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Narasimha Rao, not Vajpayee, was the PM who set India on a nuclear explosion path

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Narasimha Rao, not Vajpayee, was the PM who set India on a nuclear explosion path
by Vinay Sitapati
Published 19 hours ago.
Rao’s biographer delves into the mystery of his decision not to conduct a nuclear test.
phhqzpemnh-1467219293.JPG

Image credit: Ravi Raveendran/AFP | Narasimha Rao

Two days after Narasimha Rao’s body was cremated in 2004, an emotional Atal Bihari Vajpayee paid his old friend a startling tribute. Rao was the “true father” of India’s nuclear programme. Vajpayee said that, in May 1996, a few days after he had succeeded Rao as prime minister, “Rao told me that the bomb was ready. I only exploded it.”

“Saamagri tayyar hai,” Rao had said. (“The ingredients are ready.”) “You can go ahead.”

The conventional narrative at the time was that prime minister Rao had wanted to test nuclear weapons in December 1995. The Americans had caught on, and Rao had dithered – as was his wont. Three years later, prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee fulfilled his party’s campaign promise by ordering five nuclear tests below the shimmering sands of Rajasthan.

Vajpayee’s revelations unsettled this narrative with new questions.

How closely was Rao involved in India’s nuclear programme? What prompted his decision to test in December 1995? Why did he change his mind? Was it US pressure or something altogether more mysterious? Why did he pass on the baton to Vajpayee six months later?

The journalist Shekhar Gupta asked Rao these questions months before he died. The former prime minister patted his belly. “Arrey, bhai, let some secrets go with me to my chita [funeral pyre].”

On the morning of 15 December 1995, the New York Times ran a sensational story. “In recent weeks, spy satellites have recorded scientific and technical activity at the Azad Kashmir[h]ran test site in the Rajasthan desert.” The story quoted US government officials telling The Times that American intelligence experts suspected India was preparing for its first nuclear test since 1974.

A few days after the leaked story, the American ambassador to India, Frank Wisner, sought a meeting with Rao’s principal secretary, Amar Nath Varma. Wisner walked into the PMO carrying photographs taken from American satellites. Varma told Wisner he had no idea what he was talking about. He asked Wisner if he could keep the photographs and show them to the scientists. Wisner quickly hugged the photographs. “These are part of my body,” he is reported to have angrily said. “The only way you can take the photographs is if you take me along.”

On 19 December 1995 – the day the nuclear tests had been originally scheduled – the Indian foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee (who was not in the loop on the nuclear tests) was asked by Rao to make a statement of denial. The Americans were not satisfied. That same day, the President of the United States, Bill Clinton, sent a message to New Delhi. He wanted to speak to the prime minister. Narasimha Rao asked his closest nuclear confidant to prep him on possible questions from Clinton.

The call came in the morning to Rao’s office in the PMO, sometime around 21 December. “I want to tell you about progress in the CTBT negotiations,” Clinton began. After speaking in generalities for a couple of minutes, Clinton moved sideways. “We are happy to note a clear statement by your foreign minister that the government of India is not testing.”

Rao replied as planned, “I saw the press clippings too. They are false.” “But Mr Prime Minister,” Clinton interjected, “what is this that our cameras have picked up?” Rao replied, again as planned. “This is only a routine maintenance of facilities.” Rao then added, slowly, so that Clinton could understand him through his Indian accent.

“There is right now no plan to explode. But yes, we are ready. We have the capability.”

The nuclear tests should have been conducted on 19 December. It is not known when Rao stopped it – at T-3 [three days in advance] or T-1 [one day in advance]. But here the matter rested until a few days after the Clinton phone call.

On 25 December 1995, a secret letter was delivered to Rao, asking him to delay testing for four weeks, to keep the US at bay. It went on to suggest that by early February 1996, India should conduct two to three nuclear tests. The note ended by quoting K Subrahmanyam: “India’s voice on nuclear disarmament is not heeded because it is like an elderly spinster espousing the virtues of chastity.”

Narasimha Rao ordered the bomb to be removed from the L-shaped shaft. Yet – contrary to the public narrative – he was far from done.

On 14 January 1996, Abdul Kalam wrote to Rao urging him to boycott the ongoing CTBT negotiations and test nuclear weapons as soon as possible. The note was prepared in consultation with other members of the secret nuclear committee. At 11 AM on 19 January 1996, Rao’s appointment diary shows that he met with his principal secretary, as well as his foreign, atomic energy and defence secretaries to “consider our stand on CTBT”. A month later, Rao asked the finance ministry to prepare yet another analysis of the economic effects of a nuclear test.

