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Non-Proliferation Doubletalkby thefiltercoffeeTuesday, July 14, 2009 at 05:26 AM EDTThe recent statement at the G-8 summit in L’aquila calling all non-signatories to “immediately†sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT) and banning the transfer of enrichment and reprocessing (ENR) technologies to non-NPT signatories, was perhaps unexpected, but not altogether shocking. The statement comes prior to the visit of Secretary Clinton to India in August, who, like her husband before her, is a strong proponent of the regime, and of the necessity of bringing the pariahs — India, Israel and Pakistan — into the fold of the mainstream. The symbolism should not be lost on India. The country is quite self-sufficient in ENR technology, and for every member that refuses to play ball, there are others that are more than willing. The statement doesn’t affect India’s quest for cost effective no-ENR-strings-attached nuclear deals with suppliers much — as Indrani Bagchi points out in her blog — but it does point to the unraveling of the non-proliferation agenda being prepared by the Obama Administration to be thrust down our throats. India, therefore, should fully expect mounting international and US pressure to sign the NPT prior to the 2010 NPT RevCon. Secretary Clinton will no doubt take the opportunity to raise the issue during bilateral discussions next month. The Japanese, as notorious on the issue as they always were, have made repeated calls this year for India to sign the NPT as a non-nuclear weapons state. Rajiv Gandhi in a speech at the Third Special Session of the UN in 1988 elucidated India’s stance on the issue:
This UPA administration has shown a remarkable ability to undo relationships and depart from the country’s long held positions with stealth and great haste. This blogger hopes that the NPT issue will not fall prey to uninformed meddling. India needs to make it very clear to Secretary Clinton and others like her championing the NPT cause, that the nation continues to harbor significant reservations on the structure and spirit of the regime that effectively prevent it from being a signatory. It has long been India’s official position that India cannot and will not participate in a discriminatory regime that would seek to legitimize the possession of nuclear weapons by some nations, while denying similar rights to others. It has also been India’s stated commitment to universal global nuclear disarmament. Signining the NPT would give credence to nuclear aparthied and provide currency to the notion that some countries have a greater right to self defence than others. This article originally appeared on The Filter Coffee. |
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