|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
Indian Stalinists reverse course, allow Indo-US nuclear deal
go to IAEA
By Kranti Kumara
21 November 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Despite a months-long display of conspicuous opposition to
the civilian nuclear co-operation treaty that Indias United
Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition government has struck with
the Bush administration, the Communist Party of India (Marxist)-led
Left Front has abandoned its opposition to New Delhi taking any
further steps toward operationalizing the deal.
Late last week, the Left Front dropped its opposition to the
Congress Party-led UPA initiating discussions with the International
Atomic Energy Agency on an India-specific safeguards
agreement, and talks are to begin today between Indian and IAEA
officials in Vienna.
Since 1974, when it first staged a nuclear explosion, India
has been subject to a US-led international nuclear fuel and technology
embargo. The Indo-US nuclear deal would end the embargo and create
a unique category for India within the world nuclear regulatory
regime as the only non-signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty allowed access to advanced civilian nuclear technology.
Once it secures an agreement with the IAEA, the UPA government
will have to negotiate yet another deal with the Nuclear Suppliers
Groupa consortium of the countries that control world nuclear
trade.
Only after all these negotiations are successfully completed
will the Bush administration, which sees the nuclear treaty as
crucial to its efforts to draw India into a global partnership,
ask the US Senate to ratify the treaty.
Negotiations on the Indo-US nuclear treaty were completed in
late July, but the Indian government has for months been prevented
from initiating the negotiations with the IAEA due to the opposition
of the Left Front, whose MPs are sustaining the UPA government
in office.
In August, after the Left Front had come out against the treaty,
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh staked his governments life
on the deal, publicly daring the Stalinists to bring it down if
they would not support the treaty. Thereafter, for the better
part of two months, Indian politics were dominated by discussion
about an imminent election. Then in early October, in part because
of pressure from the smaller parties in the UPA, which feared
losing seats and influence in the event of an election, Manmohan
Singh and Congress President Sonia Gandhi unexpectedly pulled
back. To the dismay of Indias corporate elite, which strongly
supports the nuclear deal, Singh said that were it to fail it
would not be the end of the world.
As part of their efforts to mollify the Stalinists and in the
hope of wearing down their opposition and/or gaining time to come
up with an alternate strategy, the UPA government formed a joint
committee with the Left to study the deal and the criticism made
of it by the Left and by members of Indias political, nuclear,
and military establishments. After five meetings over two-and-a-half
months, the committee, from all reports, remained deadlocked,
with the Left Front insisting that it was adamantly opposed to
the deal and to the government taking any steps to operationalize
it, especially as the treaty is opposed by a clear majority of
the members of Indias parliament.
The Bush administration, meanwhile, had gone into high gear
to press New Delhi to push the agreement forward, warning that
with the US political agenda soon to be dominated by the November
2008 elections, it is imperative that India obtain IAEA and NSG
approval.
It was within this context that the Left Front, after talks
between Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI (M)] General-Secretary
Prakash Karat and Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi, suddenly dropped
its opposition to the government beginning talks with the IAEA.
This decision was formally conveyed to the government at a hastily
convened meeting last Friday of the UPA-Left Committee on the
Indo-US nuclear deal.
Despite their facilitating the UPA governments and the
Bush administrations attempts to implement the nuclear deal,
the Stalinists are maintaining a posture of militant opposition
to it. After the Left Front had given its approval to the UPA
to proceed with the IAEA negotiations, Karat thundered, [The]
Left is determined to oppose this deal and we think it is bad
for our country.
Karat justified his bombast by the fact that the UPA is still
required to present the text of the IAEA safeguards
agreement to the UPA-Left-Front committee for its consideration
before the committee finalises its findings
on the Indo-US nuclear treaty.
The Stalinists are claiming that this gives them an effective
veto over the treaty, but government and UPA officials are claiming
otherwise. This was made clear by the comments of a UPA source
to the Indian Express. The corporate daily quoted this
official as stating, We have not made any commitment that
our signature on the safeguards agreement is incumbent on the
Lefts approval. The Left can only make
suggestions to the draft agreement. Once we have completed formal
negotiations with the IAEA, we cannot tell the IAEA that we will
not sign it. Its a matter of national prestige. So, it would
be for the Left to decide whether it wants to force mid-term polls
when the government goes to the IAEA Board of Governors.
Just as importantly, the key thing for the government and for
the Congress Party leadership in the current context was to break
the logjam in operationalizing the treaty.
That has now happened. While the discussions with the IAEA
and NSG proceed, the Congress Party leadership will continue to
try to lay the political groundwork for politically breaking with
the Left, should it continue to oppose the Indo-US nuclear treaty,
and precipitating an early election. And there is little doubt
that the Congress will opt for such a course, if they think they
can carry their UPA allies with them and triumph at the polls.
Both, however, are far from foregone conclusions.
Anti-imperialist posturing
The Stalinists in general and the CPI (M) in particular posture
as indefatigable opponents of US imperialism and maintain constant
anti-US rhetoric to burnish their left image.