In late March, Rao received a second call from Bill Clinton. The US President once again urged Rao to desist from testing. It is not known what exactly Clinton said. But the very fact of the call is more evidence that Rao was actively considering testing nuclear weapons in March 1996.

National elections were scheduled for May 1996, and Rao spent the next two months campaigning. On 8 May at 9 PM, Abdul Kalam was asked to immediately meet with the prime minister. Rao told him, “Kalam, be ready with the Department of Atomic Energy and your team for the N-test and I am going to Tirupati. You wait for my authorisation to go ahead with the test. DRDO-DAE teams must be ready for action.”

Two days later, the election results were announced. Kalam recalls that Rao ordered him not to test, since “the election result was quite different from what he anticipated”. The BJP’s Atal Bihari Vajpayee took over as prime minister on 16 May 1996. Narasimha Rao, Abdul Kalam and R Chidambaram went to meet the new prime minister “so that”, in Kalam’s telling, “the smooth takeover of such a very important programme can take place”.

Vajpayee’s revelations of 2004 make clear what was discussed. Immediately afterwards, Vajpayee ordered nuclear tests, but rescinded that order when it was clear that his government would not last. In 1998, back as prime minister for the second time, Vajpayee was able to finally “go ahead” and explode.

The evidence is overwhelming that Narasimha Rao gave the “T-30” order to test nuclear weapons in late November 1995. Rao involved a large number of people in assessing the consequences, an unusual step for a man as secretive as he was. He knew that American satellites were hovering above Pokhran. They were nonetheless able to detect activity that indicated testing was imminent. US pressure followed, and Rao cancelled the tests.

It is also clear that India did not have a hydrogen or thermonuclear device in December 1995. A member of the nuclear committee confirms, “[This] became ready only by around March 1996.” Between April and May 96, Rao considered testing again. He backed off when he realised that he had lost the national elections.

Given that this is what we know, what can we deduce about Rao’s intentions? Only three theories fit the known facts.

The first is that Rao had decided to test nuclear weapons in December 1995. But the American satellites caught on, and under pressure from the US, Rao chose to postpone testing. This is the explanation favoured by nuclear expert George Perkovich in his book on India’s programme. This theory, however, does not explain why Rao decided to test again only a few months later. American pressure – and sanctions – would not have varied significantly between December 1995 and April 1996.

The second theory is that Rao never intended to test in December 1995, and the Americans were mistaken. “The truth is that Rao never cleared the tests,” journalist Raj Chengappa says in his superbly sourced book on the nuclear programme. This, however, leaves unexplained why Rao gave the order all the way till “T-7” in December 1995, and why he wanted to test again four months later. What game was Rao playing?

A third, more sensational, theory attempts an answer. Rao knew he had only one chance to test before sanctions kicked in, i.e., he could not both test conventional atomic bombs in December 1995 as well as the hydrogen bomb separately in April 1996. As Shekhar Gupta – who has had unprecedented access to Rao as well as the nuclear team – speculates: “By late 1995, Rao’s scientists told him that they needed six more months. They could test some weapons but not others…thermonuclear etc. So Rao began a charade of taking preliminary steps to test, without intending to test then.”

He then deliberately leaked the information on the tests – by telling many people about it, and ordering observable digging in Pokhran. When the Americans found out – as Rao wanted them to – he ordered the tests to end.

In doing so, Rao made India’s nuclear capacity clear while CTBT negotiations were ongoing, and gave his scientists breathing space to develop the hydrogen bomb. By April 1996, hydrogen bomb ready, Rao genuinely wanted to test, but decided against it since he had lost the mandate of the people.

For Rao to have gone ahead with this deception—only a whisker away from treason—there are three people he might have likely told: A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, R. Chidambaram and Naresh Chandra. Chidambaram and Chandra were both awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second-highest civilian honour, by later governments. Kalam was given the Bharat Ratna and made President of India. Did Narasimha Rao tell his successors something about these men that the public does not know?

Regardless of which of these theories is true, they all point to the fact that far from dithering, Rao was actively involved in the nuclear programme – a trait he also exhibited on the economy, welfare schemes and foreign policy. The portrait that emerges is of a hands-on manager. As Arunachalam puts it, “I worked with five prime ministers. I would rate Rao very high. [He] was a rare politician who understood the importance of technology in building national policy.”

Rao’s magnanimity in letting Vajpayee revel in the glory of nuclear testing (including of the hydrogen bomb) is telling. As Abdul Kalam said, it “reveals the maturity and professional excellence of a patriotic statesman who believed that the nation is bigger than the political system”.

