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Indian-US Nuclear Deal News & Discussions

EagleEyes

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123, US-India Civilian Nuclear Deal-An Analysis

Recently concluded US-India agreement for civilian nuclear cooperation, has generated huge controversy in the Indian and international political circles. After the 1974 Pokharan nuclear explosion, India had become out-cast among the nuclear club countries and the 45-member Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). India, being not a signatory of the NPT (Non Proliferation Treaty), there is a blanket ban on transfer of nuclear technology and the nuclear fuel.
However, the agreement makes India an exception. It marks a strategic shift in the US policy by designating India a virtual guest member of the official nuclear club. The 2006 Hyde Act, which prohibits the export of nuclear technology and the fuel to such countries, also endorsed Bush's approach of helping India safeguarded civil nuclear programme.

At present 31 countries use nuclear energy contributing about 17% of the world's electricity output. India has 17 operational nuclear plants, while 6 more are under construction. In India, nuclear energy contributes only 3% of total electricity generation, which it proposes to increase up to 7% by 2020. India, with modest uranium reserves of about 54,000 tonnes only, cannot achieve the proposed target without importing the nuclear fuel. The proposed nuclear agreement opens the door to the import of the fissile material and civilian nuclear technology and to develop technology to reprocess spent fuel. The agreement fulfils India's long-standing requirements of building a number of nuclear power plants.

India is second richest in thorium deposits in the world. Its long-term goal is to produce energy through use of thorium. Moreover, plutonium retrieved from the spent fuel can be used with thorium in nuclear fast-breeder power plants securing energy independence. Scientists contend that reprocessed fuel, though expensive, yields 30 times more energy than conventional energy plants.

Thorium-plutonium technology is a complex and a three-stage process: The second stage is expected to be completed by 2010 at Kalpakkam and stage three and the fast breeder reactors, by 2020. Till then, India will have to depend on the import of uranium from the NSG countries.

Those opposing the pact say there are certain clauses, which need clarification. They say India is still on the US blacklist for acquiring duel use items rendering the pact useless. (Duel-use articles are the ones developed for civilian use, but could be used for military purposes as well.) Hyde Act also clearly prohibits the export of duel-use items. Article 5 (2) of the agreement clearly states, "Transfer of duel-use will be subjected to the parties' respective applicable laws, regulations and licence policies." The US spokesperson, Sean McCormack also declared that if India conducts a nuclear weapon test, the agreement would stand scraped with provision of return of all materials including reprocessed material. They also doubt the intention of Washington. They opine, India, if goes ahead, will become subordinate ally of the US.

Those favouring say, in reality reverse is true. According to them, India is free to conduct nuclear test should national interest so dictate and that termination clause does not even mention the word test. It merely mentions "the party seeking termination has the right to cease further cooperation...if it determines that a mutually acceptable resolution of outstanding issues has not been possible or cannot be achieved through consultations". There is no mention of "return of materials."

To becoming the US ally, it is argued: In sixty years history, there is no evidence of India having compromised on its foreign policy as a quid pro quo. It alone withstood UN Security Council resolution on Kashmir favouring Pakistan; in 1971 went ahead liberating Bangladesh, defying US and China backed 110 nations UN resolution; withstood the pressure of Indo-Soviet Peace and Friendship Treaty; defied NPT and conducted first Pokhran test in 1974 and accepted the penalties; again, India did not join US and China and majority of the non-aligned in supporting Pol Pot's representation in the UN General Assembly; it also did not join anti-Soviet campaign on Afghanistan; and lastly conducted Shakti tests in 1998 defying the non-proliferation community.

However, there are many slips between sip and lip. Deal is yet to undergo endorsement of the US Congress, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and 45-member NSG. The IAEA must agree to ensure that India must have unrestricted supply of raw material from NSG. They must reach consensus making huge exception for the world's second nuclear state that has not joined NPT; other is China.

To sum up, the deal is of mutual benefit: Washington views India a rising democracy with a youthful population and a reservoir of talent that will help its objectives. The deal will give the US access to Indian market for both reactor technology and military hardware. Concerned by growing terrorism and rise of China, United States sees in India a reliable long-term strategic partner. Joint military exercises also are the way to the same destination.

Comparatively, India will be a much greater beneficiary. It will come out of the international nuclear apartheid and be able to develop advanced nuclear technology to meet its increasing energy demands. Those who talk about the costs of this partnership have not taken into account India's history. At this advance stage, if India backs out, its credibility in the international community will take a severe beating.

Dr RP Mishra, Manuj Features


Central Chronicle--Column
 
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beautiful short precise writeup. though have some inaccuracies but still overall kudos to author.
 
