"The Tatas had mooted a proposal for a private airline with 40 per cent equity contribution from Singapore Airlines. As this would have been a formidable competitor, Jet tried hard to upset rules regarding foreign equity contribution," the former civilian aviation secretary in the I K Gujral government writes in "An Outsider Everywhere - Revelations by an Insider", published by Konark.
Kaw, who was in the IAS for 37 years, says he advocated a rule in the policy related to allowing of 40 per cent equity contribution by foreign airlines even in new proposals.
"This was seen by Jet as a victory for the Tatas. If approached as policy, it would enable favourable consideration of the Tata proposal. (Then civil aviation minister Chand Mahal) Ibrahim was not happy... He was not convinced. Jet people had told him that I was trying to show undue favour to the Tatas," he writes.
"The minister did not clear the file, despite several attempts on my part. The history of civil aviation in this country would have taken a different trajectory, if Tata Singapore Airlines had been allowed to float an airline."
On a civil aviation policy, he writes, "The country does not have a civil aviation policy even today. It is of the considered view of many experts in civil aviation that FDI investment will not be allowed in India till this is permitted by the powerful owners of Jet Airways."