When India finally tested nuclear weapons in 1998, western sanctions followed. Yet – as Rao judged – it has not harmed India in the long term (its effects on India’s security is more contested). Subsequent prime ministers have also followed Rao in refusing to sign the CTBT and NPT.

In 2005, US President George W Bush decided to make an exception to the international non-proliferation regime. Under the Indo-US nuclear deal, India would separate its civilian and military nuclear facilities, placing only its civilian facilities under international scrutiny. The US would help with India’s civilian nuclear energy. The deal made India the only country not part of the NPT framework that is still allowed to do nuclear commerce with the rest of the world.

This deal would have been impossible had not India been both an acknowledged nuclear weapons state as well as an emerging economic power.

The 1998 nuclear tests – sanctioned by Vajpayee with the help of Narasimha Rao – forced the West to concede that India would never cap its nuclear programme. They could, of course, have treated India as a renegade – as they have Iran, North Korea, and to some extent, Pakistan. But the economic power of post-1991 India – for which Rao gets the lion’s share of the credit – meant that the West could not afford to alienate India. This mix of economic might and an unbending nuclear programme is what has led to new status for India in the international system.

Seen thus, Narasimha Rao is not just the “true father” of the 1998 nuclear tests. He is also the crafter of a fresh vision for India in the world. This new self-image, at odds with Nehruvian idealism, emphasises economic muscle alongside a conventional military and large nuclear programme. It is a vision not without its critics. But for better or for worse, it is likely to be the dominant way in which India sees itself in the years to come.

vlpcotnzig-1467219367.jpg

Excerpted with permission from Half Lion: How PV Narasimha Rao Transformed India, Vinay Sitapati, Penguin Viking.

http://scroll.in/article/810874/nar...-pm-who-set-india-on-a-nuclear-explosion-path
 
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@dadeechi


:help::rap:UOTE="dadeechi, post: 8430450, member: 171993"]Narasimha Rao, not Vajpayee, was the PM who set India on a nuclear explosion path
by Vinay Sitapati
Published 19 hours ago.
Rao’s biographer delves into the mystery of his decision not to conduct a nuclear test.
phhqzpemnh-1467219293.JPG

Image credit: Ravi Raveendran/AFP | Narasimha Rao

Two days after Narasimha Rao’s body was cremated in 2004, an emotional Atal Bihari Vajpayee paid his old friend a startling tribute. Rao was the “true father” of India’s nuclear programme. Vajpayee said that, in May 1996, a few days after he had succeeded Rao as prime minister, “Rao told me that the bomb was ready. I only exploded it.”

“Saamagri tayyar hai,” Rao had said. (“The ingredients are ready.”) “You can go ahead.”

The conventional narrative at the time was that prime minister Rao had wanted to test nuclear weapons in December 1995. The Americans had caught on, and Rao had dithered – as was his wont. Three years later, prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee fulfilled his party’s campaign promise by ordering five nuclear tests below the shimmering sands of Rajasthan.

Vajpayee’s revelations unsettled this narrative with new questions.

How closely was Rao involved in India’s nuclear programme? What prompted his decision to test in December 1995? Why did he change his mind? Was it US pressure or something altogether more mysterious? Why did he pass on the baton to Vajpayee six months later?

The journalist Shekhar Gupta asked Rao these questions months before he died. The former prime minister patted his belly. “Arrey, bhai, let some secrets go with me to my chita [funeral pyre].”

On the morning of 15 December 1995, the New York Times ran a sensational story. “In recent weeks, spy satellites have recorded scientific and technical activity at the ***[h]ran test site in the Rajasthan desert.” The story quoted US government officials telling The Times that American intelligence experts suspected India was preparing for its first nuclear test since 1974.

A few days after the leaked story, the American ambassador to India, Frank Wisner, sought a meeting with Rao’s principal secretary, Amar Nath Varma. Wisner walked into the PMO carrying photographs taken from American satellites. Varma told Wisner he had no idea what he was talking about. He asked Wisner if he could keep the photographs and show them to the scientists. Wisner quickly hugged the photographs. “These are part of my body,” he is reported to have angrily said. “The only way you can take the photographs is if you take me along.”

On 19 December 1995 – the day the nuclear tests had been originally scheduled – the Indian foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee (who was not in the loop on the nuclear tests) was asked by Rao to make a statement of denial. The Americans were not satisfied. That same day, the President of the United States, Bill Clinton, sent a message to New Delhi. He wanted to speak to the prime minister. Narasimha Rao asked his closest nuclear confidant to prep him on possible questions from Clinton.

