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UK ex-PM Johnson showers praise on 'changemaker' PM Modi in new memoir

'Unleashed', which hit the shelves in the UK this week, devotes a whole chapter to Britain's relationship with India as a relationship as good as it has ever been

British High Commission said the UK will issue an Open General Export Licence (OGEL) to India to cut the delivery period for defence procurement

Johnson goes on to credit himself with injecting a broader vision for the India-UK partnership. | File Photo

Press Trust of India London

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Former British prime minister Boris Johnson is all praise for change-maker Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a new memoir that reflects upon his eventful political career and recalls a curious astral energy that he felt on his very first meeting with the Indian leader.

'Unleashed', which hit the shelves in the UK this week, devotes a whole chapter to Britain's relationship with India, describing it as a relationship as good as has ever been.

Repeatedly stressing the strong India-UK friendship in the context of the Indo-Pacific, the former British prime minister credits himself for setting the course for a proper free-trade deal with India thanks to finding "exactly the partner and friend" needed in PM Modi.
 

"For some reason, we went down to stand in the dark in the plaza by Tower Bridge, in front of a crowd of his supporters," recalls Johnson in the chapter titled 'Britain and India', referencing his first meeting with Modi during a visit to his City Hall office by the river Thames when he was Mayor of London.

"He raised my arm and chanted something or other in Hindi, and though I couldn't follow it I felt his curious astral energy. I have enjoyed his company ever since because I reckon he is the change-maker our relationship needs. With Modi, I felt sure, we could not only do a great free-trade deal but also build a long-term partnership, as friends and equals," he writes.

Johnson reveals how a distinctly sniffy UK Foreign Office had warned him off meeting the Hindu nationalist leader during an earlier mayoral trade delegation to India in 2012, a problem that was soon dropped to pave the way for a relationship that "hit an all-time high".

The 60-year-old politician-author asserts how much he loves India, being a "veteran" of many Indian weddings because his children with Sikh heritage ex-wife Marina Wheeler trace their roots to the country.

While he writes with pride of a similar "Anglo-Indian syncretism" in politics with his diverse Cabinet as PM including many British Indians such as Rishi Sunak and Priti Patel, Johnson laments the slow-paced growth of bilateral trade due to unnecessary trade barriers that leave UK visitors clinking in with duty-free booze for Indians starved of Scotch whisky at decent prices.

Johnson also recalls the tremendous success of his visit to India as PM in January 2022 as a much-needed morale booster and balm for the soul away from an increasingly belligerent domestic politics that would eventually end in his unceremonious exit from 10, Downing Street just a few months later.

He claims he had also wanted to use the visit to make a gentle point to Modi on the issue of relations with Russia being at a global inflection point with its conflict with Ukraine.

He writes: "I knew all the history and the sensitivities, the reasons for India's post-war non-alignment with the West, the seemingly unbreakable relationship with Moscow. I understand the Indian dependence like China's on Russian hydrocarbons. But I wondered if it was not time for a modulation, a rethink... As I was to put it to the Indians, Russian missiles were turning out to be less accurate, statistically, than my first serve at tennis. Did they really want to keep Russia as their main supplier of military hardware?"

It is in this context that in another section of the book, where he showers the late Queen Elizabeth II with effusive praise for her deep personal knowledge of history and history-makers, he references his efforts to get India to take a tougher line with Russians.

The Queen, he writes, remembered something the former Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru had told her in the 1950s. 'He told me that India will always side with Russia and that some things will never change. They just are,' Johnson recalls being told by the Queen. "I cite that as an illustration of her amazing ability to reassure and to contextualise," he says, with reference to his customary weekly audiences with the late monarch when he was prime minister.

Johnson goes on to credit himself with injecting a broader vision for the India-UK partnership to go beyond trade and climate change and educational partnerships and embark on a whole programme of military and technological collaboration.

Overcoming the qualms of the MoD (Ministry of Defence), who he claims are always worried about India's closeness to Russia, we agreed to work together on all kinds of military technology, from submarines to helicopters to marine propulsion units, he declares.

With 'Unleashed', Johnson seems to be keen to stress a lack of bitterness over his undignified removal as PM in the wake of the PartyGate scandal of Covid law-breaking parties but is clear that it was Rishi Sunak, his eventual successor at 10 Downing Street, who precipitated his exit by resigning as chancellor from the Cabinet in June 2022.

"It was worse than a crime, I thought, it was a mistake both for Rishi and for the party, never mind the country. So it proved, he writes, alluding to the recent disastrous general election result for the Tories," Johnson writes.

"I don't blame Rishi for prematurely wanting to be PM; in fact I don't blame any of them, really, for trying to turf me out. It's just what Tory MPs do...It goes without saying that if we had all stuck together I have no doubt that we would have gone on to win in 2024, and a lot more of my friends would now have their seats," he claims.

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First Published: Oct 12 2024 | 4:47 PM IST

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