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Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

US-India nuclear cooperation —Dr Haider K Nizamani

While agreeing on the scope of the agreement, New Delhi and Washington have skilfully avoided the issue of dual use of nuclear knowledge, materials, and technology. It is no secret that nuclear technology can be dually used i.e. the same knowledge and technology can be used for peaceful and military purposes

Barring a few essays by retired Pakistani ambassadors, there has been little debate in Pakistan about the agreement for cooperation between US and India in the field of nuclear energy, made public in the first week of August. The agreement has sparked intense debate in India that can possibly lead to the downfall of Manmohan Singh’s government if his Left Front supporters pull the plug on the government over this deal.

The deal has not created equivalent ripples in Pakistan. A country mired in troubled waters of domestic politics can’t be faulted for not expending intellectual energies on the intricacies of the Indo-US nuclear agreement. Ironically, the state of the debate in Pakistan today is eerily reminiscent of the post-1974 debate in Pakistan after India’s so-called peaceful nuclear explosion. Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was the lone voice drawing attention to the implications of India’s detonation on Pakistan’s security policy.

To fully understand and assess the import of the agreement, there is no substitute for reading the twenty two page draft.

Sporadic analyses in Pakistani newspapers have assumed quite a lot by way of the ordinary reader’s prior knowledge of treaties and agreements concerning nuclear weapons and energy. Therefore, erring on the side of the caution, I will try to paraphrase the salient features of the deal, their implications for non-proliferation, and policy options for Pakistan.

Although the agreement is manifestly about peaceful uses of nuclear energy, a second glance reveals that both countries are ‘desirous of strengthening the strategic partnership between them’.

So defenders of the agreement are being a little disingenuous if they would like us to see it as a deal merely confined to the peaceful use of nuclear energy. That is one of the key Left Front objections to the agreement.

Article 1 defines the terms used in the agreement. Interestingly, the term information “means any information that is not in the public domain...but will cease to be information whenever the Party transferring the information or any third party legitimately releases it into the public domain”. Basically what is termed ‘information’ is in practice a secrecy clause as information is deemed such only when it is out of the public domain.

When it comes to ‘non-nuclear materials’, the signing parties retain the privilege of ‘jointly designating’ any materials as ‘non-nuclear’.

Furthermore, the determination of any material as nuclear by IAEA’s Board of Governors ‘shall only have effect under this Agreement when both Parties to this Agreement have informed each other in writing that they accept such amendment’. In other words, the IAEA’s determination will virtually have no applicability on the Indo-US nuclear cooperation if the latter chooses not to accept that in writing.

Article 2 outlines the “Scope of Cooperation”. The declared objective is to enhance, institute, and facilitate nuclear cooperation in the civilian sector ranging from reciprocal visits by scientists to the ‘development of a strategic reserve of nuclear fuel to guard against any disruption of supply over the lifetime of India’s reactors.’

But the scope is not confined to bilateral cooperation. Clause 2 (g) of the 2nd article reads: ‘Supply between the Parties, whether for use by or for the benefit of the Parties or third countries, of nuclear material.’

This means that India and the US are going to team up to provide, if they consider it in their economic and strategic interests, such cooperation to other countries. Nuclear material from India is unlikely to be shared with countries that are earmarked as actual or possible threats to either India or the US. Here, one can foresee growing cooperation among close US allies like Israel and new-found friends like India while shutting the doors of cooperation with countries like Iran or Pakistan.

While agreeing on the scope of the agreement, New Delhi and Washington have skilfully avoided the issue of dual use of nuclear knowledge, materials, and technology. It is no secret that nuclear technology can be dually used i.e. the same knowledge and technology can be used for peaceful and military purposes. India proved that in 1974 by conducting its first nuclear test. Proponents of the agreement unconvincingly dismiss the above concern as pure scare-mongering.

Article 5 deals with the critical issue of the Transfer of Nuclear Technology. This can be read as obligations of the US under the agreement to make the case for India with other members of the Nuclear Supplier Group (NSG), and amending domestic laws that would result in unhindered supply of fuel for India.

Foreseeing possible opposition from majority of the NSG countries, the US has assured India that they would jointly ‘convene a group of friendly supplier countries to include countries such as Russia, France and the United Kingdom to pursue such measures as would restore fuel supply to India.’ This is a recipe for undoing international commitments and opening the Pandora’s Box of the nuclear fuel supply chain.
How has Pakistan officially reacted to the agreement? Is its official reaction to the Agreement an appropriate policy course for Islamabad?

The official Pakistani position points out the discriminatory nature of the agreement and demands that the exemptions being granted to India should also be granted to Pakistan because it too has to cope with an acute energy shortage. Former Ambassador Najmuddin Shaikh echoes official fears that if we mount a campaign stressing the importance of maintaining the non-proliferation regime, there is a risk of inviting scrutiny and comment on our ‘spotty’ record of controlling the export of nuclear technology.

