---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sukla Sen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Jan 13, 2007 9:26 AM
Subject: CPIM Champions Indian Nukes!

[Here we reproduce below a statement of the Polit
Bureau (the apex body in the party hierarchy) of the
Communist Party of India (Marxist), by far the largest
Left party in India, and another detailed article
enunciating the party's stand on the Indo-US Nuke
'Deal'.
Both were carried by their central (weekly) organ,
'People's Democracy'.

What is notable here is that both the pieces are
unashamedly asserting their commitments to defend and
promote India's "strategic autonomy" i.e. full
freehand in Bomb-making. Both are asserting that India
must not allow the US deviate from its commitments
made in the July 18, 2005 Bush-Singh Joint Statement
and scrupulously stick by Indian Prime Minister's
commitment given to that effect on August 17 2006 on
the floor of the Indian Parliament. So the party comes
out unmistakably as a champion of the July 18 Joint
Statement – the 'Deal' in its 'original' form.

This would help one appreciate the huge difficulties
encountered by the anti-nuke peace movement in India
where the traditions of independent (of political
parties) civil society mobilisations and protests are
much younger and weaker than in the West. And also the
imperative to mobilise global resistance to the 'Deal'
in its entirety.]

I/II.
http://pd.cpim.org/2006/1217/12172006_pb%20on%20nuclear%20deal.htm

US Legislation On Nuclear Deal Not Acceptable



The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist) issued the following statement on December
11, 2006



THE Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) is of the considered
view that the recent Act passed by the US legislature
concerning bilateral civil nuclear cooperation with
India is grossly violative of the assurances made by
the prime minister in the Indian parliament. An
agreement on this basis will seriously undermine the
pursuit of an independent foreign policy.



Replying to the debate in the Rajya Sabha on August
17, 2006, with specific reference to the nine points
of concern raised by the CPI(M), the prime minister
had unambiguously stated that India cannot and will
not accept any compromises on the following:



   1.

      Full civilian nuclear cooperation: "removal of
all restrictions on all aspects of cooperation and
technology transfers."
   2.

      Principle of Reciprocity: "India will accept
only IAEA safeguards on nuclear facilities in a phased
manner…only when all restrictions on India have been
lifted."
   3.

      Annual certification by US president: "We have
conveyed to the United States our opposition to these
provisions, even if they are projected as non-binding
on India, as being contrary to the letter and spirit
of the July statement."
   4.

      India as a state possessing advanced nuclear
technology: "India's strategic programme is totally
outside the purview of the July statement and we
oppose any legislative provisions that mandate
scrutiny of either our nuclear weapons programme or
our unsafeguarded nuclear facilities."
   5.

      Safeguards agreement and fuel assurances: India
seeks uninterrupted supply of fuel to reactors that
would be placed under IAEA safeguards together with
India's right to take corrective measures in the event
the fuel supplies are interrupted. Further, "there is
no question of allowing American inspectors to roam
around our nuclear facilities".
   6.

      Autonomy of decision making on future scientific
research and development: "We will not accept
interference by other countries vis a vis the
development of our strategic programme.
   7.

      Moratorium on production of fissile material:
"We are not willing to accept a moratorium on the
production of fissile material".
   8.

      Global Nuclear Disarmament: While committed to
the Rajiv Gandhi action plan, "there is no question of
India….accepting full scope safeguards as a
requirement for nuclear supplies to India now or in
the future."
   9.

      Cessation of Future cooperation: Responding to
US terms to cease cooperation in case India proceeds
with further nuclear tests the PM had stated, "India's
position and development of nuclear weapons is an
integral part of our national security. This will
remain so."



The final act of the US legislation runs contrary to
most of these assurances given by the prime minister.
This includes provision of imposing restrictions and
trade regimes barring access to dual use nuclear
technology thus denying India its full nuclear fuel
cycle. The annual good conduct certification by the US
president remains. There are nine references to
India's role being one of support and complicity with
the US designs on Iran. The act talks of India's
foreign policy being "congruent to that of the United
States." Instead of an India specific additional
protocol with the IAEA US law calls for a modified
additional protocol meant for non-nuclear weapon
countries etc.



