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Home » Nukes » US-​​India Nuclear Cooperation

US-​​India Nuclear Cooperation

singh_at_white_house.jpg
Lolly, lolly get your nuclear fuel here.
I hope Indian PM Manmohan Singh trav­els light, because he returns to India laden with good­ies.
During his state visit to the US, Singh wrung a promise from President Bush to:

… seek agree­ment from Congress to adjust US laws and poli­cies, and [to] work with friends and allies to adjust inter­na­tional regimes to enable full civil nuclear energy coop­er­a­tion and trade with India …

The full text of joint state­ment and the press con­fer­ence with Bush and Singh are both avail­able on-​​line.
The Bush Administration is pro­hib­ited by US law and its inter­na­tional oblig­a­tions from pro­vid­ing civil nuclear assis­tance to India, because New Delhi refuses to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. In fact, the inter­na­tional oblig­a­tion in ques­tion — the vol­un­tary Nuclear Suppliers Group — was cre­ated as a response to India’s 1974 “peace­ful” nuclear explo­sion.
The Bush Administration is eagerly court­ing India because … well, frankly, I don’t know. I am told the intel­lec­tual argu­ment for the Bush Administration pol­icy is reflected in Ashley Tellis’ India as a New Global Power: An Action Agenda for the United States.
Tellis argues the “change in approach” arose “from three evolv­ing per­cep­tions within the Bush administration”:

First, the admin­is­tra­tion had come to real­ize that India would not give up its nuclear weapons so long as var­i­ous regional adver­saries con­tin­ued to pos­sess com­pa­ra­ble capa­bil­i­ties. The fact that the admin­is­tra­tion ini­tially viewed both of Indias antag­o­nists Pakistan and China with con­sid­er­able sus­pi­cion only made senior U.S. offi­cials more sym­pa­thetic to New Delhis predica­ment.
Second, the admin­is­tra­tion was now of the under­stand­ing that Indias nuclear weapons did not pose a threat to U.S. secu­rity and the United States larger geopo­lit­i­cal inter­ests, and could in cer­tain cir­cum­stances actu­ally advance American strate­gic objec­tives in Asia and beyond. The admin­is­tra­tions own antipa­thy to nuclear arms con­trol agree­ments such as the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and the Fissile Material Cut-​​off Treaty (which hap­pened to dove­tail with Indian inter­ests on these issues), cou­pled with its strong expec­ta­tion of an even­tual renewal of great-​​power com­pe­ti­tion, allowed both real­ist and neo­con­ser­v­a­tive fac­tions within the admin­is­tra­tion to take a more relaxed view of New Delhis emerg­ing nuclear capa­bil­i­ties.
Third, the admin­is­tra­tion now appre­ci­ated that the range of tech­no­log­i­cal resources asso­ci­ated with weapons of mass destruc­tion (WMD) and their deliv­ery sys­tems that were present in India in both the pub­lic and pri­vate sec­tors posed a far more seri­ous threat to American safe­ty­were these resources to be leaked, whether delib­er­ately or inad­ver­tently, to hos­tile regimes or non­state actorsthan New Delhis own­er­ship of var­i­ous nuclear assets. These per­cep­tions, which became dom­i­nant in admin­is­tra­tion think­ing in regard to India post-​​9/​11, made tight­en­ing the Indian export con­trol regime far more impor­tant from the view­point of increas­ing U.S. secu­rity than lean­ing on the Indian state to cap or roll back its strate­gic pro­grams.
From these three per­cep­tions grew the con­vic­tion that the United States ought to focus pri­mar­ily on safe­guard­ing Indias tan­gi­ble and intan­gi­ble WMD capa­bil­i­ties, even as Washington strug­gled to find ways of accept­ing New Delhis nuclear weaponry within the con­strain­ing frame­work of the exist­ing inter­na­tional non­pro­lif­er­a­tion order.

Dana Milbank and Dafna Linzer at the Washington Post have a story about the agree­ment and its impli­ca­tion for the global non­pro­lif­er­a­tion regime.
– posted by Jeffrey Lewis.
Update: Scott Gearity has more.

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July 19th, 2005 | Nukes | 646 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2005/07/19/us-india-nuclear-cooperation/US-India+Nuclear+Cooperation2005-07-19+13%3A23%3A41wonk You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. Byron Skinner says:
    July 19, 2005 at 7:55 pm

    For days now the web has been lighted up with sto­ries of Terrorist and nuclear weapons. I’m glad that President Bush just shown exactly where the United States stands in stop­ping the sale of mate­ri­als and tech­nol­ogy into the Muslim part of the world.
    I think I can see the Presidents logic here. It’s bet­ter to sell nuclear tech­nol­ogy to a coun­try that already has the bomb rather then to a coun­try who wants the bomb. Make new bombs are a no, no make bet­ter bombs, well thats ok.
    India’s loy­al­ity to the United States is only as good as the last tech sup­port con­tract it gets from HP or Microsoft.
    ALLONS,
    Byron Skinner
    “Stewart’s Platoon”

    Reply
  2. The Cenobyte says:
    July 20, 2005 at 10:06 am

    State play­ers with nukes are really just not the big worry any­more. These guys arn’t the ones that are going to use them against us or even against a coun­try that is not a nuke player. The issue is nuke weapons get­ting into the hands of non-​​state play­ers and a good rela­tion­ship with those that have the bombs might help us keep the bombs from the non-​​state play­ers that we are so wor­ried about.

    Reply
  3. Jay says:
    August 15, 2005 at 6:31 pm

    Minor point: India is not a Muslim nation.

    Reply
  4. Greg Pauloson says:
    August 31, 2005 at 5:26 pm

    As some­one who has 11 years trav­el­ling the con­ti­nent called India rid­ing a HD, I will sup­port it. I have seen this countrie’s hunger for suc­cess & I know they want peace in the world, like we do. Lets sup­port plu­rarlism, not stalinism!

    Reply
  5. James Millane says:
    October 21, 2005 at 8:15 am

    India devel­oped the bomb in 1974, not now. They have had an exem­plary track record (100 times bet­ter than china and pak­istan) with nuclear non pro­lif­er­a­tion. How long are we going to keep reward­ing nations like pak­istan for fear of what bad they can do and ignore India which can do good? In any case, this is inevitable.

    Reply

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