Such a posture was on full display during a speech Karat delivered
on November 1 in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta). Karat observed that
India is a prize for the US and not Pakistan because of
its market. Developed India can be useful for counterbalancing
China. This is a game the US is trying to play which has to be
foiled. He then went on to observe that the US was attempting
to make India its strategic ally because China as the most
powerful socialist country is capable of challenging the might
of the USA.
His comments were seized upon by the corporate media, which
in the main is carrying on a relentless and shrill campaign in
support of the Indo-US nuclear deal as further grist for a crude
anti-communist campaign, in which the Left Front had been pilloried
for being more concerned with Chinas interests than those
of India.
In fact, the Stalinists opposition to the deal has been
directed at convincing the Indian bourgeoisie that its national
interests lie in not allowing India to be ensnared in a
dependent relationship with the US and adhering instead to the
Indian ruling elites traditional posture of non-alignment.
That said, the Left Front leaders do very much see the pro-investor
policies of Socialist China as a model. Indeed, in
their zeal to transform their political bastion of West Bengal
into a cheap labor haven for international and domestic capital,
the Indian Stalinists have begun to duplicate the Chinese Stalinists
methods, mounting violent attacks against peasants who have resisted
their land being seized and transformed into a special economic
zone.
Both Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi and Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh have tried to allay the Stalinist concern about
the UPAs evident pro-US tilt by making separate, high-level
visits to China and Russia.
Sonia Gandhi undertook a five-day visit to China in late October
where she was feted by all of the Chinese Stalinist leadership,
including President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao. Her
trip might be part of a political strategy to appear more balanced
in foreign policy as her party has been under siege for the tilt
towards the US, observed Brahma Chellaney, a defence analyst
with the New Delhi-based private think-tank, the Centre for Policy
Research.
Similarly Manmohan Singh made a visit to Russia for several
days commencing November 11 in a bid to overcome tensions that
have arisen due to Moscows concerns over the India-US strategic
relationship and various Indo-Russian arms deals. The talks, however,
appear to have been fractious. According to Indian news reports,
Russia, angered by the Indian governments stalling on a
deal to purchase Russian nuclear reactors, has signaled that will
introduce a new inflation-escalator clause into the two countries
arms contracts.
The crisis of the Left Front
Several factors are at play in the crumbling of the Stalinist
opposition to the nuclear deal.
First there is the crisis in the Stalinist camp precipitated
by the West Bengal Left Front governments pursuit of pro-investor
policies. Recent months have seen a wave of social and political
unrest in West Bengal, including food riots. In the days directly
before the Left Fronts reversal on the nuclear deal, the
West Bengal Stalinist regime was further rocked by the popular
backlash against the CPI (M)s use of armed goons and savage
violence to crush a peasant protest in the Nandigram area. (See:
West Bengals Stalinist government mounts terror campaign
to quash peasant unrest)
The Left Front leaders thus have good reason to fear elections.
They also are in evident debt to the UPA government. The UPA
has spurned demands from the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP) for it to use the breakdown of law and order
in West Bengal to invoke presidents rule in
West Bengal (i.e. to sack the state government), and has instead
dispatched the Indian states paramilitary forces to back
up the West Bengal government in Nandigram.
The Stalinists are also acutely sensitive to right-wing criticism
that they are threatening the government and want to prove to
the bourgeoisie that they are a responsible opposition
party.
A final consideration is the Gujarat elections. The Stalinists
wish to present a united secular opposition to the
BJP in the upcoming state-assembly elections in the BJP bastion
of Gujaratno matter that the Congress is aligning itself
with a group of BJP dissidents, including persons who share major
responsibility for the 2002 Gujarat anti-Muslim pogrom.
There is no doubt that the Stalinists approval of the
nuclear deal is seen as a crucial victory by the UPA government
and the Congress Party.
An unnamed government minister was quoted by the Indian
Express on Nov. 17 exuding confidence that the way has now
been cleared for the Congress-led UPA to implement the nuclear
treaty: If [the Gujarat] poll results go against the Congress,
the party will have to take a political call. Even then, it could
mean a delay of four to five months. From now on, the deal is
well on course.
Despite the fact that the UPA has subordinated every aspect
of domestic socio-economic policy to the profit interests of large
domestic and international corporations, and despite the mass
discontent across India at deepening economic insecurity and ever-widening
social inequality, the Left Front has sustained the Congress Party-led
government in power. With the assent gifted to the UPA on the
Indo-US nuclear deal, the Stalinists have now extended their support,
albeit with veiled political rhetoric, to the UPAs and the
India bourgeoisies efforts to forge a strategic partnership
with US imperialism.
See Also:
West Bengals Stalinist government
mounts terror campaign to quash peasant unrest
[15 November 2007]
Indo-US nuclear deal could be casualty
of Indias fractured domestic politics
[13 November 2007]
Mounting press speculation
India will face early elections
[22 September 2007]
Differing motives propel India
and US to finalize nuclear agreement
[11 September 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |