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India-US nuclear agreement at an impasse
By Daniel Woreck and Kranti Kumara
9 June 2007
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The much-heralded nuclear deal between India and the United
States that was announced by US President George Bush and Indian
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on March 2, 2006, has now reached
an impasse and is even threatening to unravel. Three days of intensive
negotiations starting May 31 in New Delhi, between US Undersecretary
of State for Political Affairs and the chief US negotiator of
the Indo-US nuclear accord, Nicholas Burns, and his Indian counterpart,
Foreign Secretary Shivashankar Menon, failed to resolve key differences.
Burns flew to New Delhi on an unscheduled visit with the single-minded
purpose of reaching an accord on the so-called 123 agreement,
so named since bilateral nuclear deals by the US with other countries
are negotiated under section 123 of the 1954 US Atomic Energy
Act (USAEA). The US side had introduced uncertainty about Burnss
visit just prior to his arrival in New Delhi no doubt as a negotiating
tactic to goad the Indian side into making concessions.
Burns was hoping to have a signed accord in time to make a
triumphal announcement of Bush administration foreign policy successes
during a meeting between Manmohan Singh and Bush in Heiligendamm,
Germany, on the sidelines of the G-8 summit. Although India is
not officially a member of the G8 group, Manmohan Singh has been
invited to attend parts of the summit,
as have the leaders of China, Brazil, Mexico and South Africa.
Under the Indo-US nuclear deal, India is to be given an exceptional
status with access to nuclear technology and uranium fuel supplies
from the 45-member Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), which controls
world nuclear trade, in exchange for India clearly delineating
its civilian nuclear facilities from those used for the military
and putting the former under the inspection of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
This special treatment accorded to India, which developed nuclear
weapons in defiance of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT),
should be contrasted with the USs incessant demonisation
of, and threats against, Iran. Although Iran is a signatory to
the NPT, the US has strenuously objected to it exercising its
rights to develop a full civilian nuclear programme under the
scrutiny of the IAEA, claiming that the NPTs stipulations
constitute inadequate safeguards against Iran developing nuclear
weapons.
The details of the Indo-US 123 agreement have been under negotiation
for many months. But some of the stipulations of the December
2006 Henry Hyde Act, which amended the USAEA so as to allow the
US government to enter into negotiations with India on civilian
nuclear collaboration despite it having nuclear weapons, are proving
to be major stumbling blocks.
The Hyde Act introduces several new requirements that are seen
by the Indian nuclear establishment and much of the Indian political
elite as a way for Washington to severely constrain the Indian
nuclear programme and to subordinate Indias foreign policy
to the hegemonic ambitions of the US.
A comment on the Stratfor web site in May observed,
The problem is that India is not too pleased with several
new stipulations that Congress added to the original agreement,
and neither side has much of an appetite for making concessions
at this point.
The Hyde Act stipulations that most concern India appear to
be the following:
* India is prohibited from detonating any nuclear explosive
device, although under the accord, the US is not prohibited from
carrying out similar tests. If India does detonate a nuclear device
or otherwise breaks any agreement with the IAEA, then the US will
invoke the right of return under which it can demand
the return of all material supplied, including US reactors, spent
fuel and unused fuel.
* As the agreement stands, India is prohibited from using any
equipment or fuel from the US for reprocessing spent nuclear fuel
without explicit consent of US. India is seeking to include explicit
language in the 123 agreement that would grant it full and permanent
prior approval by the US.
The Hyde Act directs India to dissuade, isolate, and
if necessary, sanction and contain Iran for its efforts to acquire
weapons of mass destruction, including a nuclear weapons capability
and the capability to enrich uranium or reprocess nuclear fuel
and the means to deliver weapons of mass destruction. The
significance of this measure is in some dispute, because the White
House contends that it is only advisory, but India
objects to any attempt to dictate its foreign policy through US
law.
* The US president is required to annually certify to Congress
that India is complying with the act, a provision that the Indian
elite fears will be used to routinely bully it to do US bidding
on the world stage.
The Hyde Act also directs the Bush administration to seek approval
of any final 123 agreement with India from the IAEA and NSG. Several
members of the NSG have already voiced opposition to the deal,
and it is not clear at this point whether a successful deal would
obtain the approval of this body that works by unanimous consensus.
While the Bush administration has voiced public disapproval
of some of the provisions in the Hyde Act, it appears that it
is already using these binding congressional mandates to pressure
India into making concessions that are unacceptable to wide sections
of the Indian elite, especially Indias nuclear establishment
and military.
The Hyde Act still maintains Indias classification as
a Non-Nuclear Weapons State (NNWS), and as a result, India would
be held to various NPT-type prohibitions that are built into the
USAEA. The absurdity of Indias classification as an NNWS
is readily apparent; India after all possesses a considerable
number of nuclear weapons and is intent on expanding its nuclear
deterrent. Yet, this classification is necessary under US
law if India is to be allowed civilian nuclear fuel and technology
while not signing the NPT.
