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India: The wages of the nuclear deal

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The wages of the nuclear deal - Views - livemint.com

The wages of the nuclear deal
The N-deal has turned out to be what the US mandated, not what the Prime Minister had assured India
Brahma Chellaney

The quiet signing of the reprocessing agreement on 30 July has completed the last remaining bilateral element of the nuclear deal with the US. The multilateral elements are not only complete, but also being implemented. For example, India already has brought 16 of its nuclear facilities under permanent international inspection—a number scheduled to progressively go up to cover two-thirds of all Indian nuclear installations within four years. In addition, India is set to shut down, by this year-end, its main military-production workhorse, the CIRUS reactor—the biggest cumulative contributor of weapons-grade plutonium to the country’s stockpile.

Yet, despite the deal being in force, India continues to battle major technology controls. China has greater access than India does to US high technology, and this is unlikely to change after the ongoing Obama administration review of US export controls. Because the review is being driven by the barely disguised business goal to increase US share of the Chinese market so as to reduce the yawning trade deficit, the China-India access gap can only widen in Beijing’s favour.

What tangible benefits, strategic or otherwise, has the deal yielded for India? Let’s face it: The Americans were more honest than the Indians about the deal. The final deal has turned out to be in line with what the US Congress mandated, not what the Indian Parliament had repeatedly been assured by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

In fact, the deal conforms fully to the provisions of the 2006 US Hyde Act. The Congressional ratification legislation—the 2008 Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Non-Proliferation Enhancement Act (NCANEA)—actually tightened some of the Hyde Act provisions. The Indian side had publicly claimed that the Hyde Act would not determine the final deal, with some in authority even seeking to creatively differentiate between “operative” and “non-binding” parts of that Act. It had further been claimed that the 123 Agreement, once ratified, would become the “last expression of the sovereign will” and override all other laws including national laws.

Photo: Mannie Garcia/Bloomberg

Photo: Mannie Garcia/Bloomberg
These too-clever-by-half arguments have fallen flat on their face. Nothing can be more embarrassing to the Indian side than the fact that the bilateral accords it negotiated and signed—the 123 Agreement and the reprocessing pact—match up to US congressional stipulations.

Worse still, the accords have been made subservient to US law. Take the 123 Agreement, which neither contains the international-law principle (found in the US-China accord) that neither party will invoke its internal law as justification for a failure to honour the accord, nor provides (found in the US-Japan or US-South Korea accord) for an arbitral tribunal to settle any dispute. As the NCANEA makes explicit, “Nothing in the (123) Agreement shall be construed to supersede the legal requirements of the Henry J. Hyde Act”.

As a result, the final deal ends up giving the US specific rights—enforceable through the pain of unilateral suspension or termination of cooperation—while saddling India with obligations. The NCANEA actually records that the promise of uninterrupted fuel supply is a “political”, not legal, commitment. It cannot be anything else because the 123 Agreement itself confers an open-ended right on the US to suspend fuel supplies straight away while issuing a one-year termination notice. In fact, as a corollary to that right, the US has retained the prerogative in the reprocessing accord to unilaterally suspend its reprocessing consent to India.

What stands out about the final deal are the four “Nos” for India: No binding fuel-supply guarantee to avert a Tarapur-style fuel cut-off; no irrevocable reprocessing consent; no right to withdraw from its obligations; and no right to conduct a nuclear test ever again. The no-test obligation constitutes the first instance in the nuclear age where one nuclear-weapons power has used a civilian cooperation deal to impose such a prohibition on another nuclear-weapons state. The CIRUS’ impending dismantlement is another weapons-related obligation thrust on India.

No country in history has struggled longer to build a minimal deterrent or paid heavier international costs for its nuclear programme than India. Despite Asia’s oldest nuclear programme, India now has the world’s smallest nuclear arsenal— smaller than even Pakistan’s. More significant is that India still does not have a single Beijing-reachable nuclear missile in its inventory or production line. It is against that background that the nuclear deal marks a turning point.

