[So, India's membership of the NSG, a body created specifically to
banish India from the global nuclear market as a response to India's
first nuclear explosion, is deemed as a necessary and facilitating
step towards "India’s rise as a global power".
Once a member of the NSG, India will also get to indefinitely block
bickering neighbour Pakistan's bid for the same status. (Never mind
the reports the India is assuring China that it won't.)]

I/III.
http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/critical-seoul-nsg-meet-in-2-days-will-have-reverberations-for-indias-international-orientation/

Critical Seoul NSG meet in 2 days will have reverberations for India’s
international orientation

June 21, 2016, 2:00 AM IST Dhruva Jaishankar in TOI Edit Page

A decision by the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) on June 23-24 – as to
whether to include India as a member – may be overshadowed in
international media by other expected developments. These include the
results of Britain’s referendum on staying in the European Union, an
unprecedented US presidential election campaign, and the imminent
ruling by an international court of arbitration in The Hague between
China and the Philippines on the South China Sea.

But the NSG meeting is no less important, for the potential
implications it could have for relations between India and China. A
decision, particularly if it were not to go in India’s favour, would
have reverberations for Asian security, climate change and global
governance.

***NSG is a 48-country cartel initially formed in 1974 after India’s
first nuclear test, to control the flow of nuclear technology and
supplies. A consensus decision at its next plenary meeting in Seoul,
South Korea, to include India as a member would help India’s
integration into the global nuclear order, completing its transition
from an alleged rule-breaker to a formal rule-maker.*** [Emphasis
added.] India’s ability to export civilian nuclear materials and
technology could also help lower the costs of nuclear energy and could
boost the sector in energy-starved India.

By extension, it would facilitate India’s ability to deliver upon its
commitment, made before the 2015 Paris climate summit, to source 40%
of its electricity from non-fossil fuel sources by 2030. For the past
several years India has been working to align its nuclear and dual-use
export controls with NSG guidelines, to make a strong case for
membership.

***Prime Minister Narendra Modi has in recent months become personally
invested in the matter, visiting Mexico and Switzerland to secure
those countries’ support and personally reaching out to leaders of
other countries who have expressed hesitation. Support for India’s NSG
membership has consequently become a litmus test of relations with
India.*** [Emphasis added.]

Resistance to India’s inclusion has emanated from some predictable
sources. Several smaller countries in Europe and elsewhere had earlier
expressed concerns, echoed by non-proliferation groups in the US and
elsewhere who believe that India’s entry somehow undermines the
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and encourages Pakistan’s
rapidly-growing nuclear arsenal. These are hollow arguments. NSG and
NPT are distinct arrangements, while Pakistan’s growing nuclear
arsenal is increasingly an insurance against US intervention.

However, the primary resistance to India’s inclusion comes from China.
Beijing’s main argument is that India is a non-signatory of NPT, but
it conveniently overlooks the fact that France was admitted as an NSG
member before it joined NPT. India believes NPT is fundamentally
unfair, permanently legitimising the nuclear weapons of certain
countries, including China, while denying India for no reason other
than its belated development of nuclear weapons.

***China’s resistance to India’s membership is ultimately political,
intended to constrain India’s rise as a global power*** [emphasis
added]. India is often described as a swing power in the evolving
international system.

While deepening its strategic partnership with the US as a fellow
democracy and status quo power, New Delhi has found common cause with
Beijing in many areas. China is India’s largest trade partner in
goods, and is an increasingly important source of investment. India
and China also cooperate in various international forums, including on
matters of national sovereignty and on increasing representation for
the emerging markets in global governance.

China’s decision to accept or deny India’s membership in the NSG is
therefore crucial. Its marshalling resistance in the face of
overwhelming support for India would severely set back its relations
with India, with possible consequences for bilateral goodwill,
cooperation on climate change and multilateral groupings such as
Brics.

China’s actions would stand in stark contrast to the US, which has
actively lobbied for India’s inclusion in NSG. This would have
reverberations for India’s international orientation. The future of
Asian geopolitics could well be determined later this year in The
Hague. But just as easily, it could be shaped by a decision made at
Seoul in a couple of days.

II/III.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/indias-nsg-entry-foreign-secretary-jaishankar-may-travel-to-seoul/article8756501.ece

III.
http://www.catchnews.com/pov/dangerous-folly-the-case-against-india-s-bid-for-an-nsg-seat-1466497163.html
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Peace Is Doable

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