Congress Leader Praises India's "Mature" West Asia Diplomacy, Calls for Unity

Senior Congress leader Anand Sharma has commended the NDA government's diplomatic handling of the West Asia crisis, describing it as mature and skillful. He emphasized the need for national unity and a sustained dialogue to back the government's response with a national consensus. Sharma warned that the conflict poses severe economic challenges, including supply chain disruptions and rupee depreciation, requiring urgent tackling. His supportive stance marks a notable divergence from his own party's criticism, exemplified by Rahul Gandhi's recent sharp attack on Prime Minister Modi's foreign policy.

Key Points: Anand Sharma Lauds India's Crisis Handling, Differs from Congress

  • Congress leader praises govt diplomacy
  • Calls for national consensus on crisis
  • Warns of economic fallout from war
  • Stance differs from party's criticism
3 min read

"India's handling of crisis mature, skilful": Senior Congress leader Anand Sharma

Senior Congress leader Anand Sharma calls India's West Asia diplomacy "mature and skilful," urging national unity, even as Rahul Gandhi criticizes PM Modi's foreign policy.

"Indian diplomatic handling of the crisis has been mature and skillful - Anand Sharma"

New Delhi, April 2

Senior Congress leader Anand Sharma on Thursday lauded the NDA government's efforts to navigate through the crisis in West Asia, terming the diplomatic approach as "mature and skilful".

He further called for "national unity", seeing a mature response prioritising national interest as the "need of the hour".

"Indian diplomatic handling of the crisis has been mature and skillful avoiding potential minefields. India's response must be backed by a national consensus and resolve. Government has held an all-party meeting to apprise the leadership of political Parties of the situation and policy decisions in an unpredictable and volatile situation," Sharma said in a post on X.

"This national dialogue should be sustained. National unity and a mature response guided by national interest are the need of the hour," he added.

Sharma predicted that global supply chain disruption can lead to depreciation of the rupee, calling for an urgent need to tackle this challenge. He also urged dialogue when rule based multilateral order is on the verge of collapse.

"The war has aggravated the energy, economic and global security challenges. Global supply chain disruption, tremors in world markets and sharp depreciation of the Rupee and national currencies present an immediate and long term challenge that needs to be urgently tackled. The enormity of the crisis must be fully registered. The world can not remain a mute spectator to the collapse of rule based multilateral order and the global crisis management mechanism," he stated.

He advised that India must mobilise the global south and strategic partner countries for the restoration of peace.

"India has throughout history commanded respect for its moral authority and commitment to peace. There is much at stake, especially the future of the younger generation. India must endeavour to mobilise the global south and strategic partner countries to collectively work for the restoration of peace and order," he said.

Sharma's views differ from Congress, which has constantly criticised the government, blaming it for the LPG supply situation in the country.

Earlier, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi slammed PM Narendra Modi's handling of the West Asia conflict, alleging that India has been sidelined in international negotiations and describing the PM as "compromised".

"Our foreign policy is Prime Minister Modi's personal foreign policy. You can see the result of this. It's a universal joke. Everybody considers it a universal joke," he said.

Escalating tensions in West Asia, particularly the ongoing conflict involving the United States, Israel, and Iran, have led to a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz--a crucial route that handles nearly one-fifth of the world's crude oil supply. Before the crisis, India sourced around 12-15% of its oil imports through this route.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
He's absolutely right about the rupee and supply chains. As someone who runs a small export business, I'm already feeling the pinch. The government needs to act fast to shield our economy. This is where practical policy matters more than rhetoric.
R
Rohit P
Finally, a voice of reason from the opposition! It's refreshing to see a leader prioritise the country over blind criticism. We need more of this consensus-building, especially when our energy security is at stake due to the Hormuz situation.
P
Priyanka N
While I appreciate the call for unity, I hope this isn't just words. The government must be truly transparent in these all-party meetings. The common citizen needs to know the real plan to tackle fuel prices and inflation that will surely follow.
M
Michael C
Mobilising the Global South is a smart strategic move. India has the credibility and the position to lead that conversation. This crisis shows why we need strong, consistent diplomacy, not just reactive measures.
K
Kavya N
The internal contradiction within the Congress is glaring. One senior leader praises the handling, while another calls it a "universal joke." This kind of confusion doesn't inspire confidence in the opposition's alternative vision, if any.
V
Varun X
His point about the younger generation's future is crucial. War far

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