He reiterated his party's demand for a joint parliamentary committee probe into the deal, saying only it could call for all relevant records. "The CAG is not God," he said, apparently rejecting the ruling BJP's contention that the national auditor's report should be the final word on the contentious issue.
"The CAG allowed itself to become a joke and an honourable government in future will restore the prestige and credibility of the institution," Chidambaram said.
"If you thought those 33 pages will bring to light the hidden aspects of the deal and explain matters relating to numbers, pricing, delivery etcetera and comment on correctness and propriety of transaction, you will be disappointed," he said.
The much-awaited report of the Comptroller and Auditor General on the controversy-hit deal was tabled in Parliament on Wednesday. According to the report, the Modi government secured a 2.86 percent cheaper price for Rafale fighter jets than what was negotiated by the UPA regime.
However it flagged that removal of 'sovereign guarantees' only benefitted the French manufacturer, and not India. It also pointed out that certain India-specific enhancements in the new deal were "not required" and the Ministry of Defence overruled the Indian Air Force's proposal to reduce the number of these enhancements.
(With PTI inputs)
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