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Why did 'honest' PM allow dishonest men to loot exchequer?

In 2009, Manmohan responded to the charge of being a weak PM and dynasty's doormat by giving it back to LK Advani. At Friday’s (3 January 2014) press conference, when confronted with the public perception that his stewardship of India has been disastrous, he lashed out at Narendra Modi instead.

January 07, 2014 / 08:45 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

One has always sought answers to the following questions: why did an “honest” PM allow dishonest people to loot the exchequer? Why did Manmohan Singh never assert himself with Sonia Gandhi, despite knowing that he was her most trusted option as PM? She needed him more than he needed her. And why did he take all the flak and criticism on behalf of the dynasty? And why, why could he not have resigned if he was truly against the venality the surfaced during UPA-2?

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We have to wait for his autobiography to find that out, and even then we may not. But an elementary understanding of human psychology suggests how Manmohan Singh deals with such issues: with guile and subtlety rather than by confronting issues head-on. He is a survivor. Attacks on his persona are met through a strategy of displaced aggression or indirect revenge - where you show anger against your real tormentor by making someone else the target of it, or by hitting back indirectly.

In 2009, Manmohan responded to the charge of being a weak PM and dynasty's doormat by giving it back to LK Advani. (Read about that here). At Friday’s (3 January 2014) press conference, when confronted with the public perception that his stewardship of India has been disastrous, he lashed out at Narendra Modi instead. Having Modi as PM would be "disastrous" for the country, Singh said. Even though this was in response to a journalist's question, Singh had the option of dismissing Modi’s challenge or saying he did not believe in “communal” politics, but he chose strong language. This is classic displaced aggression, for Modi has not usually targeted the PM; he goes for the dynasty.