http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-3636274/Indias-bid-join-Nuclear-Supplier-Group-point-pride.html

PM Modi is anxious to secure NSG membership while Obama is still in
office, says analysts
By ASSOCIATED PRESS

PUBLISHED: 07:48 GMT, 11 June 2016 | UPDATED: 17:44 GMT, 11 June 2016

NEW DELHI (AP) - India is rejoicing over news that Prime Minister
Narendra Modi has brokered deals with U.S. officials to bring New
Delhi closer to its long-held dream of joining an elite group of
nations allowed to control the global trade in nuclear materials,
equipment and technology.

Newspapers have run daily front-page stories heralding progress on the
nuclear front after President Barack Obama came out in support of
Indian membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group, which led other
nations including Mexico and Switzerland to suggest they, too, were on
the board. Diplomats in Vienna suggested on Thursday that India is
closer than ever to join the NSG, despite never fulfilling the
requirement of signing a global treaty aimed at preventing the
proliferation of nuclear weapons and weapons technology.

But would India's entry into the club make any difference? Some
analysts say no, at least not from a technical standpoint.

U.S. President Barack Obama and Indian PM Narendra Modi shake hands
before their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in
Washington. (File picture)

India has already managed to secure an access to nuclear fuel and
technology to build power plants it says it needs to boost energy
capacity and drive economic growth for the nation of 1.25 billion
people.

Analysts say joining the NSG is chiefly a matter of pride and desire
to be taken seriously by some of the world's most powerful nations.
Since prompting international technology sanctions and limits on
exports by conducting nuclear tests in 1998, India has been eager to
gain legitimacy as a nuclear power.

"In practical terms, there is nothing extra that the NSG will give
India other than a seat at the nuclear high table," said Rakesh Sood,
a retired diplomat closely associated with India's nuclear
negotiations over the past decade.

India already has deals with more than eight countries for supplies of
uranium, and has signed agreements for reactors with France, Russia
and the United States.

This week's reported nuclear breakthroughs were seen as a major point
of progress for Modi, who has placed new urgency on India's nuclear
ambitions with the aim of vastly expanding atomic power to account for
about half of the country's total electricity supply by 2050.

Nuclear power is one way India, the third-biggest emitter of
greenhouse gases, could cut its emissions and reduce air pollution
from coal-fired power plants.

India scored a major victory in 2008, under Modi's predecessor, by
securing a waiver from Washington allowing it access to nuclear
technology and fuel despite its refusal to sign the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. But progress in deals to build new nuclear
plants since then has stalled.

For months, Indian officials have crisscrossed the globe to gather
support for New Delhi's entry into the NSG, the 48-member group that
controls access to technology used in making atomic weapons.

Ironically, the group was set up in response to India's own
clandestine nuclear test in 1974, which made New Delhi something of a
pariah in the West. Joining the club requires the unanimous approval
of all members.

Analysts said Modi is anxious to secure NSG membership while Obama is
still in office, after years of receiving support from his
administration.

"It's a matter of timing. A crescendo is building up; now is the time
to clinch it," said Sheel Kant Sharma, a former Indian ambassador to
Vienna, Austria. "Tactically and strategically it's time for India to
be on the side of those who control technology."

This week, Obama hailed India's membership in the Missile Technology
Control Regime, a group that restricts the export of missiles and
their delivery systems.

Officials also reported progress in resolving an impasse over an
Indian liability law passed in 2010 that makes builders of nuclear
plants in India financially responsible for any accidents that might
occur, with efforts to negotiate a multi million-dollar insurance fund
to cover any accidents.

The workaround solution seems to be ameliorating concerns; the
Toshiba-backed U.S. energy giant Westinghouse Electric Co. said this
week it is finalizing a contract to build six nuclear reactors in
southern India.

India continues to refuse to sign the nonproliferation treaty, arguing
that it is discriminatory since it defines nuclear weapon states as
those that tested nuclear devices before January 1967 — which would
disqualify India from ever becoming a member.

Nevertheless, Obama called on governments participating in the NSG to
support India's application to the group when it meets later this
month in Seoul, South Korea.

On Thursday, two diplomats at an NSG meeting in Vienna said resistance
from New Zealand, Ireland, Turkey, South Africa and Austria had
softened, though China remained opposed. The diplomats demanded
anonymity in exchange for speaking to The Associated Press because
they were not authorized to talk about the substance of the closed
session.

India's admission to the nuclear club is further complicated because
Pakistan, its arch-rival, also wants to join. On Thursday, the Dawn
newspaper in Islamabad reported that the Pakistani government had
formally asked the Obama administration and Congress for their
support.

Indian analysts said China may be persuaded to ease its position if it
is offered something in exchange, for example, being allowed to join
the Missile Technology Control Regime. Its 2004 application for
membership was denied on suspicion that some Chinese companies were
secretly supplying missile technology to North Korea.

"It is possible China may now seek some kind of bargain, whereby it is
given entry to the MTCR in return for letting India get into the NSG,"
Praveen Swami said in the Indian Express newspaper.

___

Associated Press writer George Jahn in Vienna contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nirmala George on Twitter at twitter.com/NirmalaGeorge1

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