Ukraine crisis
Thomas Edmunds
Chennai
RUSSIA has successfully averted the threat to its borders by annexing Crimea. Vladimir Putin has shown that the days of the unipolar world are numbered.
The hidden agenda of the West was to destroy the Russian naval base in Crimea. Putin saw through the game and sought a referendum. He won as the people of Crimea chose to be a part of Russia. The U.S. sanctions on Russia will be counterproductive.
Deendayal M. Lulla
Mumbai
Khushwant Singh
KHUSHWANT SINGH’S death is a great loss to the literary and media fraternity (“Electric man in a bulb”, April 18). The void left by him will be difficult to fill. His column was read and enjoyed by all, irrespective of their age. He was one of the best authors of his time who knew the tastes of the masses. He was brutally honest, sometimes bordering on rudeness. Many people did not appreciate this honesty in matters like politics and sex. But Khushwant was unapologetic about it. He lived his life being true to himself and that reflected in his writing. He once famously claimed at a press conference that “any rubbish I write gets published”. But he took pride in his work. The best part about him was his humility.
Mahesh Kapasi
New Delhi
K.R. Srinivasan
Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh
I VENERATED two Indian journalists—R.K. Karanjia, the firebrand editor of “Blitz”, and Khushwant Singh, author and columnist. “Free Frank Fearless” was how Karanjia characterised his tabloid. The “lecherous” freethinker Khushwant gave a sleazy character and fame to “The Illustrated Weekly of India”. Is it not baffling that Morarji Desai, a prohibitionist and purist, and Khushwant, who enjoyed life to the hilt and perhaps believed that “a couple of whiskies a day keeps the doctor away”, died peacefully at the same ripe age of 99?
K.P. Rajan
Mumbai
KHUSHWANT lived a fruitful life spanning nine decades. In the epitaph he wrote for himself in “Death at My Doorstep”, he says : “Here lies one who spared neither man nor God / Waste not your tears on him, he was a sod / Writing nasty things he regarded as great fun / Thank the Lord he is dead, this son of a gun.”
Jayant Mukherjee
Kolkata
India-China war
THE essay “India-China War: The True Story” (April 18) reveals the persons and reasons behind India’s “Forward Policy”. It is also true that the Chief Information Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah refused to share with Indian citizens the Henderson Brooks report on the war.
In 1962, the conditions of both the Indian Army and the Indian Air Force were better than those of China, but the essay does not look at India’s military failure.
Rakesh Kumar Rajbansi
Kolkata
Development myths
THIS is with reference to the Cover Story “Whose development is it anyway?” (April 4). Articles of this kind started appearing in the media once it became clear that a Narendra Modi wave was sweeping the country. Modi has been following his economic model in Gujarat since he came to power in 2001. Nobody felt the need to question him then. While the nation has rejected the Nehruvian and the Left’s models of development, it is a fact that Gujarat’s voters are happy with the Modi model.
Duggaraju Srinivasa Rao
Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh
THIS refers to your article “Marketing politicians” by Prabat Patnaik (April 4). Politics today needs big money and a bigger marketing effort. It needs the support of the media and the right campaign to market itself to its target audience. Modi is playing his cards effectively at this stage. Who knows what will happen?
S. Ganesh
Chennai