[It is after May 18 1974, when India carried out its first nuclear blast,
the then Prime Minister of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, would proclaim
that Pakistanis are ready to eat grass if necessary to make nuclear bomb.
And, finally, it is May 11, and 13, 1998 that made possible for
Pakistan to carry
out its own nuclear explosion just in a fortnight's time on the following
May 28 and 30.

Now, a repetition from the same story.
In the wake of the Indo-US nuclear deal culminating into opening up of the
doors of global nuclear trade to India, ending more than three decades of
ostracisation, by virtue of the NSG waiver made possible by determined
US prodding backed up by all out Indian efforts and strong supports
particularly from France and Russia, Pakistan is now having a similar deal
with China sans the NSG waiver having its demand to be treated on par with
India been rudely rebuffed by US and the NSG.

The fact that India carried out its first nuclear blast through deceit and
breach of faith with plutonium obtained from the spent fuel rods of the
CIRUS reactor provided by Canada to help develop India its "peaceful nuclear
programme" is craftily dismissed by the author with just a sleight of hand.
He also keeps completely mum over the fact that it was not that Canada alone
went irate, there was strong international reaction to the Indian blast on
May 18 1974.
Similarly, while he is somewhat relieved at the NSG's failure to lay down
stricter rules for its members restricting transfer of (nuclear fuel)
enrichment and reprocessing technologies to non-NPT signatories, he is
extremely cut up with its meek response to the upcoming Pak-China nuclear
deal.]

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/dc-comment/nuclear-pursuits-702

Nuclear pursuits
By By Inder Malhotra
Jul 07 2010

COMPARED WITH the protracted excitement and controversy over the Indo-US
civilian nuclear deal, the resumption of India-Canada nuclear cooperation
that was abruptly ruptured 36 years ago has received little attention. This
may be because despite its undoubted significance the accord between the two
countries — signed in the presence of the two countries’ Prime Ministers in
Toronto on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty (G-20) Summit — is entirely
non-controversial. It is also beneficial to both sides and inimical to no
third country.

Not many people remember that Canada was the first country to help India
embark on its nuclear programme, as drawn up by legendary Homi Bhabha. While
a British-supplied Apsara reactor was the first to be set up in this
country, Canada’s Cirus reactor, called “Candu” by the Canadians, was the
second. But it suited India’s needs and Dr Bhabha’s grand design, based on
Indian realities, much better. For, unlike Apsara, it used natural uranium
fuel with heavy water as moderator and thus freed us from dependence on
uncertain imports of enriched uranium. No wonder then that Candu became the
prototype for the subsequent reactors installed in this country. At the time
of the signing of the Cirus agreement there was no International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) or a safeguards system. So the only condition the
India-Canada agreement contained was that this country would use the
plutonium produced by the reactor for “peaceful purposes” only.

Fast forward to May 18, 1974: On that day India conducted an underground
nuclear detonation in Pokhran, Rajasthan, now known as Pokhran I. The then
Canadian Prime Minister, Pierre Trudeau, somewhat angrily terminated his
country’s nuclear cooperation with India. Indira Gandhi’s argument that what
India had conducted was a peaceful nuclear experiment (PNE) for economic
purposes was perfectly valid. PNEs were much in vogue then. The US had
conducted 28 and the Soviet Union as many as 239 explosions of the same
kind. But this evidently made no difference to Trudeau. Canada walked out of
the half-completed second reactor at Rana Pratap Sagar in Rajasthan, a
project that the Russians completed later. Furthermore, since then Canada,
invoking the guidelines of the Nuclear Suppliers’ Group (NSG), had also been
enforcing a ban on the export to India of dual use technology and materials.

All this is now a thing of the past. The 36-year-old chasm has been bridged.
In fact, the potential of the Toronto accord is immense. Canada will almost
certainly join other nuclear reactor-exporting countries, such as the US,
France and Russia, to seek a share in this country’s huge and growing
nuclear market. To India some of the finely-honed Canadian nuclear
technologies would be of great interest. Most importantly, Canada is the
world’s biggest producer of uranium of which India is very short. It is no
secret that during the last two years lack of uranium had forced some
nuclear power stations to curtail production.

However, if there is an excellent and highly promising nuclear accord in
hand, there are several developments in the complex and oft-manipulated area
of nuclear trade and diplomacy in the works that can lead to discord and
other complications, and should therefore be a cause for concern. Of these
the most notable is China’s defiant decision to supply Pakistan two new
nuclear reactors to be established in the plutonium-producing Chashma atomic
complex in Pakistan’s Punjab. This is in clear violation of the written
assurances China gave the NSG while joining it in 2004. Even at that time it
had insisted that the two reactors it was then selling to Pakistan were
“grandfathered” much before it had applied for the NSG membership. These two
reactors are nearing completion at Chashma. Some champions of
non-proliferation, including the US, gently suggested that Beijing should
ask for the NSG’s approval, as was done in the case of the Indo-Soviet
nuclear deal. But this fell on deaf ears. The only assurance Beijing is
prepared to give is that the reactors it proposes to sell to its ally would
be under the IAEA safeguards.

Under the circumstances the general expectation was that the 46-member NSG
would take up this issue at its meeting at Christchurch, New Zealand, in the
last week of June. In fact, an “army” of non-proliferation enthusiasts had
descended on the meeting’s venue to press for nuclear-trade guidelines being
“observed fully by all concerned”. But the result was an anti-climax. A
former Indian governor of the IAEA, T.P. Sreenivasan, has described the
situation aptly. Writing under the heading “The Nuclear Suppliers’ Group’s
Shameful Silence”, he says: China’s “blatant violation” was “on everyone’s
mind but nobody’s lips… The US was nowhere to be found”. Perhaps to explain
the American reluctance to cause any offence to China, the writer quotes a
“senior White House spokesman” to the effect: “India imitates China,
Pakistan imitates India. What can we do to stop their nuclear activities?”
The same spokesman is reported to have added that US did not want to
“displease China or Pakistan”. This bespeaks of China’s clout on the one
hand and Pakistan’s importance in the American scheme of things in relation
to Afghanistan, on the other.

Selig Harrison, a respected American writer and foreign policy expert, is
even more sharply critical of the US equivocation on Chinese reactors to
Pakistan, but his is a voice in the wilderness. The US needs China for a
number of reasons, including economy, war on terror and North Korean nuclear
weapons. Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari is already in Beijing. Nobody
should be surprised if the agreement on the two reactors is signed during
his six-day visit.

There is another cause for concern for India in the form of a move within
the NSG to prohibit the transfer of reprocessing and enrichment technologies
to countries that haven’t signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (read
India). If accepted by the nuclear cartel, this would retrospectively dilute
the 123 Agreement between India and the US and the NSG’s own “clean waiver”
under which India is fully entitled to get these two technologies. At
Christchurch the matter was not taken up. But it hasn’t been dropped either.


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Peace Is Doable

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