This policy prescription overlooks the fact that the reason Pakistan’s noise about the Indo-US nuclear cooperation being discriminatory is falling on deaf ears is precisely because of Islamabad’s track record on nuclear transactions. Coincidentally, news regarding the A Q Khan clandestine nuclear network hit the headlines contemporaneously with the increased cooperation between Delhi and Washington in 2005.

Serving Pakistani diplomats and those in the armed forces responsible for making policy choices on nuclear and disarmament matters should be aware that the US is not going to extend concrete cooperation to Pakistan in the nuclear arena no matter how loudly Islamabad shouts ‘discrimination.’ Since that is not going to work, it is about time that military and civilian policymakers alerted others of the serious pitfalls of the agreement.

The writer teaches at the Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Canada and can be reached at hnizamani@hotmail.com
 
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Pak voices concern over Indo-US nuke deal
3 Oct 2007, 1144 hrs IST,PTI
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UNITED NATIONS: Voicing concern over the "incipient" Indo-US civilian nuclear deal, Pakistan has said any endorsement of a selective approach would "fatefully damage" the existing consensus on disarmament and non-proliferation.

Addressing the United Nations General Assembly, Pakistan's Foreign Secretary Riaz Mohammad Khan said "the incipient Indo-US civilian nuclear deal would inject a new element in the region".

Apparently referring to the agreement that India is seeking with the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) in the context of the nuclear accord, he said "In the coming months, the NSG states have a heavy responsibility as any endorsement of a selective or discriminatory approach could fatefully damage the existing consensus on disarmament and non-proliferation".

India has to get a waiver for international nuclear trade from the 45-member NSG to operationalise the atomic deal.

But while opposing the deal, the Pakistan Foreign Secretary said Islamabad has a strong interest in developing civil nuclear power generation under international safeguards.

"We have concerns over strategic stability which we will maintain despite our firm opposition to an arms race in South Asia," he said adding Pakistan would maintain "minimum credible deterrence."

Khan said there is an "obvious need" for a new and universal consensus on non-proliferation, disarmament and peaceful nuclear cooperation that eliminates dangers and risks and establishes cooperation on an equitable basis.

Indiatimes: Indian entertainment, news, multi-media, movies, games, cricket, shopping
 
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Well blame your proven track record in nuke proliferation.
 
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N-deal may go back to drawing board​

NEW DELHI: What happens to the Indo-US nuclear deal if the strong signals that have been sent out by the UPA government actually herald the end of the deal? Well, if India is unprepared to take the next step, both India and the US will have to go back to the drawing board in the next US administration.

The deal, as it stands now, is only an agreed text between the two countries, which has not been signed by both sides. It was negotiated at great cost between the two sides with a separation plan that was a declared policy statement by the Indian government.

But it was not signed by the two governments, and it is not approved by the US Congress, which means in the US, certainly, it has no legal sanction. The next US administration can work with the Indian government in two ways — they can take the agreed text as a given and work on the next steps. Or they can reopen the text — which will then open a can of worms because both sides will want to put in terms that will inevitably not be agreeable to the other side. "India got such a great deal because ultimately, the Bush administration wanted to accommodate India," a government source said. That may not be true for the next administration.

In 2003, the previous NDA government had negotiated the "Next Steps in Strategic Partnership" that included India-US cooperation in civil nuclear cooperation, export controls, high-tech cooperation and missile defence. The UPA government did not take the NSSP forward so it was deemed to have been "completed", because the UPA government went for something much bigger, and got it.
N-deal may go back to drawing board-India-The Times of India
 
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India will not go to IAEA, PM tells Bush​
16 Oct 2007,
ABUJA (NIGERIA): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday told US president George Bush that his government would not be able to hold safeguards negotiations with International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in what brings down the curtain on a long and painstaking push for operationalisation of the deal during his tenure.

‘‘The Prime Minister explained to president Bush that certain difficulties have arisen with respect to the operationalisation of the India-US civil nuclear cooperation agreement,’’ tersely noted the official press release issued after the talks.

Save a three-line reference to the deal, the one-page statement focussed exclusively on the deadlocked WTO talks and how to take them forward. The shyness reflected the government’s embarrassment in being forced to cast aside, at least for now, what it sincerely felt was going to be a historic and honourable agreement for India.

Singh conceded his failure to get past the obstacles raised by the opponents of the deal, as well as allies leery of a confrontation with the Left on the matter, after Bush responded to the PM’s efforts to reach him.

Singh had, early on, failed to get through to Bush who was on Air Force One.