The call came in the morning to Rao’s office in the PMO, sometime around 21 December. “I want to tell you about progress in the CTBT negotiations,” Clinton began. After speaking in generalities for a couple of minutes, Clinton moved sideways. “We are happy to note a clear statement by your foreign minister that the government of India is not testing.”

Rao replied as planned, “I saw the press clippings too. They are false.” “But Mr Prime Minister,” Clinton interjected, “what is this that our cameras have picked up?” Rao replied, again as planned. “This is only a routine maintenance of facilities.” Rao then added, slowly, so that Clinton could understand him through his Indian accent.

“There is right now no plan to explode. But yes, we are ready. We have the capability.”

The nuclear tests should have been conducted on 19 December. It is not known when Rao stopped it – at T-3 [three days in advance] or T-1 [one day in advance]. But here the matter rested until a few days after the Clinton phone call.

On 25 December 1995, a secret letter was delivered to Rao, asking him to delay testing for four weeks, to keep the US at bay. It went on to suggest that by early February 1996, India should conduct two to three nuclear tests. The note ended by quoting K Subrahmanyam: “India’s voice on nuclear disarmament is not heeded because it is like an elderly spinster espousing the virtues of chastity.”

Narasimha Rao ordered the bomb to be removed from the L-shaped shaft. Yet – contrary to the public narrative – he was far from done.

On 14 January 1996, Abdul Kalam wrote to Rao urging him to boycott the ongoing CTBT negotiations and test nuclear weapons as soon as possible. The note was prepared in consultation with other members of the secret nuclear committee. At 11 AM on 19 January 1996, Rao’s appointment diary shows that he met with his principal secretary, as well as his foreign, atomic energy and defence secretaries to “consider our stand on CTBT”. A month later, Rao asked the finance ministry to prepare yet another analysis of the economic effects of a nuclear test.

In late March, Rao received a second call from Bill Clinton. The US President once again urged Rao to desist from testing. It is not known what exactly Clinton said. But the very fact of the call is more evidence that Rao was actively considering testing nuclear weapons in March 1996.

National elections were scheduled for May 1996, and Rao spent the next two months campaigning. On 8 May at 9 PM, Abdul Kalam was asked to immediately meet with the prime minister. Rao told him, “Kalam, be ready with the Department of Atomic Energy and your team for the N-test and I am going to Tirupati. You wait for my authorisation to go ahead with the test. DRDO-DAE teams must be ready for action.”

Two days later, the election results were announced. Kalam recalls that Rao ordered him not to test, since “the election result was quite different from what he anticipated”. The BJP’s Atal Bihari Vajpayee took over as prime minister on 16 May 1996. Narasimha Rao, Abdul Kalam and R Chidambaram went to meet the new prime minister “so that”, in Kalam’s telling, “the smooth takeover of such a very important programme can take place”.

Vajpayee’s revelations of 2004 make clear what was discussed. Immediately afterwards, Vajpayee ordered nuclear tests, but rescinded that order when it was clear that his government would not last. In 1998, back as prime minister for the second time, Vajpayee was able to finally “go ahead” and explode.

The evidence is overwhelming that Narasimha Rao gave the “T-30” order to test nuclear weapons in late November 1995. Rao involved a large number of people in assessing the consequences, an unusual step for a man as secretive as he was. He knew that American satellites were hovering above Pokhran. They were nonetheless able to detect activity that indicated testing was imminent. US pressure followed, and Rao cancelled the tests.

It is also clear that India did not have a hydrogen or thermonuclear device in December 1995. A member of the nuclear committee confirms, “[This] became ready only by around March 1996.” Between April and May 96, Rao considered testing again. He backed off when he realised that he had lost the national elections.

Given that this is what we know, what can we deduce about Rao’s intentions? Only three theories fit the known facts.

The first is that Rao had decided to test nuclear weapons in December 1995. But the American satellites caught on, and under pressure from the US, Rao chose to postpone testing. This is the explanation favoured by nuclear expert George Perkovich in his book on India’s programme. This theory, however, does not explain why Rao decided to test again only a few months later. American pressure – and sanctions – would not have varied significantly between December 1995 and April 1996.

The second theory is that Rao never intended to test in December 1995, and the Americans were mistaken. “The truth is that Rao never cleared the tests,” journalist Raj Chengappa says in his superbly sourced book on the nuclear programme. This, however, leaves unexplained why Rao gave the order all the way till “T-7” in December 1995, and why he wanted to test again four months later. What game was Rao playing?