The lasting legacy of this deal, in which the Indian government invested considerable time and diplomatic resources, will be to ensure that India stays enmeshed in its struggle to build regionally confined nuclear-weapons capability while becoming more reliant than ever on conventional arms imports to meet its basic defence needs. If ever there was hope of India becoming a full-fledged nuclear-weapons state such as China, that prospect has passed.

A closer relationship with the US is in India’s own interest. But it could have been built without a deal that carries serious, long-term costs. Indeed, such are the wages of the deal that India has refrained from speaking up on regional-security issues that directly impinge on its interests, including the continuing transfer of offensive US weapon systems to Pakistan, now the largest recipient of the US economic and military aid in the world. Islamabad, in fact, has managed to cut its own deal to buy two China-origin reactors without the burden of conditions cast on India.

Brahma Chellaney is professor of strategic studies at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi
 
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So now US had put a kill switch on India's nuclear energy!!
I think we are lucky to have it just on our F-16s!!

The lasting legacy of this deal, in which the Indian government invested considerable time and diplomatic resources, will be to ensure that India stays enmeshed in its struggle to build regionally confined nuclear-weapons capability while becoming more reliant than ever on conventional arms imports to meet its basic defence needs. If ever there was hope of India becoming a full-fledged nuclear-weapons state such as China, that prospect has passed.

Just as mentioned a 100 times earlier, US is using India just to contain China and US won't let the size of this container grow more than it desires. Now it shows how much influence does US has on India (nuclear deal as well as gas pipeline).

America's only problem with Soviets and now with China is that they are potential threats for itself. And how can it let form another threat in the name of treatment of its ongoing ailment!!

Now those who says that US is our master, I would love to hear their comments. Now whose master is America !!
 
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So now US had put a kill switch on India's nuclear energy!!
I think we are lucky to have it just on our F-16s!!



Just as mentioned a 100 times earlier, US is using India just to contain China and US won't let the size of this container grow more than it desires. Now it shows how much influence does US has on India (nuclear deal as well as gas pipeline).

America's only problem with Soviets and now with China is that they are potential threats for itself. And how can it let form another threat in the name of treatment of its ongoing ailment!!

Now those who says that US is our master, I would love to hear their comments. Now whose master is America !!


Who cares. If not America, we have French, Russian, Japanese, Canadian lining up for nuclear trade. We were at least able to lift off sanctions on nuclear trade. We will get the technology some how. Give it some time,as India grows economically, so will its clout.

Also, everybody seems to think if China wins India has to loose. Why can't both gain enough to sustain growth. Who cares if China has better nuclear technology. I just want India to be able to produce the power it needs.
 
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WIth every deal there are upsides and down sides..nobody takes 100% share of the pie..The Indians will benefit enormusly from this deal in terms of operational assitance and uranium delivery. India is uranium starved and was in much more need for such deal to purchase fuel.
 
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There are strings attached with US.

But dont forget, the same deal gives un unrestricted access to top of the line french and russian nuclear technology....

And Even Reprocessing Rights from Russia... India has gained far more than it can loose out ...

US may restrict... But who cares.. We have over half a dozen suppliers of Nuclear Technology...
 
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^ Exactly. US cant give no strings attached nuclear KNow how to India due to its own laws, but by getting the NSG waiver for India, it has opened the gates for others like France, Russia, Canada etc which are not bound by such stringent laws. Thats acutally enough for us. As our friend XiniX says, feel the diplomacy :cheers:
 
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There are strings attached with US.

But dont forget, the same deal gives un unrestricted access to top of the line french and russian nuclear technology....

And Even Reprocessing Rights from Russia... India has gained far more than it can loose out ...

US may restrict... But who cares.. We have over half a dozen suppliers of Nuclear Technology...

Exactly....If not US then Russians...if not them then the French..if not them then the Canadians,Japanese etc etc.

What we need at this moment is nuke energy for electricity....not nuke weapons.

And please dont forget we have almost 5 (dono the exact number) military reactors away from IAEA (legallty) that churns out material to blow the shyt out of anyone who comes with a bad intention.

So a win-win situation for us.
 
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