*Nuclear Waiver - Blow To Non-Proliferation*

*By Praful Bidwai*

08 September, 2008
*Inter Press Service <http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43818>*

*NEW DELHI, Sep 8 (IPS)* - The special waiver granted to India by the
Nuclear Suppliers' Group (NSG) from its nuclear trade rules is being seen as
a massive setback to the cause of global nuclear non-proliferation and
disarmament.

The NSG's waiver will allow India to resume nuclear commerce with the rest
of the world with very few restrictions although India is not a signatory to
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has refused to accede to any
other agreement for preventing the spread of, reducing the numbers of, or
abolishing nuclear weapons.

The 45-nation conglomerate, a private arrangement set up after India's first
nuclear weapons explosion in 1974, turned a full circle at its special
meeting in Vienna, on the weekend, the second one in a fortnight, held at
the behest of the United States.

The NSG was originally established "to ensure that nuclear trade for
peaceful purposes does not contribute to the proliferation of nuclear
weapons or other nuclear explosive devices".

But it has now done the very opposite by agreeing to the exceptional waiver
for India as part of New Delhi's controversial nuclear cooperation deal with
the U.S. inked three years ago.

Washington hailed the waiver as "historic" and one that would boost nuclear
non-proliferation, while New Delhi described the deal as an "important step"
towards meeting the challenges of climate change and sustainable
development.

Clearly though, the waiver only became possible because of the strong-arm
methods used by the U.S. to bludgeon dissenting NSG members into agreeing to
the exemption text it had drafted in consultation with India.

Contrary to the claim that the waiver, and more generally, the U.S.-India
nuclear deal, will bring India into the global "non-proliferation
mainstream" or promote nuclear restraint on India's part, *it will allow
India to expand its nuclear weapons arsenal and encourage a nuclear arms
race in Asia, particularly in the volatile South Asian subcontinent, where
Pakistan emerged as India's nuclear rival 10 years ago. *

The special waiver has been roundly criticised by nuclear disarmament and
peace groups throughout the world, including in India.

*The waiver, says the U.S.-India Deal Working Group of the disarmament
network 'ABOLITION 2000', comprising more than 2,000 peace groups worldwide,
"creates a dangerous distinction between 'good' proliferators and 'bad'
proliferators and sends out misleading signals to the international
community..." *

"The exemption" it adds, "will not bring India further into conformity with
the non-proliferation behaviour expected of the member-states of the NPT."

Barring the exceptional situation in which India might conduct another
nuclear test, the NSG imposes no significant conditions on nuclear trade
with India. Even this condition is not stated up-front, and is mentioned in
reference to a general statement by India's Foreign Minister Pranab
Mukherjee on Sep. 5, in which he reiterated India's unilateral and voluntary
moratorium on nuclear testing and its non-proliferation commitments.

*But a voluntary moratorium can be lifted easily and unilaterally.* In any
case, it falls short of a legally binding commitment not to test.

India had insisted on a "clean and unconditional" waiver from the NSG, and
has very nearly secured it, thanks to the indulgence of the U.S., which
proposed the deal in the first place and lobbied hard and furiously for it.

*With the waiver under its belt, India can proceed to import uranium fuel,
of which it is running short, and a range of other nuclear materials,
equipment and technologies for its civilian nuclear programme. But it can
divert domestic uranium exclusively for weapons purposes. *

"Under the U.S.-India nuclear deal, India signed an agreement to separate
its military nuclear facilities from civilian installations and subject some
of the latter to safeguards under the International Atomic Energy Agency,"
says Achin Vanaik, head of the department of political science at Delhi
University, and a national coordination committee member of the Coalition
for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (India).

*According to Vanaik, India will only put 14 of its 22 operating or planned
civilian nuclear reactors under IAEA safeguards, which are meant to ensure
that no nuclear material from them is diverted to military purposes. ''But
it can use the remaining eight reactors to produce as much plutonium as it
likes for its weapons programme." *

*According to a report prepared by independent scientists and experts for
the International Panel on Fissile Materials two years ago, these eight
reactors alone can yield fuel for as many as 40 Nagasaki-type bombs every
year. *

In addition, India can produce more bomb fuel from its dedicated military
nuclear facilities and fast-breeder reactors, which it can maintain and
expand.

