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Mounting press speculation India will face early elections
By Keith Jones
22 September 2007
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Recent weeks have seen mounting speculation in the Indian press
that the rift between the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government
and the Left Front over the proposed Indo-US nuclear trade treaty
will result in early or mid-term elections.
Since May 2004, the Stalinist-led Left Front has been providing
the UPA, a dozen-party coalition anchored by the Congress Party,
with the parliamentary votes to cling to office, although the
UPA has pursued neo-liberal socio-economic reforms and a strategic
global partnership with the US.
Most opposition parties are now said to be in election mode.
Leaders of the official opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP),
whose opposition to the Indo-US accord is driven more by factional
hostility to the Congress than differences over the treatys
terms and Indias geo-political strategy, have declared early
elections inevitable.
Leaders of the twin Stalinist parties that dominant the Left
Frontthe Communist Party of India (CPI) and the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) or CPMhave repeatedly disavowed
any intention or desire to bring down the government. But they
have also warned the government that should it proceed with operationalizing
the treaty, it will be breaking the Common Minimum Programme,
the agreement that underpins the UPA coalition and its alliance
with the Left, and that such action could determine the governments
fate. We wont be there to help this government conclude
this agreement, declared CPM General Secretary Prakash Karat,
September 12. Thats final.
In the first week of September, the Left Front mounted a mass
agitation denouncing the treaty and the five country (India, US,
Japan, Australia, and Singapore) naval exercise then underway
in the Bay of Bengal as two prongs of a US effort to ensnare India
in a pro-US, Asian-Pacific strategic bloc.
To mollify the Left, the government agreed in late August to
set up a 15 member UPA-Left committee to consider the objections
raised to the treaty by experts, i.e. members of Indias
nuclear and geo-political establishment, the Left, and others.
However, it rapidly emerged that the Left and the government
have a very different understanding of the committees mandate.
UPA cabinet ministers and Congress Party leaders have insisted
that the committee is only an advisory body and that, in any event,
the treaty cannot be renegotiated.
Under Indias constitution, parliament does not ratify
treaties. Rather they are proclaimed by the government. But with
the BJP, the Left Front, and most of the other opposition parties,
including those that are part of a newly-formed third
(i.e. anti UPA, anti-BJP) alliance of regional parties, having
declared their opposition, there is a clear parliamentary majority
against the treaty, undermining its legitimacy, and raising the
possibility that the government could face a successful non-confidence
motion should the treaty be made operational.
We do not want a political crisis, Karat told a
rally in Delhi last Tuesday. But in a democracy, the opinion
of the people is what counts, and we represent the third biggest
party in Parliament. We have been fighting against both communalism
[i.e., the Hindu supremacist BJP] and imperialism, which pose
a threat to our country. The government is fully aware of our
political stand on the issue, and the stand-off should be resolved
through dialogue.
Karat called for the government to wait six months before taking
any further steps to operationalize the treaty, which would terminate
a 33-year US-led embargo on the transfer of civilian nuclear fuel
and technology to India.
Before the treaty can come into effect, India must negotiate
safeguard agreements with the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) and the 45-country Nuclear Supplier Group
(NSG). Only then will the Indo-US nuclear treatyknown as
the 123 Agreement, because US nuclear treaties are negotiated
under section 123 of the 1954 US Atomic Energy Actbe placed
before the US Senate for ratification.
IAEA and NSG approval is far from guaranteed, since, with this
treaty, the US is effectively creating a unique status for India
within the world nuclear regulatory regimea self-proclaimed
nuclear-weapons state that has refused to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty but would nonetheless be freely able to purchase civilian
nuclear fuel and technology on the world market.
Pakistan has strongly objected to the special status being
given India, warning that it will alter the balance of power in
South Asia. China, whose approval is required, since decisions
within the NSG are by consensus, has questioned whether granting
an exemption for India will not undermine efforts to prevent the
proliferation of nuclear weapons. Members of the Chinese elite
speaking in an unofficial capacity have not been so circumspect.
They have condemned the Indo-US nuclear treaty as a calculated
move by Washington to build up India as a strategic counterweight
to China and as evidence have point to the many statements made
along such lines by leading figures in the Bush administration
and the US geo-political military establishment.
In deference to the Lefts wishes, India did not begin
the process of negotiating IAEA safeguards when the UN agency
met in Vienna in September. The Indian press, however, is reporting
that the government does intend to initiate talks with the IAEA
next month.
