1, 2, 3 -----Go!
(A speech by Ambassador T.P.Sreenivasan at the Consulate General of
India, Dubai on October 22, 2008)
I am grateful to the Consul General of India, Mr. Venu Rajamony and
the Institute of Chartered Accountants for hosting this event. I am
honoured that Mr.Rajamony has also performed the "Gulf Launch" of my
two recent books. Thank you for your kind and generous words.
In the last three years or so, I have spoken so often aroopagangbout
the nuclear deal that, as it happened in the case of Albert Einstein,
even my chauffeur can make a case for it. According to the Einstein
story, one day his chauffeur told him that he had heard him so often
about the theory of relativity that he, the chauffeur, could repeat it
as well as Einstein could. Einstein thought this was a good idea and
let his chauffeur speak at a conference and he himself sat at the
back. The chauffeur was perfect in his presentation and everybody
applauded him. But Einstein began to worry when the Chairman proceeded
to invite questions from the audience. Sure enough, the first question
itself was hard even for Einstein to answer. Einstein thought that
the bluff would be called. But the chauffeur was more brilliant than
he thought. He said, "That is such an easy question that I do not need
to answer it. I shall ask my chauffeur at the back to do that."
I chose the title for today's talk "1, 2, 3---Go" as the so called 123
Agreement is, in many senses, the shot gun start for India to launch
itself into the race for all round development. Like the Hyde Act, the
name '123' also has caused much misunderstanding. Some said that the
Hyde Act was so called because India and the United States had much to
hide. Others said that the 123 agreement was just the beginning and
the Americans would come up with 4, 5, 6 and 7, 8, 9 agreements! In
actual fact, it is an agreement signed as provided for in section 123
of the US Non-Proliferation Act and the Hyde Act is named after
Congressman Henry Hyde, (may his soul rest in peace) who chaired the
House Foreign Relations committee at the time. Having been released
from the shackles of technology denial, India can now explore new
frontiers of knowledge not only in the nuclear field, but also in
space, defence and agriculture. We do not need to reinvent the wheel;
we do not need to spend scarce resources on research and development
of products already available in the market. More than fuel and
reactors, the availability of the vast array of dual use technologies
and products will open up unprecedented opportunities. Gone are the
days when, in the aftermath of the 1998 tests, a black list prohibited
the gardening unit of BARC from purchasing lawn mowers from the United
States because of its dual use capability!
The 123 agreement is not a sudden invention of President Bush and
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. It came as the culmination of a long
series of efforts made by both countries since India kept itself out
of the "grand nuclear bargain" called the NPT in 1970. The US and
others tried every trick in the world to bring India into the fold of
the NPT, while India tried to end the discrimination inherent in the
NPT. As new NPT edifices were erected and India continued to defy
them, more severe sanctions followed, reaching a climax in 1998, when
the Glenn Amendment kicked in and estranged the two biggest
democracies in the world. But throughout this period, India had put
forward proposals and made suggestions to end the standoff without
compromising the fundamentals.
Indira Gandhi sent special envoys to Moscow and Washington to seek
nuclear guarantees before rejecting the NPT. Morarji Desai tempted
President Carter to come to India in the hope of resolving the nuclear
imbroglio, but returned empty handed. P.V. Narasimha Rao thought he
made a deal with President Clinton, in which India would not test and
the US would move towards disarmament. Atal Behari Vajpayee accepted
four of the five benchmarks put forward by President Clinton as
conditions for normalisation of relations. On July 18, 2005, Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh did no more than follow the same path. He made
no additional concessions. It was the United States, which dropped its
insistence on "strategic restraint" and paved the way for a
breakthrough.
To me, the surprise was not that the change in the US position enraged
the non-proliferation lobby in the US, but that some of our political
and scientific circles opposed the agreement on different grounds.
Together, the two sets of critics delayed the deal and prompted the
two governments to take positions that muddled the essential merit of
the agreement. The battle was carried from the US Congress to the
Indian Parliament, from the Board of Governors of the IAEA to the
Nuclear Suppliers group. The 123 agreement escaped unscathed, but the
accompanying literature is complex, sometimes contradictory and
certainly open to different interpretations. But as long as the
mutuality of interests that prompted the two countries to take this
historic step remains in place, the end of the technology denial
regime will endure and India will be able to reintegrate itself with
the global scientific community. The Indian ambassador in Vienna does
not have to be in a group of three with Israel and Pakistan, but in a
group of technologically advanced responsible nations, which includes
the nuclear weapon states. He does not have to decline invitations to
interact with the NSG, as I used to do in the era of India's nuclear
isolation.