A third, more sensational, theory attempts an answer. Rao knew he had only one chance to test before sanctions kicked in, i.e., he could not both test conventional atomic bombs in December 1995 as well as the hydrogen bomb separately in April 1996. As Shekhar Gupta – who has had unprecedented access to Rao as well as the nuclear team – speculates: “By late 1995, Rao’s scientists told him that they needed six more months. They could test some weapons but not others…thermonuclear etc. So Rao began a charade of taking preliminary steps to test, without intending to test then.”

He then deliberately leaked the information on the tests – by telling many people about it, and ordering observable digging in Pokhran. When the Americans found out – as Rao wanted them to – he ordered the tests to end.

In doing so, Rao made India’s nuclear capacity clear while CTBT negotiations were ongoing, and gave his scientists breathing space to develop the hydrogen bomb. By April 1996, hydrogen bomb ready, Rao genuinely wanted to test, but decided against it since he had lost the mandate of the people.

For Rao to have gone ahead with this deception—only a whisker away from treason—there are three people he might have likely told: A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, R. Chidambaram and Naresh Chandra. Chidambaram and Chandra were both awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second-highest civilian honour, by later governments. Kalam was given the Bharat Ratna and made President of India. Did Narasimha Rao tell his successors something about these men that the public does not know?

Regardless of which of these theories is true, they all point to the fact that far from dithering, Rao was actively involved in the nuclear programme – a trait he also exhibited on the economy, welfare schemes and foreign policy. The portrait that emerges is of a hands-on manager. As Arunachalam puts it, “I worked with five prime ministers. I would rate Rao very high. [He] was a rare politician who understood the importance of technology in building national policy.”

Rao’s magnanimity in letting Vajpayee revel in the glory of nuclear testing (including of the hydrogen bomb) is telling. As Abdul Kalam said, it “reveals the maturity and professional excellence of a patriotic statesman who believed that the nation is bigger than the political system”.

When India finally tested nuclear weapons in 1998, western sanctions followed. Yet – as Rao judged – it has not harmed India in the long term (its effects on India’s security is more contested). Subsequent prime ministers have also followed Rao in refusing to sign the CTBT and NPT.

In 2005, US President George W Bush decided to make an exception to the international non-proliferation regime. Under the Indo-US nuclear deal, India would separate its civilian and military nuclear facilities, placing only its civilian facilities under international scrutiny. The US would help with India’s civilian nuclear energy. The deal made India the only country not part of the NPT framework that is still allowed to do nuclear commerce with the rest of the world.

This deal would have been impossible had not India been both an acknowledged nuclear weapons state as well as an emerging economic power.

The 1998 nuclear tests – sanctioned by Vajpayee with the help of Narasimha Rao – forced the West to concede that India would never cap its nuclear programme. They could, of course, have treated India as a renegade – as they have Iran, North Korea, and to some extent, Pakistan. But the economic power of post-1991 India – for which Rao gets the lion’s share of the credit – meant that the West could not afford to alienate India. This mix of economic might and an unbending nuclear programme is what has led to new status for India in the international system.

Seen thus, Narasimha Rao is not just the “true father” of the 1998 nuclear tests. He is also the crafter of a fresh vision for India in the world. This new self-image, at odds with Nehruvian idealism, emphasises economic muscle alongside a conventional military and large nuclear programme. It is a vision not without its critics. But for better or for worse, it is likely to be the dominant way in which India sees itself in the years to come.

vlpcotnzig-1467219367.jpg

Excerpted with permission from Half Lion: How PV Narasimha Rao Transformed India, Vinay Sitapati, Penguin Viking.

http://scroll.in/article/810874/nar...-pm-who-set-india-on-a-nuclear-explosion-path[/QUOTE]
Oh my god :o::o::o:

So bjp only achievement of history belongs to congress

Now bhaktas :taz::rofl::rofl::rofl::help:

@nair @proud_indian @Roybot @jbgt90 @Sergi @Water Car Engineer @dadeechi @kurup @Rain Man @kaykay @Abingdonboy @SR-91 @nang2 @Stephen Cohen @anant_s

@jbgt90 @ranjeet @4GTejasBVR @The_Showstopper @guest11 @PARIKRAMA

@GURU DUTT @HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @litefire @AMCA
 
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Its known fact that Rao did infact initiate the Test program but Rao had the burden of poor or recovering economy with him. However one cant take away the credit from Atal ji, the moment he had the power he gave free hands to APJ ( remember AB Vajpaee had only 13 days). Mr Kalam in so many interviews has explained how they suceeded in nuke test and he was given free hand by AB Vajpaee within a week of coming into power.
Mr Rao was one true PM rather a bloated congressman .... Mr AB Vajpaee took it from where he left ( both economy and N test).
 