For the Indian elite, the nuclear-fuel supply guarantee and
the ability to import foreign nuclear technology are pivotal.
India has meagre domestic uranium reserves that put a
considerable strain on its ability to supply both its civilian
and military nuclear needs.
According to estimates by the International Panel on Fissile
Material, India could increase its nuclear weapons production
from its current capability of 6 to 12 weapons a year to as many
as 40 to 50 weapons annually, once the Indo-US nuclear deal frees
up domestic resources, including uranium for military use.
Although the Indian nuclear establishment with considerable
effort has mastered all aspects of the complex nuclear technology,
including its manufacture, much of its equipment has been reverse-engineered
or jury-rigged, raising questions about their quality. The Indian
nuclear establishment no doubt wants to interact with the world
nuclear establishment to obtain more-advanced technology and scientific
knowledge.
India has declared a moratorium on nuclear testing, but it
is resisting transforming the moratorium into a legally binding
agreement. The Indian elite wish to retain the right to revoke
their moratorium at any time should they feel threatened by world
developments, such as the testing of nuclear weapons by Pakistan
or China, or for that matter, the development of new types of
nuclear weapons by the US itself.
The right to reprocess spent fuel is also of great importance
to India, because such fuel is necessary for the three-stage,
indigenous nuclear process it is trying to developa process
whose final stage would use thorium, of which India has vast reserves,
as nuclear fuel. A prohibition against reprocessing uranium and
plutonium would complicate or even halt this complex undertaking
with the Indian side suffering tremendous technological and economic
damage.
Conflicting interests
There is undoubtedly a complex set of contradictory factors
motivating the two sides in their increasingly desperate attempt
to hammer out an accord.
Successful conclusion of the deal would open up to US big business
a huge Indian market for nuclear technology and military hardware
that now is mainly supplied by Russia. According to the US Chamber
of Commerce, a successful agreement could produce as much as $100
billion in nuclear and other sales for US companies
Although economic calculations are of considerable importance,
the most important factors motivating the Indo-US nuclear deal
are geopolitical.
The nuclear deal has been touted by the Bush administration
as proof of its willingness to assist India in becoming a world
power and as the first step in a global partnership
between the worlds two most populous democracies.
The US is intent on making India a central part of its efforts
to contain and constrain a rising China. It also hopes to use
India as a springboard to further penetrate the oil-rich region
of Central Asia and is prepared to consider contracting out to
an India enmeshed with the USthrough increased military,
nuclear and geopolitical tiesthe policing of the Indian
Ocean.
The debacles the US is facing in Iraq and Afghanistan have
only made the Bush administration more anxious to clinch such
a deal with India.
Writing in the April 26 edition of the Washington Post,
Nicholas Burns declared, The pace of progress between Washington
and Delhi has been so rapid, and the potential benefits to American
interests so substantial, that I believe within a generation Americans
may view India as one of our two or three most important strategic
partners.
Underlining the considerable potential for profit by US companies,
Burns continued, American companies will be among the first
to invest in and profit from the opening of this gigantic energy
market. We hope India will move quickly to help us complete a
final bilateral agreement to make this a reality.
The Indian elite has been gratified by Washingtons talk
of India becoming a world power. It also believes it vital to
escape the international quarantine on Indias nuclear programme
for geopolitical reasons and so as to facilitate the rapid expansion
of Indias civilian nuclear energy capacity. (India is dependent
on imports for 70 percent of its oil and natural gas.)
However, the refusal by the US to fully admit India to the
nuclear weapons club, the various stipulations in
the Hyde Act, and the repeated attempts of Washington to use the
accord to bully India into lining up with the US in its confrontation
with Iran and into forgoing plans to join a pipeline to bring
Iranian natural gas to South Asia have given pause to the Indian
government and elite.
The US is urging India to abandon the gas pipeline project
with Iran and Pakistan (IPI) in exchange for the nuclear deal
and a rival gas pipeline project: the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-Indian
pipeline (TAPI). According to Asia Times online, the TAPI
pipeline, unlike the IPI project, will involve major US oil and
construction companies and will have to pass through US occupied
Afghan territory. This will put the US in a commanding position;
understandably, the Indian elite is wary of such dependence upon
the US given its long-standing use of bullying tactics.
Burnss recent visit to India was accompanied by much
talk, especially from the US side, that the talks on the 123 agreement
have reached their final stage. But given the differing motivations
and interests of the two sides, a 123 agreement may prove impossible
to reach. Even if one is finalised, it will still need approval
from the NSG, IAEA, and the US Congress, and will continue to
rest on a shaky geopolitical foundation.
See Also:
US Senate endorses
Bushs nuclear accord with India
[29 November 2006]
What the debate in
India over the US nuclear pact shows
[29 August 2006]
Bush secures nuclear
accord with India
[3 March 2006]
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