Knowing India's nuclear credentials

Free Karma

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Knowing India's nuclear credentials - The Hindu
Manufactured Western outrage ignores the reality that under the landmark 2005 India-U.S. agreement, the IAEA has unprecedented access to Indian nuclear facilities

There has been a concerted attack on India from the usual suspects in recent days even as it was entering into negotiations to formally accede to the Nuclear Suppliers Group. As if on cue, Jane's Intelligence Review carried out a "(non)-exposé" of an Indian military nuclear facility in Karnataka. As exposés go, it was lame even by Jane's standards. The nature of the facility and location have been publicly available since 2010. Yet, this new "exposé" was carried by all mainstream print news outlets and predictably sensationalised with everyone feigning alarm and anxiety. This manufactured outrage culminated with a sanctimonious editorial in The New York Times that was remarkable for the sheer incoherence of its own arguments. As the designated chief of the non-proliferation ayatollahs (with blinkers) and representative of a motley anti-India group in the U.S. that is shrinking ever so rapidly, this too was on expected lines.

Assault on credentials

Nevertheless, it is important to dismantle the uneasy arguments of this concerted assault on India's credentials. The first proposition that must be taken issue with is the propagation of a falsehood that Pakistan and its reckless build-up of nuclear stockpile is somehow driven by India's posture. While Pakistan's careless impulse may be a result of more than one central factor, it is important to understand that this may have a lot to do with its suspicion of American intentions. The oft-quoted argument is that Pakistan seeks to equalise the conventional mismatch with India through a misguided reliance on numbers of strategic and tactical warheads. The irrationality and illogic of this behaviour has been proven by the fact that a country like North Korea has deterred both the U.S. and South Korea with explosions that may not even have been nuclear. Pakistan's vertical proliferation has no mooring to India's strategic programme — only to its own paranoia. The question is what fuels this? There is no denying the fact that Pakistan was able to obtain "nuclear immunity" for its sub-conventional activities against India with even 10 warheads. It may well be the fear of the U.S. that motivates its build-up today.

One motivator is the pressure the U.S. has been applying on Pakistan (without success due to the China factor) to sign onto the Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT), which will forever cap the Pakistani arsenal. Contrary to what the commentary would have us believe, the FMCT, instead of curbing fissile material, has demonstrably accelerated Pakistan's programme. So much for flawed logic. The second is the fear of the American "Plan B", which involves the seizure and confiscation of much of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal. The former has driven Pakistan to enrich their extant stockpile of radioactive material to weapons grade at breakneck speed. The latter has ensured that Pakistan is rapidly weaponising its fissile stock, in order to disperse and complicate any such weapons seizure plans. These facts are well understood in Washington policy circles. The exposés and op-eds of the past weeks are for most just another edition of Aesop's fables.

The second issue has to be the demonstrated lack of understanding of the reality that shaped the landmark civil nuclear agreement between the U.S. and India. This nuclear deal was based on one clear principle — that India's military programme would irrevocably be separated from the civilian programme. This was not an optimal solution for India or for the P5, but like all international agreements it was based on arriving at an outcome that would benefit all parties and enhance the global order. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohammed El Baradei in an op-ed in the Washington Post, specifically welcomed the deal without reservation, his rationale being "either we begin finding creative, outside-the-box solutions or the international nuclear safeguards regime will become obsolete." This is now accepted wisdom. The IAEA has gained unprecedented access to India's nuclear facilities. India has accepted additional protocols this June, and has strengthened its own export laws. Significantly, the same journals and reports confirm that India's own arsenal has remained stable over the period with no increases despite the turbulence in the neighbourhood. The benefits of bringing India inside the 'non-proliferation tent' are therefore vast, visible and tangible.

While these editorials and reports may very well have got their facts and numbers right, the analysis is so convoluted that the facts they quote cease to be relevant. The argument goes that India needs to sign the FMCT, the CTBT, and agree to mutual weapons reduction with China and Pakistan, since it is the nuclear deal with the U.S. that has set the cat amongst the pigeons. Here then is some measure of reality. India is already providing active support to the FMCT negotiations — it is a work in progress, not yet a concrete treaty. It has been Pakistan that has been blocking the work at the conference on disarmaments negotiations.