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I really don't like these comparisons unless they are substantiated by facts, between two governments. Even PM Modi during his interview to timesnow credited last government in putting into motion the process of getting MTCR and NSG membership.
Similarly here, PM Rao prepared groundwork for Pokhran 2 and ultimately it was the case of taking a political call.
We must also remember that PVN Rao inherited an almost bankrupt economy and he had to enforce liberalization process. That meant when he completed his tenure, India, economically was in far better position. N tests invariably attract sanctions and unless the economy is strong enough to absorb those shocks, you are calling for a disaster. So Vajpayee sahab was perhaps in a much better position to authorize tests and at the same time bear the economic and foreign policy bumps that were to come. & he did!
Both had same team of brilliant technocrats like Late Kalam Sahab, Dr. Kakdokar et al but the geo political conditions were much different.
International events work on a different time scale and compared to tenure of governments, they take much more time to materialize. So as a general statement, i don't think there would ever be a case of single government taking whole credit. At the same time casual observers like us too should be mature never to blame a single administration for blunders that occur.
@Abingdonboy @Levina @Joe Shearer @PARIKRAMA @GURU DUTT @nair @Rain Man @Robinhood Pandey
 
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I really don't like these comparisons unless they are substantiated by facts, between two governments. Even PM Modi during his interview to timesnow credited last government in putting into motion the process of getting MTCR and NSG membership.
Similarly here, PM Rao prepared groundwork for Pokhran 2 and ultimately it was the case of taking a political call.
We must also remember that PVN Rao inherited an almost bankrupt economy and he had to enforce liberalization process. That meant when he completed his tenure, India, economically was in far better position. N tests invariably attract sanctions and unless the economy is strong enough to absorb those shocks, you are calling for a disaster. So Vajpayee sahab was perhaps in a much better position to authorize tests and at the same time bear the economic and foreign policy bumps that were to come. & he did!
Both had same team of brilliant technocrats like Late Kalam Sahab, Dr. Kakdokar et al but the geo political conditions were much different.
International events work on a different time scale and compared to tenure of governments, they take much more time to materialize. So as a general statement, i don't think there would ever be a case of single government taking whole credit. At the same time casual observers like us too should be mature never to blame a single administration for blunders that occur.
@Abingdonboy @Levina @Joe Shearer @PARIKRAMA @GURU DUTT @nair @Rain Man @Robinhood Pandey

You explained it perfectly........ The political call to conduct the test was taken by Vajpayee, and one must appreciate his will to go ahead with it, and it was not an easy decision to take.... But as i you rightly said the efforts of PVN towards improving economy cannot be ignored, and vajpayee could not have done the test if the economy was not put back in track......

But the most important aspect was the Political will to conduct the test and keeping it secret until the official declaration......
 
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I really don't like these comparisons unless they are substantiated by facts, between two governments. Even PM Modi during his interview to timesnow credited last government in putting into motion the process of getting MTCR and NSG membership.
Similarly here, PM Rao prepared groundwork for Pokhran 2 and ultimately it was the case of taking a political call.
We must also remember that PVN Rao inherited an almost bankrupt economy and he had to enforce liberalization process. That meant when he completed his tenure, India, economically was in far better position. N tests invariably attract sanctions and unless the economy is strong enough to absorb those shocks, you are calling for a disaster. So Vajpayee sahab was perhaps in a much better position to authorize tests and at the same time bear the economic and foreign policy bumps that were to come. & he did!
Both had same team of brilliant technocrats like Late Kalam Sahab, Dr. Kakdokar et al but the geo political conditions were much different.
International events work on a different time scale and compared to tenure of governments, they take much more time to materialize. So as a general statement, i don't think there would ever be a case of single government taking whole credit. At the same time casual observers like us too should be mature never to blame a single administration for blunders that occur.
@Abingdonboy @Levina @Joe Shearer @PARIKRAMA @GURU DUTT @nair @Rain Man @Robinhood Pandey

A most sensible post.

On a different note, Narasimha Rao was a hugely underestimated leader. History will give him far more credit than we his countrymen thought to give him.
 
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more than his own party gave him for sure. His treatment by Congress was despicable.
No wonder congress is in a such a pathetic shape. If not for him there would have been no MMS or chidambaram , they would have been left to rot at mercy of congress high command.

The guy was running minority govt, various scams and a failing economy but finally got the country to better shape. Compare the later congress govt who took a better running economy to virtual standstill.
 
