marxist Parties being on Moscow's pay-roll
would not come as a surprise to any one except to the uninitiated.
The Communist Party of India was until 1943, just the Indian chapter
of the Communist International, controlled directly from Moscow. No
wonder it had collaborated with the British during the Quit India
Movement of 1942- 43. Even after independence, in 1962, it had no
qualms justifying the Chinese invasion.
In
so far as India is concerned, the time period to which most of the
KGB exposures relate is the mid-seventies.
Ironically,
it was in 1973 that the Government of India introduced in Parliament
The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Bill, 1973. The Bill was referred
to a Joint Select Committee and passed in 1976. With some later amendments,
this is still an important law on the Statute book.
Under
this law, all Government employees, all Members of Parliament and
State Legislatures, all political parties, their office bearers or
candidates for election, and furthermore, all media persons are totally
prohibited from accepting any foreign contribution.
This
law bans all these categories from accepting even hospitality from
any foreign source except with the permission of Government. Was this
not a monstrous fraud on democracy that at a point of time when an
ordinary newsman or a naïve member of a State Assembly could
become subject to severe penalties if he were to accept an invitation
to visit a foreign country, those in Government were accepting crores
and crores without any hesitation what so ever.
The
voluminous exposures, made in these KGB papers add up to an extremely
disturbing scandal, calling for a comprehensive enquiry by a Supreme
Court judge.
The
country would like to know how much of all that is contained in these
sensational papers is true. In our letter to the Prime Minister we
have urged him " to encourage the political parties concerned
to file suits in the appropriate courts of law " in respect of
all such allegations as they think are not true. The BJP demands that
the Prime Minister makes a detailed statement in this regard without
any further delay.
There
is need to fully investigate our intelligence agencies, too. The nation's
security is the issue.
Also,
the Government must commit itself to bringing out a White Paper in
a given time frame sharing with the nation all the information it
has on the foreign funds pumped into India since independence to pollute
its politics.
The
White Paper, we demand should not be confined to the KGB. It must
cover all foreign sources, including CIA & ISI. Senator Moyinhan
has in his papers recorded some facts about the CIA's activities in
India. As for the ISI, there is no requirement of any elaboration
of that Agency and its activities in India.
Both
the main parties in the UPA Government have come under a cloud because
of these KGB revelations. Their silence is understandable.
The
country, however, hopes that the Prime Minister will respond boldly
to our plea, and clinch the issue.
The
people cannot forget that when the Nanavati Commission described the
1984 killings in the capital as "an organised carnage",
it was Dr. Manmohan Singh who mustered courage to apologise publicly
to the nation for the gory happenings. He personally had nothing to
do with those crimes.
The
situation is very similar today. If Dr. Manmohan Singh announces that
Government will come out with a White Paper, and also set up a judicial
enquiry, he would be serving a twofold cause - firstly patriotism,
and next, integrity in public life. And he would simultaneously be
redeeming the country of the stigma that may stick to us because of
these exposures.