Additionally, India's signature on the CTBT is explicitly linked to a similar U.S. and Chinese commitment. As long as they do not ratify these two treaties, India has a voluntary unilateral moratorium on testing. What is holding up Indian accession is U.S. and Chinese accession.

Experts in Beijing claim that China's expansion and modernisation of its nuclear forces is being driven by the ill-advised and deeply destabilising withdrawal of the U.S. from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty. This has nothing whatsoever to do with India.

India, therefore, is first being made the whipping boy for the failure of the American non-proliferation lobby in their own country and then it has to accept blame for the complex relations the U.S. shares with Pakistan and China that is driving these Asian allies to increase their arsenals. Can we get real, please?
 

Free Karma

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Nuclear fog hangs over Modi's U.S. visit - The Hindu
As the Indian administration gears up to launch a civil nuclear cooperation blitz with the U.S. and reiterate its petition to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Washington in September, industry experts said that decisions in these complex matters "will not materialise overnight," and New Delhi may have "painted itself into a corner," on nuclear liability.

Speaking to The Hindu Omer Brown, legal counsel for Contractors International Group on Nuclear Liability, said that in theory more progress could be made during the high-level visit, yet it is difficult for U.S. corporations to create an insurance pool against the risk of a nuclear accident in India given that foreign inspectors were not permitted to examine the facilities for insurance purposes and could only "train" Indian inspectors to go in and undertake this critical task.

With continuing debate around Section 17(b) and Article 46 of India's nuclear liability law raising thorny questions about channelling liability, Mr. Brown said, "The only way forward is for [India's nuclear liability] law to be amended."

Meanwhile South Block's calls for India's admittance to the elite nuclear exporter's club appeared to be falling on deaf ears, as no decisions were taken about this at the NSG's meeting in Argentina last month. and, "The matter is not consensual in the group and it can be assumed there will be continued consultations about how to proceed," Mark Hibss, Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment's Nuclear Policy Programme told The Hindu .
Wonder how Modi will handle this, he wants to raise power production quite quickly, will the law be amended? To attract more companies? I think Russia accepted the law didnt it? Japan seems to be indicating it is okay with the law aswell. Will that be enough push for the industry?

Modi ready to fast track NSG issues - The Hindu
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has prepared the ground for his crucial bilateral meetings in September focusing on nuclear issues – specifically membership of the Nuclear Supplier Groups – during his talks with Prime Minister Abe of Japan, Premier Tony Abbott of Australia, Chinese President Xi Jinping and finally U.S. President Barack Obama.

In Mumbai this week, Mr. Modi addressed scientists at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC). At the classified briefing, he told them to keep to targets of tripling nuclear power generation by 2023, and also indicating a greater role for private players while saying "nuclear energy must be commercially viable and competitive with other sources of clean energy in the long run."

The Prime Minister's speech indicated that the government now plans to go full steam ahead with plans for nuclear energy production; plans that had been on the back burner in the last two years of the UPA regime, especially after local protests over the projects in Kudankulam and Jaitapur.

The strategic dialogue with U.S. secretary of state John Kerry next week is expected to work on ironing out differences with Washington even as meetings with visiting Russian Deputy prime minister and French Foreign Minister addressed the issues of suppliers liability. But the government isn't stopping there.

Sources tell The Hindu that Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott's plans to visit India for a two day trip in September is centred around the Australian agreement to sell uranium to India. An Australian government delegation was in Delhi July 20 to tie up his programme. Mr. Modi will also visit Australia for the G-20 summit in November this year.

Meanwhile, Indian and Japanese officials are working on the possibility of announcing a civilian nuclear cooperation agreement when Mr. Modi travels to Tokyo for talks on September 1and 2 with Mr. Abe. With expectations high of the two leaders, who share a camaraderie, fast-tracking negotiations, local Japanese papers have been urging Mr. Abe to obtain a commitment from India on signing the NPT and fissile material cut-offs first. Although that is unlikely to happen, India will certainly be up against the 'non-proliferation' lobby in its quest to build up nuclear power as an alternate source of energy.

An even bigger stumbling block could be China, whose support for Pakistan's nuclear programme makes it an unlikely backer for India's pitch for NSG membership, and President Xi's visit to India will be equally significant, as all 48 members of the NSG must approve India's membership.
Every single member out of 48 will have to agree? I dont see that happening.
 
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Obama does not support bush India nuclear deal so don't expect any progress.
Bush actively had nsg members support the deal.
 

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