The conversation with Bush after the UPA government blinked in the face-off with the Left was necessary because he was, on the American side, the chief catalyst for the successful negotiation of the 123 Agreement. Bush defied strong resistance from non-proliferation hardliners, as well as lobbyists for Pakistan, in the state department and Pentagon who argued that ‘‘concessions’’ to India would tip the scales in the sub-continent towards India and annoy the old-time ally.

The US president had also vowed to lug the deal through the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the US Congress in the face of continued opposition.

The statement said that the two leaders also discussed the divergences holding up the Doha Round. Reiterating that India was committed to the successful conclusion of the Doha Round, the statement said trade liberalisation had contributed immensely to the growth of the world economy.

The statement said the draft texts in circulation could be the basis for discussions towards an agreed outcome in agriculture and industrial tariffs (non-agricultural market access or NAMA). Although there were grey areas in the text and specific numbers which needed to be agreed upon, the texts gave a broad indication of the range of possibilities on most issues, the statement added. Singh said that India was comfortable with most of the elements of these texts.

It was a reasonable compromise between differing positions of various countries. As is true of any trade deal, it involved give and take by all and India was ready to do its share of giving in this regard.
India will not go to IAEA, PM tells Bush-Rest of World-World-The Times of India
 
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Well blame your proven track record in nuke proliferation.

There is nothing "proven" about the Pakistani State's "track record in proliferation".

Individuals were involved in proliferation, that s true, but neither is it false that individuals from other nations, including the West and India, have proliferated. So lets be consistent with the standards used.

To paraphrase your signature:

"But then, lets not allow facts to come into the way when we're trying to speak about Pakistan. We simply shouldn't.'
 
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What he is possibly alluding to is the proven case of AQ Khan.

Possibly, but my point with respect to different standards remains.

What do you think of Hillary's chances of taking the US legislature along on this deal, and possibly removing certain language that seems to have become anathema to some in India? She seems to be quite chummy with the India Caucus.
 
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I don't think that Mrs Clinton is terribly thrilled about the Indo US nuke deal.

And so long the Communists of India's support is required for the govt's survival, nothing is going to happen to the deal.
 
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Singh briefs Bush on nuclear deal

Indian PM Manmohan Singh has spoken to US President George W Bush about difficulties over a nuclear deal with the US, a government statement said.

Differences between the Congress-led government and its allies over the deal led to speculation about early polls.
Communist allies say the deal, which will allow India access to civilian nuclear technology and fuel, gives the US leverage on India's foreign policy.
The government appears to have backtracked in face of the opposition.

Mr Singh, who is now on an official visit to Africa, called Mr Bush and discussed the nuclear deal, among other things, according to a government release.
"The prime minister explained to President Bush that certain difficulties have arisen with respect to the operationalisation of the India-US civil nuclear cooperation agreement," the release said.
Mr Singh said last week that the nuclear agreement was "an honourable deal that is good for India and good for the world".

He said if the deal did not come through, he would be disappointed.
"One has to live with certain disappointments. We are not a one-issue government. The deal not coming through is not the end of life," he added.
He said: "The government is trying to reconcile the divergent points of view on the issue within the ruling coalition."

The deal has also been criticised by many outside India.
Under the landmark nuclear deal, India is allowed to reprocess spent nuclear fuel - something that is seen as a major concession and opposed by some members of the US Congress as India has not signed the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.

Link: BBC NEWS | South Asia | Singh briefs Bush on nuclear deal
 
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The Deal is dead atleast till the next elections. Thats democracy's drawback,sometimes good things get stalled as too many people (read politicians- BJP, Cong) want to take sole credit for it. It shows that Indian Politicians are not yet mature enough to bury their differences to do good for their country. India is a loosing access to good light weight nuclear reactor technology. Also shows what a low opinion the Indian Politicians have about the head of India,s Atomic Energy who negotiated the deal. China and Pakistan must be having a good secret laugh.
 
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The Deal is dead atleast till the next elections. Thats democracy's drawback,sometimes good things get stalled as too many people (read politicians- BJP, Cong) want to take sole credit for it. It shows that Indian Politicians are not yet mature enough to bury their differences to do good for their country. India is a loosing access to good light weight nuclear reactor technology. Also shows what a low opinion the Indian Politicians have about the head of India,s Atomic Energy who negotiated the deal. China and Pakistan must be having a good secret laugh.


hmmm yeh may be all politics as Indian PM Singh was quoted by media as saying that he can not risk his government over the deal.

and Bush called him today.
But i dont think so it will drag on the deal is definetly okayed.
On the other side about China and Pakistan's sentiments well i dont think so. they are not kids to jump over such lil things as we all know the deal is a reality a little delay wont hurt it :)
 
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