US Lifts Ban on Nuclear Trade with India

http://www.democracynow.org/2008/10/10/us_lifts_ban_on_nuclear_trade

*Achin Vanaik*, professor of international relations and global politics at
Delhi University. He is a founding member of the Coalition for Nuclear
Disarmament and Peace <http://www.cndpindia.org/>, a group founded after
India conducted its first nuclear test in 1998.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *President Bush has signed legislation to lift a
three-decade ban on nuclear trade with India. The deal would allow India to
expand its nuclear power industry without requiring it to sign the
Non-Proliferation Treaty as other nations must. *
*

*PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: *India will continue to build on its strong
record of responsibility in operating its nuclear facilities. And India and
the United States will cooperate more closely to keep the world's most
dangerous weapons out of the hands of extremists and terrorists. The bill I
sign today approves the 123 Agreement I submitted to Congress and
establishes the legal framework for that agreement to come into effect. The
bill makes clear that our agreement with India is consistent with the Atomic
Energy Act and other elements of US law. By passing this legislation, my
administration and Congress demonstrate our common view that nuclear
cooperation is in the interests of both the United States and India.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *Manish Tiwari of India's Congress Party also hailed the
ratification of the deal. *
*

*MANISH TIWARI: *Without compromising on our weapons program; without
compromising on our fast breeder reactor program; without signing the NPT,
the CTBT or the FMCT; India has been able to access the entire spectrum of
global civil nuclear commerce on very much its own terms. It is a historic
day for India.
*JUAN GONZALEZ: *Critics say the agreement encourages nuclear production
worldwide, because it effectively rewards India for developing nukes outside
the treaty. Although it's received little attention in the US, the deal has
sparked heavy controversy in India, with critics worrying it will undermine
Indian sovereignty.

*AMY GOODMAN: *Achin Vanaik is a professor of international relations and
global politics at Delhi University. He's a founding member of the Coalition
for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace, a group founded after India conducted its
first nuclear test in '98. Professor Vanaik joins us now on the line from
New Delhi.

Your reaction to the lifting of this ban?

*ACHIN VANAIK: *Well, I think it's a very sad day for India and the world.
This is a—there are three aspects to this deal, and the consequences are
negative in all three aspects: the strategic political dimension, in which
India will now partner much more strongly than ever before the United States
in its informal imperial project; second, of course, it's a very sad day for
all of us who are concerned about nuclear disarmament and the dangers of
proliferation, both vertical and horizontal; and it's also a bad day for
those who believe that nuclear energy is outmoded and must be replaced by
renewable sources of energy and that the direction of nuclear—civilian
nuclear energy is a bad one.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *The reports are that India is planning to build as many as
thirty nuclear power plants. I would assume then that the Bush
administration is also looking at the potential for business for American
companies to get involved in that.

*ACHIN VANAIK: *The commercial aspect from the United States point of view
is secondary to the strategic political dimension. After all, as you know,
the United States has not built a nuclear reactor since 1979, or something
like that, after Three Mile Island. And the French and the Russians are far
ahead. The initiative for this deal, actually, did come from the Bush
administration, not from New Delhi, and it was motivated primarily by the
desire to consolidate and deepen the strategic relationship.

As for the thirty nuclear power plants that India wants to build—at the
moment, it has about fourteen; in due course, it'll be—have seventeen. But
thirty is still a long way ahead. And the economics of building nuclear
power plants is, of course, atrocious, horrendous, in so many ways.

*AMY GOODMAN: *We're talking to Professor Vanaik in New Delhi in India. What
does this mean for the relationship with Pakistan, the nuclear arms race?
And also, at the same time this is going through without India signing the
nonproliferation agreement, the US putting enormous pressure on Iran.

*ACHIN VANAIK: *Yes, well, you probably heard the—Manish Tiwari, I think I
heard, in the Congress saying how wonderful it is, because India is able to
get this deal without having to do anything with regard to nuclear
proliferation. It can keep on building its nuclear arsenal. So, one obvious
impact of this is that it is going to provoke Pakistan. They've already made
it clear that they are going to try to establish more fuel supplies, and
they're going to build more bombs. So there's a kind of impact on the
nuclear arms race between India and Pakistan.

But that's not the only arms race that is going to be—that's going to be
extended. It's important to understand that this deal, to the delight of the
Indian government, legitimizes its nuclear weapons policies, but this deal
also legitimizes American nuclear weapons policies, and India is now a
supporter of things like the ballistic missile defense system, the
Proliferation Security Initiative, which is a guarantee that we are going to
have a global nuclear arms race, because the ballistic missile defense
system, as you know, is directed towards Russia and China. The Russians and
Chinese don't like it. They're going to have to quantitatively and
qualitatively expand their nuclear arsenals to overcome this attempted
shield. And, of course, as the Chinese do so, then the Indians have to do so
also, in order to counter the Chinese, and then the Pakistanis have to do so
to counter the Indian ambitions. So, you have a dynamic of an arms race,
which is also, to some extent, out of the hands of the Indians as a result
of this particular deal.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *And what is the reaction domestically among opposition
groups within India to this spiraling involvement of the government in
nuclear power?

*ACHIN VANAIK: *Well, with regard, there are—the two main opposition forces
have been from the Hindu nationalist and Hindu communal force, the Bharatiya
Janata Party, and from the left party, the communist party, being the
Marxist and Communist Party of India.

The opposition from the right-wing Hindu nationalist and fundamentalist
party is basically that, insofar as India was not going to test, then this
could restrain India's development. But we, of course, are not like the
left. We want the strong strategic relationship with the United States. This
deal isn't quite good enough. That's their sort of criticism.

On the part of the left, their preoccupation is, in many ways, nuclear
nationalism, to some extent shared with the BJP, that, why can't we just—we
shouldn't have this kind of restraint. Of course, if India tests, then, of
course, what's going to happen is that, both in the Nuclear Suppliers Group
as well as in the United States, there would be huge problems in terms of
the civilian nuclear cooperation.

But nuclear nationalism is something that we have to fight against. If we
really want to move towards a world free of nuclear weapons and this
disastrous situation that now exists, then we have to think much beyond this
question of, "Oh, well, we are the nuclear goodies, and the others are the
nuclear baddies. And we, the countries that have nuclear weapons, are
somehow the great guardians of the nuclear world order, and we are reliable
and can be trusted." I mean, I find it astonishing that so many people
worldwide are still prepared to swallow this.

*AMY GOODMAN: *Achin Vanaik, we want to thank you very much for being with
us, professor of international relations and global politics at Delhi
University, founding member of the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and
Peace, speaking to us from New Delhi, India.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
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