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India scraps Nuclear Deal with US

sohailbutt

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Just came across news on Geo News, that India has srcapped its plans to ink the deal with US due to pressure from opposition.

NO MORE NUCLEAR DEAL WITH US!!!
 
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The latest from the nuclear deal so far..

UPA committed to nuclear deal: Shyam Saran
Tuesday, 06 May , 2008, 22:28

New Delhi: A few hours before India's ruling United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and the Left sat to discuss the Indo-US nuclear deal Tuesday, the prime minister's special envoy on the pact, Shyam Saran, said the government remained committed to the agreement.

"This government has a commitment to the agreement and every effort possible will be made to see the deal through," Saran said at a press interaction organised by the Indian Women's Press Corps. "The deal is not dead."

He accepted that the deal had to go through a "certain political process", which was "inevitable in a democracy" and in the country's best interests.

"People have concerns over India's strategic programme, our indigenous research and development programme. They have said these should be sacrosanct and should not be compromised," Saran said.

The former foreign secretary pointed out that it would be wise to do the deal "sooner rather than later".

"Obviously, we should have the deal sooner rather than later. As the process continues, the level of political uncertainty will increase."

He admitted that there were "the political ground realities here and there" but added that it was a "joint enterprise" between India and US for which both governments have to work together and make it a reality.

"The encouraging aspect is that at last there is broad bipartisan support for the deal, which is based on the recognition that Indo-US relations are important and will become even more important in the future.

"People have concerns over India's strategic programme, our indigenous R&D programme. They have said these should be sacrosanct and should not be compromised," Saran said, adding that the government was trying to ensure that "whatever was promised in the joint statement becomes a practical reality".

The nuclear committee of the UPA and its Left allies at their meeting will take stock of New Delhi's negotiations with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) over the India-US civil nuclear agreement.

The discussions in the eighth round of the 15-member UPA-Left nuclear committee meeting will centre on the clarifications sought by Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) general secretary Prakash Karat from External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee. The minister heads the panel.

At their last meeting March 17, the Communists, who oppose the operationalisation of the the nuclear pact with the US, insisted on taking a look at the draft agreement between India and the IAEA. But they did not get to see it.
 
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The Nuke deal depends on one single factor: The ability of Congress to form a government without commie help.

Otherwise, the commies will continue to stall it.
 
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Left nukes the Nuclear deal- Politics/Nation-News-The Economic Times

NEW DELHI: The Indo-US nuclear deal is headed for the cold storage. The confirmation of this worst-kept secret was provided by government interlocutors at the meeting of the UPA-Left co-ordination panel here on Tuesday.

Sources in the Left said external affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee indicated that the wrangling over the deal here has already jeopardised the timeline for the operationalisation of the 123 Agreement.

The IAEA governing body meeting in mid-May was supposed to take up the India-specific safeguards agreement. The die-hard optimists in the government were hoping to take the agreement to NSG at its meeting in Johannesburg on May 19. That this plan now stands aborted was clear when the panel decided to continue the powwows. The UPA-Left committee is now scheduled to meet on May 28.

At Tuesday’s meeting, the government used the argument that since the 123 Agreement’s timeline had already been disrupted, the Left should now give its nod for approaching IAEA for working out an agreement to ensure fuel supplies from other countries. Left parties promised to have an internal discussion on May 23 — four days before the next meeting of the panel.

Mr Mukherjee was candid in admitting the hurdles before the 123 Agreement. He told Left leaders that NAM countries reservations against non-NPT signatories getting access to nuclear fuel will embolden the nuclear Ayatollahs in Capitol Hill. The non-proliferation lobby has been making this point since 2005.

Mr Mukherjee said that since the two remaining hurdles are not cleared and the US Congress already in poll mode, it will not be possible for the Bush administration to wrap up the deal. The 123 Agreement will have to be eventually shelved as the new administration in the US will like to have a fresh look at the Indo-US nuclear engagement. At the meeting, the government refused to share the text of the safeguards agreement with Left leaders.

The government leaders maintained that any member country could object to the draft being made public. Mr Mukherjee even quipped that if the Left had joined the government, it would have been privy to the text. The Left, which concurred with the government that the text being part of an international agreement cannot be shared with them, insisted that the government should at least provide a gist of the agreement. The government is understood to have agreed to this demand.