India accepts no limits or restrictions on the size of its nuclear arsenal
and has an ambitious nuclear doctrine under which it continues to stockpile
fissile material for weapons use.

The NSG has all but put its imprimatur on India's nuclear activities which
would allow it to expand its arsenal of mass-destruction weapons and thus
set a negative example for the rest of the world, in particular, wannabe
atomic states.

In the process, says Daryl F. Kimball of the Arms Control Association
(U.S.), the NSG has undermined "efforts to contain Iran's and North Korea's
nuclear programmes, and it will make it nearly impossible to win support for
much-needed measures to strengthen the NPT" at its next review conference
due in 2010.

The waiver may weaken and harm the NPT itself by aiding the acquisition of
nuclear weapons by a country not recognised by it as a nuclear
weapons-state, which it explicitly prohibits. Effectively, it expands the
Nuclear Club to include a member which has refused to sign the treaty.

Within the NSG, there was a great deal of resistance to the waiver. An
earlier meeting of the group, on Aug. 21-22, failed to produce a consensus
-- necessary for any decision to go through.

The resistance was led by six "like-minded" countries --Austria, Ireland,
the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway and Switzerland -- which argued that
India must accept three conditions in order to resume nuclear trade.

These included a periodic review of compliance with India's
non-proliferation pledges, exclusion from trade of sensitive technologies
such as uranium enrichment and spent fuel reprocessing, and cessation of
nuclear commerce in case India tests.

In the event, India only accepted the first condition and doggedly refused
to go beyond reiterating its unilateral moratorium on testing.

However, on the second day of the NSG meeting, *Foreign Minister Mukherjee
made a general statement saying that India is opposed to nuclear
proliferation, does not subscribe to an arms race, and will behave
responsibly as a nuclear weapons-state. *

*"The statement was inane and dishonest because India initiated and has
sustained a nuclear arms race in South Asia,"* says M.V. Ramana from the
Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Environment and Development,
Banagalore. "It is really a sad commentary on the state of debate at the NSG
if such statements actually create what was described by the U.S. delegate
as a 'positive momentum'..."

Eventually, the "positive result" in the form of the waiver was achieved
after Mukherjee's statement effectively split the "like-minded" group and
led to the desertion of the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland on the
evening of Sep. 5.

Behind the change was crude pressure, blackmail and induced fear of
"isolation" on account of antagonising the "emerging power" that is India.
The topmost leaders of the U.S., India and their allies worked the telephone
lines to mount this pressure.

Kimball said that ''it appears as if George Bush and his team engaged in
some nasty threats, misinformation about positions, and intimidation, to
wear down the core six members … and their allies. You have to assume the
conversations among foreign ministers, presidents, and prime ministers
didn't focus on the policy and non-proliferation issues, but raw politics".

"Another factor,'' Kimball added, ''was the role of Germany, ostensibly the
NSG chair. At this meeting, the Germans apparently sat on their thumbs and
let the Americans run the show and keep asking for more consultations
despite the remaining differences. A more competent and less biased chair
would have provided more balance and would have adjourned the meeting Friday
night when it was clear there was still disagreement on some fundamental
issues..."

China briefly emerged as a supporter of the Group of Six, when it asked that
the waiver decision not be rushed. But, say Indian media reports, a
critically timed telephone call from Bush to Chinese president Hu Jintao did
the trick and China quickly fell in line.

"This was a triumph of crass power politics," says Vanaik. "It is sad and
profoundly disturbing that nobody resisted U.S. or Indian pressure and stood
up for elementary principles in a group where even a single member could
have blocked the waiver. *India's 'victory' is founded on crude muscle power
and cynicism, and negates rational, democratic decision-making based on a
commitment to making the world a safer place."*
(Praful Bidwai is a noted peace activist and co-founder of the Movement in
India for Nuclear Disarmament (MIND), based in New Delhi.)

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to