The US meanwhile is pushing for India to seek swift IAEA-NSG
approval. Time is of the essence, the US Ambassador
to India, David Mulford, told an Indo-American Chamber of Commerce
summit this week. In an interview with the Press Trust of India,
Richard Stratford, the director of the US State Departments
Office of Nuclear Energy Affairs, said Washington wants
to meet the entire pre-requisites for operationalization this
year.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other top Bush administration
officials have touted the Indo-US nuclear treaty as having a transformative
impact on Indo-US relations, adding that they believe an Indo-US
partnership will be pivotal for the US in the decades to come.
Hence the anxiety not to allow time for opposition to the agreement
to grow in India. But there is another pressing reason, Washington
is so anxious to lock-in the treaty: its preparations for a possible
showdown with Iran.
The Bush administration and the US Congress have repeatedly
used the nuclear pact as a means of bullying India into lining
up behind the US in IAEA discussion over Irans nuclear program.
The Hyde Act, the US legislation authorizing the Bush administration
to undertake nuclear trade negotiations with India, requires the
US president to annually certify that India is complying with
US anti-nuclear proliferation efforts against Iran.
In an appearance on Capitol Hill Tuesday to rally US Congressional
and business support for the Indo-US nuclear treaty, the US Assistant
Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Richard Boucher,
called on India to explain what is and what is not going
on in its relations with Iran, as we are upfront in our relations
with other countries like India.
The Indian government has sought to counter criticism of several
of the provisions of the Hyde Actincluding the stipulation
that the US will cease all nuclear cooperation with India in the
event India stages a nuclear weapons test and has the right to
demand the return of all nuclear fuel and equipment supplied under
the treaty-by suggesting that the 123 agreement supersedes the
Hyde Act. In his remarks Tuesday, Boucher said such a claim is
not a meaningful statement one way or another. ... The 123 agreement
is completely consistent with US law ... which includes the Hyde
Act.
The UPA government and the most powerful sections of the Indian
elite are strongly supportive of the Indo-US nuclear treaty because
they believe it represents a huge step toward India winning the
status of a world power and that it will enable India to both
reduce its dependence on foreign oil and natural gas and to further
develop its nuclear weapons arsenal.
Their hope and wish is that India can exploit the USs
desire to partner with India without being rendered a subordinate
US ally.
The Stalinists champion an alternate strategy for the Indian
elite that includes building on Indias decades long close
relations with Russia and expanding ties with China.
Opposition to the US is also crucial to the Stalinists
efforts to portray themselves as a party of the working class
and oppressedtoday, more than ever, given their imposition
of neo-liberal reforms in West Bengal and the two other states
where they hold office.
Nevertheless, in the face of the governments determination
to push through the treaty, the Stalinists may yet settle for
a formula which allows them to oppose the agreement,
while allowing the UPA to implement it.
Speaking Friday, CPM elder statesman and Politburo member Jyoti
Basu indicated that the Stalinists are anxious to avoid a showdown
with their UPA allies. The CPM has rightly argued that the Indo-US
nuclear deal must be seen within the context of burgeoning Indo-US
military and geo-political ties. But on Friday, Basu adopted the
language of the Congress leadership, saying that the Indo-US
nuclear deal is for nuclear energy. Nuclear energy is necessary
and there is need for nuclear power plants. With new industries
mushrooming, the demand for power will increase.
Basu then added, There could be some easing off of the
situation. We are against US imperialism but we need foreign capital
for industrialization. They are not coming for charity but for
profit. We will also get benefit out of it. This would be on the
basis of mutual interest.
The CPM and it Left Front allies have played a pivotal role
in containing the mass opposition within the working class and
rural poor to the social incendiary impact of the UPAs agenda
of privatization and deregulation . Nevertheless, important sections
of big business are urging the Congress to break with the Left
Front and precipitate and early election in the hopes of bringing
to power a government unencumbered by the need to give sops to
the Left Front.
There are strong indications that the Congress is actively
considering this course. The BJP is riven by crisis and has alienated
important sections of capital by pursuing an unrelenting policy
of obstruction, meaning that the Congress would be well-positioned
to rally big business behind it.
Those within the Congress advocating a break with the Left
Front are also calculating that the UPA will be able to exploit
growing popular opposition to the West Bengal Left Front government,
which has faced mass popular protests against its policy of expropriating
peasant land for big business. Toward that end, the Congress has
moved to form an alliance with the Trinumul (Grassoots) Congress
of Mamata Banerjee. A right-wing, populist split-off from the
Congress, the Trinumul Congress has hitherto been aligned with
the BJPs electoral coalition, the National Democratic Alliance.
See Also:
Differing motives propel India and US
to finalize nuclear agreement
[11 September 2007]
Indian prime minister calls
Left Fronts bluff over Indo-US nuclear accord [16 August
2007]
India-US nuclear agreement
at an impasse
[9 June 2007]
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