Once again goal posts have been shifted. Two new
provisions have been included concerning a) in case of
US canceling its obligations it would help
facilitating alternate fuel supplies from friendly
countries of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. This is now
restricted only under conditions of market failures
and does not cover deliberate US termination. b) It
was agreed that US would help build a strategic fuel
reserve to ensure continuity of running our reactors
for their lifetime. The final act now explicitly bars
any reserve other than normal operating reserves
required to run our reactors.



Under these circumstances, the argument that the
country should wait for the final bilateral agreement
is specious. Obviously, the US administration is bound
by the provisions of its act while negotiating this
agreement. This cannot be accepted by India as it
negates the most significant, if not all, assurances
made by the prime minister to the Indian parliament.
Thus, further negotiations on this score must not
proceed.



The CPI(M) demands a full fledged debate in the Indian
parliament. Nothing short of the assurances made by
the prime minister on August 17, 2006 can be
acceptable.


II.
http://pd.cpim.org/2006/1126/11262006_prabir.htm


SENATE CLEARANCE FOR INDO-US NUCLEAR DEAL



Little To Cheer About



Prabir Purkayastha



THE passing in the Senate of the Indo-US Nuclear Deal
has been hailed by the Indian media as a "big
victory", without even a cursory mention that it is
the identical Bill that Manmohan Singh in his speech
to the parliament had stated was not acceptable in its
current form. To quote the prime minister's August
speech to the parliament, "…if the final product is in
its current form, India will have grave difficulties
in accepting these Bills." Well, not only was the
Senate Bill that has been passed is in the same form
that the PM had said was not acceptable to India, more
damaging amendments have now been inserted. And if the
Indian government has any illusions about the US
reconciling the House of Representatives and the
Senate Bills to address India's concerns, they should
be set at rest by the US ambassador, who has asserted
that the Senate and the House of Representatives Bills
conform to the Bush-Manmohan Singh July 2005 Framework
Agreement and the Separation Plan of March 2006. In
other words, this is what India can expect from the US
Congress, take it or leave it.



Before we get into the details of the Senate Bill once
again, it is important to understand the US
legislative process. The two Bills, which have been
passed by the two Houses of the US Congress – the
House of Representatives earlier and now the Senate –
are not identical. They have now to be reconciled to
each other and a common text passed by the two houses
sitting together. Only after this step is completed,
an agreement between India and US on nuclear
co-operation – the 123 Agreement – can be worked out
to allow for the US to co-operate with India for its
civilian nuclear program.



MAKING INDIA DEPENDENT



Though both Bills were structured around the original
draft that the US administration presented to the two
houses, they were later modified by their respective
committees. It is these two versions that have led to
the extensive debate in India on how it was a crude
attempt to shift the goal posts and did not conform
either to the letter or spirit of the July framework
or the May Separation Plan. The Left parties and the
scientific community brought out that a number of
extraneous issues were coupled to the two Bills that
would bind India's civilian and strategic program to
US interests. Finally, after an extended debate, the
PM in his speech to the parliament echoed most of the
concerns expressed by the Left and the scientific
community and made an explicit assertion that if these
clauses were a part of the final reconciled Bill, they
would not be acceptable to India. While we may wait to
see how the final Bill shapes up, there is little
ground for the euphoria that the Indian media has been
expressing. The Killer amendments are not the ones
defeated on the floor of the House but those that are
already contained in the provisions of the Bills that
have been passed. To add insult to the injury, more
substantive amendments have been added to the Senate
Bill, which makes it clear that the any deal with the
US is like a ratchet – once we accept a deal, the US
is going to continue to turn the screws to make India
bend to its strategic designs.