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Narasimha Rao was a hugely underestimated leader.
Probably the best Congress PM. he rose from grass roots and his agrarian background meant he had an insight into rural heartland of Indian politics. He posed massive faith in Dr. Manmohan Singh and even though many say the reforms were actually World bank enforced, his sheer courage to move away from economic policies that essentially were Nehruvian Socialist ones, is no mean job. Since then, even though there have been minor changes in policies, the underlying philosophy of openness and integration with world economy, hasn't changed. & with it we find (after quarter of a century later), India is recognized as a responsible and serious member of world economy.
 
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Oh my god :o::o::o:

So bjp only achievement of history belongs to congress

Now bhaktas :taz::rofl::rofl::rofl::help:

It is a well known fact, and @anant_s has explained it beautifully. :)

Oh BTW, one point to be noted here, PVN Rao was the best PM Congress has produced after Lal Bahadur Shastri, and he is not a part of the dynasty. No wonder Congress high command have already erased this man from the history of Congress, the comparison with the dynasty heirs was becoming too uncomfortable. :)
 
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Hmm..
Everyone knew we had the bomb. So, the only thing stopping anyone from testing is the political will.

ABV had the will. Let's give credit to the person who did it not to some one who "could" have done it.

This is not about comparing PVN with ABV. Both would have their own place in History,

Also, let's not talk about the lack of political will rather political acumen that PVN had.

He took office at the point in time when India was at its weakest. We had Mandal & Babri issues, We had terrorism in Punjab & Kashmir, We had USSR breaking up losing the lone UNSC veto support, We had to mortgage gold reserves to meet ends as a country, We had Russia reneging on Cryo engine deal while China selling M-11 missiles to Pakistan & UN putting pressure to sign CTBT.

If there was a point in the independent Indian history when India was ripe for breaking up then that was time. He not only handled all these issues successfully but also stood his ground when India vetoed the CTBT resolution at UN.


Statement in explanation of vote by Ms. Arundhati Ghose,
Ambassador/Permanent Representative of India to the UN Offices at Geneva,
on Item 65: CTBT at the 50th Session of the UN General Assembly
at New York on September 10, 1996

Mr. President,

In 1995, India had participated in the adoption by consensus of resolution 50/65 which, inter alia, called on the Conference on Disarmament to conclude a universal and multilaterally and effectively verifiable CTBT which would contribute effectively to both nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation in all its aspects, so as to enable its signature at the outset of the 51st session of the GA.

The resolution proposed for adoption today in Document A/50/L.78 quotes only selectively from resolution 50/65 and proposes a text identical to the one on which there was no consensus in the body which had been charged with negotiating it. It has been presented as a national text to bypass the lack of consensus on it in the Conference on Disarmament. In addition, diverging from usual practice, the GA is being asked to 'adopt' the text, a function usually that of a Conference of States. The resolution also calls on all States to sign the Treaty - even after it is known that the text is a non-consensual one.

The CTBT requested by resolution 50 / 65 should have been one which would have contributed effectively to nuclear disarmament. We have, during the negotiations, been convinced by the nuclear weapon States that they had no intention of giving up their nuclear weapons. Weak preambular paragraphs have been included to pay lip service to nuclear disarmament and stronger paragraphs which had been introduced by the neutral and non-aligned countries during the negotiations were ignored. India is, in any case, not satisfied with mere preambular references - we have seen the fate of such preambles in other treaties. We had wished and continue to wish for a genuine commitment by the nuclear weapon States to eliminate their nuclear weapons in a reasonable and negotiated finite span of time. Without such a commitment the treaty becomes an unequal treaty which retains the present discriminatory nuclear regime -sanctioning, in effect, the possession of nuclear weapons by some countries for their security and that of their allies, while ignoring the security concerns of other States.

Secondly, the CTBT envisaged by resolution 50/65 should have been one which would have contributed effectively to nuclear non-proliferation in all its aspects. The text presented for adoption bans only explosive testing. The reason is clear. Such a prohibition is today considered acceptable by the nuclear weapon States as these states have already completed their programmes of explosive testing. They are well placed to exploit the lessons learnt through their extensive testing programmes, through more sophisticated and non-explosive technologies. During the negotiations treaty language that would have signified an end to the qualitative development and upgradation of nuclear weapons, thus curbing vertical proliferation, was categorically rejected, thereby frustrating another key element of the mandate. It is also our view and indeed our concern, that this partial test ban treaty is not only flawed, but is a dangerous one. As the 1963 PTBT which banned nuclear testing in the atmosphere resulted in a dramatic increase in the number of underground tests, we feel that this Treaty, far from being a ban, will encourage a nuclear weapons technology race, a consequence that a CTBT should have prevented. As this text will not lead to the qualitative capping of the development of nuclear weapons, it cannot be considered an integral and first step of a nuclear disarmament process.