Clearly, it was not the fine print of the 123 agreement that prompted
the opposition onslaught. For the Indian scientists, it was the fear
of the prying eyes of their peers abroad, for certain political
parties, it was sheer jealousy, but for most, it was the deep seated
suspicion of the United States, particularly in the context of Iraq,
which made them search for a hidden agenda. The United States, they
think, cannot do anything right. A funny story of an American soldier
illustrates the point. This young soldier boarded a train to London to
catch a flight home. He was exhausted and had a huge kit bag to carry.
He could not find a single empty seat in the whole train. Finally, he
found an English woman with a dog on a seat next to her. He approached
her and asked whether her dear dog could sleep on the floor so that he
could stretch his legs. When she refused, he even offered to keep her
dog in his lap. When she refused even that, in a fit of rage, the
young American picked up the dog, threw it out the window and sat
down. She was too shocked for words, but an English man, who was
watching the scene, told him, "You the Americans can do nothing right.
You drive on the wrong side of the road, use the wrong spelling for
English words. Now look at you, you have thrown the wrong bitch out of
the train!"
The past history justifies such impressions, but today, the United
States is seeking cooperation, not confrontation with India. To
resolve the problems of today like terrorism, energy shortage,
environmental challenges and pandemics, the United States needs to
work with India. Add to these the US fear of China, the search for
markets and the anxiety to get India into the nuclear mainstream and
there you see the logic of the change in the US thinking. A change in
our mindset to remove the vestiges of anti-colonialism and
anti-imperialism is needed for us to go forward.
Of course, the 123 agreement is not one sided and there is a delicate
balance of rights and obligations in it. It is not a mere civilian
nuclear trade agreement, as is generally claimed. By agreeing to
maintain our moratorium in testing, by agreeing to negotiate a FMCT,
by agreeing to subject our civilian nuclear stations to safeguards by
the IAEA, we have made peace with the non-proliferation world out
there. We have also entered into a strategic partnership with the
United States. But undoubtedly, these do more good than harm to the
vital interests of the country. These do not impose any restraint on
our minimum nuclear deterrent; they enable us to secure fuel and
technology for peaceful purposes and open a new chapter in our
relations with the United States. We should be aware that if we test,
the world will come down on us like a ton of bricks as it did in 1974
and 1998 and the deal will end. But our right to test remains and if
it becomes necessary to test in the supreme national interest, we
should be prepared to face the consequences. Bhutto's telling image of
Pakistan eating grass to build nuclear weapons must remain at the back
of our minds. It is also not illogical for the US to expect India, as
a strategic partner, to be sensitive to its interests. The litmus test
for us in dealing with these challenges should not be ideology or
paranoia. One principle in the conduct of international relations
never changes: there are no permanent friends or permanent enemies,
only permanent interests.
The 123 take off is not confined to our relations with the United
States alone. Russia and France have been waiting to go for nuclear
cooperation with India for a long time. They had found ways of giving
us fuel and equipment in the past, but the NSG bonds had tied them
down in recent years. France has already signed an agreement with us
and a Russian agreement is ready for signature. In fact, the nuclear
trade is likely to be more with France and Russia rather than with the
United States. Even Japan and China cannot resist the temptation to
sell nuclear material or at least, dual use technology. The end of our
nuclear isolation is not just a symbolic liberation; it is significant
for India's development in real terms.
The 123 agreement is not just about adding a few thousand megawatts of
electricity to our grid, (some say, wrongly, that it is only a 4%
increase) reducing our dependence on fossil fuels or minimizing the
emission of greenhouse gases. It is about ending our outcast status in
the international community, it is about removing the last impediment
in our economic development, it is about our being able to sell our
own reactors to countries dazzled by the nuclear renaissance and it is
about clarifying our nuclear policy, without which we could not have
claimed our rightful place in the global hierarchy. Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh's courageous and historic visit to Washington this year
would prove to be as important for India's progress as President
Nixon's visit to China in 1972. If the Chinese communists had remained
loyal to their ideology and paranoia of the United States then, the
Chinese would have been still sporting Mao suits and digging the earth
and not winning the largest number of gold medals at a spectacular
Olympic gala on their own soil. Speaking on the day the Chandrayan
blasted off towards the moon with instruments from multiple countries,
I can confidently say, it is "1, 2, 3---Go" for India.

-- 
T.P. Sreenivasan
Former Ambassador of India to the United Nations, Vienna,
Former Governor for India, IAEA, Vienna,

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