People's Democracy has extensively covered the
provisions of the two versions of the Bill, which are
way beyond what India had accepted in the July
framework, 2005, or the Separation Plan 2006. It was
bad enough that India went into a Deal that seriously
compromised its independent foreign policy and raised
question marks on its plans for a self-reliant nuclear
energy program. It was apparent right from the
beginning that the US saw the Deal as an opportunity
to turn India around on these two vital issues. If
India had any delusions that it was being allowed an
entry into the Nuclear club as a full member, it
should have dropped this when Bush made clear that
India would be recognised only as a recipient of
nuclear favours and would not have any right to
participate in the fuel cycle. Such rights would
belong to only a select few, which did not include
India. The yearly certification by the president, the
Congressional approval each year for the "nuclear
co-operation" to continue, the US denying India
nuclear fuel if it was not satisfied with India's
conduct on various matters, no guarantees for long
term supply of fuel from other sources – all of this
was a part of the US not seeking nuclear co-operation
but nuclear capitulation from India. Taken in its
entirety, if India has plans for an ambitious nuclear
energy program, as it is being stated by the PM, the
last thing it should do is to tie itself to such a
deal. The bigger the nuclear program, more will India
be dependent on the US for nuclear fuel and spare
parts for its plants. And more dependent it is, more
the leverage it will give the US over its foreign and
internal policies.



Energy security is no less a political issue than food
security. For those who remember the 60's, will
remember how the US turned the screws on India after
it became dependent on PL480 wheat imports for food.
The US reneging on Tarapur reactor fuel contract is a
clear pointer how dependence on the US for nuclear
fuel and technology would allow the US to have a veto
over India's policies. For those arguing that a bad
deal is better than a no deal, seem to overlook the
option that if India is not comfortable with the deal,
it can wait for an ambitious nuclear program when its
three fuel cycle is ready with thorium as fuel to
power its reactors. Till then, it should look to a
smaller self-reliant nuclear energy development rather
than tie itself in this way to the US.



THREE MORE AMENDMENTS



If the original provisions of the deal were not bad
enough, there are three more amendments that have been
tied into the Senate Bill that has been passed. One of
those is Senator Harkin's amendment that makes India's
toeing the US line on Iran an explicit condition for
the deal to continue, a pre-condition that the PM
already rejected in the parliament. The PM had stated
that any attempt to couple extraneous issues such as
Iran would not be acceptable to India. The second is a
condition that India accepts partnership with the US
agency – National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA) – that deal with the nuclear weapons program
and are known to work closely with the US security
agencies, the NSA and the CIA. At no stage of the
talks with the US, the question of Indian agencies
working with the US's security agencies have come up,
particularly as this is specifically a civilian
nuclear energy agreement. The insertion of a clause
that calls for such a co-operation with an agency that
deals with the US's military nuclear program would
mean giving the US access to India's strategic
program. Whatever may be the US intentions, the
country has a right to know what is the purpose of
such an intrusion, specifically when the PM had
assured the parliament that the only inspection India
would accept would be IAEA's and not any American
inspectors running around the country. The third seeks
to limit the amount of nuclear fuel to be commensurate
with India's reactor requirements and therefore goes
against the provision of the Bush-Manmohan Singh
agreement that India would stockpile nuclear fuel so
that it would not forced to lead a hand-to-mouth
existence for nuclear fuel. The strategic stockpile
envisaged in the agreement would no longer be feasible
with this amendment.



We have already indicated that the country will go
along with the PM's statement to the parliament as
what constitutes the line that the India-US nuclear
deal will not cross. It is clear now that the Senate
and the House of Representatives Bills go way beyond
this line. While tactically, India may wait for the
reconciled Bill to emerge before engaging in public,
any doubt that it has that it will get a Bill to its
liking should now be put at rest. The US has every
intention of using this deal to make India succumb to
its strategic designs. Any other hope is just failing
to see the writing on the wall. Or does the Indian
government mean to reverse the position that the PM
took in August in the parliament and echo ambassador
Mulford's that the two bills are in line with July
Framework and the Separation Plan, the PM's statement
to the contrary not withstanding?

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