The government interloctors attempted to convince the Left that their concerns on the four clarifications — uninterrupted fuel supply, strategic reserves of nuclear fuel, safeguards in perpetuity and additional protocol — had been addressed. The Left, however, said it would buy the claim only if it the government elaborated more on the text of the draft agreement.

Left leaders had indicated that the meeting of the panel would be yet another futile exercise as they had no intention of changing their mind on the issue. However, the two sides continue the process of exchanging notes on the deal, with neither in the mood to take a final call on the matter. While the Left hopes that the exchange of notes and meetings at regular intervals will push the deal to its last breath, the government gets breathing time before it faces elections.
 
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Indian left rejects move for N-pact with IAEA

NEW DELHI, May 6: India’s communist-led Left Front, doggedly opposing a civil nuclear deal with the United States, has yet again rejected a move by New Delhi to clinch a related parallel pact with the IAEA, sources close to the talks said on Tuesday.

It said the UPA-Left panel on the Indo-US nuclear deal held in-depth discussions for about two hours on Tuesday on the India-specific safeguards agreement with the IAEA and agreed to meet again on May 28.

Panel chief Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee told journalists after the meeting that Left leaders sought more clarifications and these would be provided to them in the next few days.

The eighth meeting of the panel held discussions on the safeguards pact between India and the global atomic watchdog, sources close to the talks said.

They said the Left parties sought clarifications on a range of issues, including guaranteed uninterrupted fuel supplies, full civil nuclear co-operation, the issue of reciprocity and implications of the Hyde Act on India’s foreign and security policies.

The government wanted the committee to give a go-ahead to it to get the approval of IAEA’s Board of Governors for the safeguards agreement, but the move got stalled as the Left sought clarifications on the issue.

The Left parties who would meet on May 23 to decide their strategy ahead of the committee’s next meeting, have also sought clarifications on certain technical aspects of the nuclear deal, including settlement of disputes and termination of agreement, reports said.

Indian left rejects move for N-pact with IAEA -DAWN - Top Stories; May 07, 2008
 
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And India is going to reject the useless treacherous "left" soon.

They are more worried about the interests of China than India.

Who needs enemies with idiots like them at home!
 
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Nuke deal set to time out

By Praful Bidwai

FACED with continuing domestic opposition to the United States-India nuclear cooperation deal, the Indian government has launched ‘one last push’ to complete negotiations before the window of opportunity slams shut.

But the chances of success of its latest bid appear to be no higher than they were some weeks ago.

Going by the recent deliberations of a special joint committee on the deal, formed by the ruling United Progressive Alliance and its Left allies, obstacles to its passage remain in place. The eighth meeting of the committee, established last year, failed to produce agreement.

At the meeting, UPA representatives asked the Left to give the government ‘‘clearance” to finalise an India-specific agreement on inspections (safeguards) for civilian nuclear facilities, which it recently inked with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The agreement is a precondition for approval of the deal by the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers’ Group (NSG), and its subsequent ratification by the US Congress.

However, the Left demanded further clarifications on the safeguards agreement before it offers its response. Although the government has promised to give these clarifications in the next few days, it seems unlikely that the committee’s next meeting, scheduled for May 28, will clinch the issue.

The Left seems to be in no mood to dilute its opposition to the deal. In its view, the deal is an unequal bargain and will draw India into the US strategic orbit and compromise its sovereignty.

‘‘Unless the UPA-Left differences are overcome by the end of May, we are likely to miss the chance to put up the agreement for approval by the IAEA Board of Governors, which is due to meet from June 2 to 6,” says a member of the UPA negotiating team, who insisted on anonymity.

The next Board meeting after June is only scheduled for Sep 22. By then, the US domestic political timetable to discuss the deal in Congress will have run its course. The ‘‘realistic” deadline for sending it to Congress is generally understood to be no later than July, after which the election agenda will overwhelm domestic US politics

The government’s current gambit is to try to delink the safeguards agreement from another crucial component of the deal, namely, a bilateral agreement signed last year, called the ‘‘123 agreement” after Section 123 of the US Atomic Energy Act of 1954.