The CTBT requested by the General Assembly should have been one which was multilaterally negotiated and universal -one which would attract adherence by all States by meeting the concerns of all States. Our concerns were ignored. The flawed text which is now proposed for adoption was negotiated in its most critical aspects, by a handful of countries and presented to the majority of the international community on a virtually 'take it or leave it basis'. India could not accept this text in the Conference on Disarmament and cannot agree to it now in the General Assembly.

We also believe that the text fails in the overarching objective set out in the mandate reiterated in GA resolution 50/ 65 - "the enhancement of international peace and security". This is the striving of the entire world community. The text has betrayed this ideal. It has confirmed and perpetuated the existing global insecurity born of a world divided unequally into nuclear haves and have-nots.

Mr. President, General Assembly resolutions are the expression of the will of nations in which multilateral treaties can find their sanction. General Assembly resolutions by definition cannot support violations of international law. The text circulated by the sponsors contains a provision in its article 14 on Entry into Force, which is contrary to the fundamental norms of international law. This provision which makes ratification by India and 43 other countries essential for Entry into Force of this Treaty was introduced after India had clearly stated that it was not in a position to subscribe to this treaty in its present form. Customary international law lays down that no obligations can be imposed on a country without its specific consent. We had indicated that we would withhold our consent to the Treaty text unless our concerns were addressed. We did not want such a provision on Entry into Force to be included in the text and repeatedly urged the Conference on Disarmament to change this article, so as to enable those countries who wanted the Treaty, flawed though it was, to achieve it, if that was indeed their intent, though it would have been without India's signature. We could have prevented, Mr. President, the present sad turn of events in which a text which runs contrary to customary international law has been brought for adoption to the General Assembly of the UNI. Mr. President, I would like to declare on the floor of this august Assembly that India will never sign this unequal Treaty, not now, nor later. As long as this text contains this article, Mr. President, this treaty will never enter into force.

The resolution in document A/50/L.78 is as flawed as the treaty text it proposes for adoption.

Mr. President, for the reasons above and as the draft text falls far short of the mandate which reflected the will of the international community, India will vote against the resolution.

http://fas.org/news/india/1996/ctbt_UN_september_10_96.htm

It is a well known fact, and @anant_s explained it beautifully. :)

Oh BTW, one point to be noted here, PVN Rao was the best PM Congress has produced after Lal Bahadur Shastri, and he is not a part of the dynasty. No wonder Congress high command have already erased this man from the history of Congress, the comparison with the dynasty heirs was becoming too uncomfortable. :)

People of India and history would never forgive SG and the gang for their despicable acts against PVN.

They did not even allow his funeral to take place in Delhi.
 
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" National elections were scheduled for May 1996, and Rao spent the next two months campaigning. On 8 May at 9 PM, Abdul Kalam was asked to immediately meet with the prime minister. Rao told him, “Kalam, be ready with the Department of Atomic Energy and your team for the N-test and I am going to Tirupati. You wait for my authorisation to go ahead with the test. DRDO-DAE teams must be ready for action. "

Some confuse with this that Abdul Kalam was father of indian nuclear test of 1998 .

Abdul Kalam wasn't a nuclear scientist at all , rather he was a rocket scientist who lead India's missile development program as the chief of DRDO .

Abdul Kalam's role in 1998 nuclear tests was that he was the chief scientific adviser to indian PM and chief of DRDO at that time . So he worked as liaison man between govt and the nuclear scientists working on the test .
 
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Hmm..
Everyone knew we had the bomb. So, the only thing stopping anyone from testing is the political will.

ABV had the will. Let's give credit to the person who did it not to some one who "could" have done it.

Rao also had will .And somewhere I had been read ,infact he attemped for it around 1995 .But US got the wind and they pressured us .But when ABV came to power ,he was careful enough to close such loopholes .

We should appreciate PM Rao ,he was one of the best PM of India .During 1991 ,it was a hell for us .USSR was vanished .And we were in a diplomatic cyclone because of our NAM policy .But PM Rao was brave enough to handle a minority Govt and revolutionary economic reforms .
His successors including current PM Modi is just following the paveway he created .
GoI always worked for the development of the nation irrespective of the party that in rule .It was the coalition pressure the bogged down their normal pace .
 
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