majesticpankaj
BANNED
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2010
- Messages
- 2,877
- Reaction score
- -14
good job by india.. make your enemy as weak as possible. the war can be fought at many fronts.
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That is an incorrect reading of Pakistan's objections - Pakistan's objections were in the context of the arbitrary nature of the Indian clearance. Pakistan wanted a standard international protocol and rules governing such exemptions for all nations, rather than the arbitrary and discriminatory process that was applied to grant India the exemption.
All nations have a right to peaceful nuclear energy.
I don't understand what the problem is. Pakistan already has nuclear weapons, what harm can it do, for them to build a nuclear power plant in order to provide domestic energy?
I really can't see why anyone would have a problem with this?
Also, the NSG is "non-binding" and therefore essentially irrelevant, all they can do is provide guidelines. There is no legal obligation to follow the guidelines at all.
why and on what grounds does china receive the right to do so unilaterally and utterly disregarding international opinion ..?....both Pakistan and China can bring their case before the NSG and let them judge the merits or demerits....
on the grounds that there is no international law stating that china pakistan are not to cooperate
on the grounds that this particular project has no proliferation concerns given it will be fully inspected by IAEA and pakistan already has the bomb hence no threat to anyone
on the grounds that NSG does not make laws, merely guidelines which are optional, and no country even brought this up in the NSG
private citizens and india has made noises but no country is officially pushing the problem and the forum for such a thing is the NSG which no country has raise any concerns
1) international law or agreement whichever way you would like to put it.....its the basis for creating the NSG....that a member nation(China)...cannot do nuclear commerce with an NPT non member without the consent of the other members.....
The NSG is legally non-binding.
They can only give guidelines, and there is no legal obligation at all to follow the guidelines.
The Sino-Pakistan nuclear deal does not break any international laws.
....it seems this anomaly is enabling Russia & China to supply Iran too........
What sanctions did Russia face, from supplying Iran with nuclear fuel for their reactor?
By the way, China was not involved in supplying Iran's reactor, it was just Russia.