Bengaluru: Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman Sunday said neither Prime Minister Narendra Modi nor any other NDA leader wanted to politicise armed forces and there was nothing wrong in talking about the political will giving freedom to the forces to take action as they deem fit. At an informal interactive session with intellectuals, academicians and young thinkers here, she said that the opposition had been constantly coming up with the allegations that armed forces were being politicised.
"Nobody wants to politicise the armed forces, not particularly myself or prime minister or anybody from here (government). We don't want to politicise the armed forces, she said.
Sitharaman sought to know whether it was wrong to compare how "weak" the Manmohan Singh-led government was in 2008 post-Mumbai attacks and the how "strong" the Modi government was now in 2019 after the Pulwama terror attack by Jaish-e-Mohammed which killed 40 CRPF Jawans in February.
"The action was taken after Pulwama because we felt the heat from the people saying: Is this India? Is this the government we voted for? Are you incapable of taking action? "And then the political will, based on sound intelligence information, gives the freedom to the armed forces to take the necessary action as they deemed fit. Is it wrong to say it? That is not politicisation of the armed forces," the Defence Minister asserted.
She asked the people to differentiate between politicisation and talking about the political will. Congress and other opposition parties have objected to Modi and several other BJP leaders referring to IAF's air strikes on terror camp in Balakot and mentioning the valour of the armed forces in defending the country.
The Congress on Friday moved the Election Commission against Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah for allegedly "dragging" the armed forces in the political domain by using them to seek votes.