The Left parties object to the ‘‘123 agreement” on the ground that it restricts the scope of U.S.-India civilian nuclear cooperation, and affects India’s strategic interests, as well as her sovereignty in foreign policy-making.

They also hold that the ‘‘123 agreement” is anchored in a special law enacted by the U.S. Congress at the end of 2006, called the Henry J Hyde Act, which imposes several obligations and restrictions on India that are unrelated to its nuclear programme.

Supporters of the deal recently launched a campaign against the Left. They argue that the Left should not logically oppose the IAEA safeguards agreement because it is independent of the ‘‘123 agreement” and not US-specific. The safeguards agreement is necessary if India is to have nuclear commerce with other countries such as Russia and France, which the Left favours.

Some other advocates of the deal, including India’s former arms-control negotiator Arundhati Ghose, who famously opposed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva in 1996, have also accused the Left of working to obstruct the deal for ‘‘unashamedly ideological” reasons and thus forgo opportunities to develop India’s nuclear power potential.

The supporters recently got a boost from a somewhat unlikely source, former National Security Adviser Brajesh Mishra, considered a close confidant of former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee of the main opposition, Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party. On Apr 27, Mishra, who had earlier opposed the nuclear deal, executed a U-turn and said that India should sign it; and not doing so would have ‘‘harmful effects”. This directly contradicts the BJP’s stand.

However, Mishra’s support for the deal came too late. He was promptly repudiated by the BJP’s top leaders, including former home minister Lal Krishna Advani and former foreign minister Jaswant Singh. Vajpayee, who is ailing, has not spoken on the issue.

The deal’s advocates earlier this week also seized an opportunity offered by a statement issued by Non-Aligned Movement states which are party to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which were meeting in Geneva in the preparatory committee for the 2010 NPT review conference. The statement called for ‘‘complete prohibition” of any kind of nuclear cooperation with NPT non-signatories.

It said that ‘‘recent developments, in particular, the nuclear cooperation agreement signed by a nuclear weapons state (the US) with a non-party to the NPT (India) is a matter of great concern.” The statement was strongly backed by Egypt, Indonesia and Iran.

The deal’s proponents cite this as an attempt by other countries, including those of the NAM, of which India has been a leading member, to scuttle the deal and impair India’s ambitious nuclear power development programme. They argue that allowing this will not be compatible with the Left’s own support for the programme.

‘‘It is true that India’s major Left parties find themselves somewhat in the spot here because they don’t categorically oppose nuclear power, as they should” argues Achin Vanaik, a professor of international relations and global politics at Delhi University. ‘‘But that does not answer the Left’s questions about the content of the IAEA safeguards agreement.”

The Left has not been shown the text of the agreement on the ground that that would be a breach of the negotiation process. But it has raised a number of issues about the agreement, in particular whether it addresses India’s concerns about uninterrupted fuel supply, transfer of technology, reciprocity of obligations, and implications for India’s foreign and security policies.

M.V. Ramana, a nuclear affairs analyst based at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Environment and Development in Bangalore argues that “there is a problem here because the IAEA is not a supplier of nuclear fuel. Nor can it uphold or guarantee the ‘right’ that India demands to build a strategic fuel reserve and to take ‘corrective measures’ in case fuel supplies are suspended.”

The questions raised by the Left are unlikely to be resolved anytime soon.

‘‘At the end of the day,” says Vanaik, ‘‘the critical issue is that of the political balance of power. The UPA, which is facing protests because of rising prices and a massive agrarian crisis, seems to be in no position to confront the Left and risk losing its support, which is crucial to its survival in Parliament.’’ — IPS News

DAWN - Editorial; May 13, 2008
 
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Daym maan, how many times this thread comes up,

I don't think its scrapped. The Nuclear deal is going to be the surprise package. We are going to face general elections in months.....the Nuclear deal will be for the Indian National congress, what the Kargil war was to the BJP. The congress is'nt prepared for polls, they will buy some time and prepare for polls.The Nick of the movement, they will pass the deal in the parliament, they actually have enough numbers to get the deal passed, and the commies will withdraw the support to the INC which will result in elections. The Image of the congress will grow, saying that they have sacrificed power for the national development and may even win a clear majority.....this is politics, nothing can be said until the last movement....anything may happen..the deal may be down but it sure is'nt out, yet.
 
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