Christian Science Monitor
Wednesday, July 20, 2005
Why US is
shifting nuclear stand with India; A bargain on nuclear technology may signal
view of India as counterbalance to China.
By Howard LaFranchi
WASHINGTON - US plans to
broaden India's access to nuclear technology, announced this week during an
enthusiastic visit to Washington by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, have
their roots in designs from the earliest days of the Bush administration to
build India's stature as a counterbalance to a rising and problematic China.
The proposed extension of
nuclear access to what the White House likes to call "the world's largest
democracy" raises questions about potential impact on other countries with
nuclear ambitions and designs for international status. That is especially true
as the announcement comes just days before the European Union is to return to
negotiations with Iran to end its nuclear-weapons programs and six-party talks
are to take up again in Beijing on North Korea's nuclear program.
But perhaps the greatest
significance of the plan is what it says about 21st- century geopolitics and in
particular about a Bush administration vision for dealing with China, some
analysts say.
"The crux of this
announcement is what it tells us about the US grand strategy, and that behind
whatever else is going on here the US is preparing for a grand conflict with
China and constructing an anti-China coalition," says Joseph Cirincione,
head of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Project at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace. "In that scenario, India is even more valuable as a
nuclear power, rather than as a nonnuclear country."
The White House plan, which
would allow India broader access to international technology for its nuclear
power industry in exchange for India granting some access to international
inspections, still faces high hurdles: Opposition is expected to be strong both
in the US Congress and among other nuclear powers who along with the US would
have some say.
In the view of some
specialists, the plan would certainly erode and perhaps mean the scrapping of
decades of international nonproliferation effort in favor of an ad hoc,
case-by-case approach that rewards certain countries while punishing others.
"This is a plan that chooses good guys and bad guys, and says that what
matters is power politics and not nonproliferation principles," Mr.
Cirincione says.
But for others, the plan
reflects a realistic appraisal both of exploding global energy needs and India's
responsible track record in handling nuclear technology.
"Yes, this does look at
India on an individual basis, but it also rewards a worthy country for its very
good performance on nuclear proliferation, and in that sense it reflects a
desirable change in US policy," says Selig Harrison, director of the Asia
Program at the Center for International Policy in Washington. The US shift will
raise protests from Pakistan, Mr. Harrison says, but in response to protests of
special treatment for India, the US "has an answer, and that is: A. Q.
Khan," he adds, referring to the "father" of Pakistan's nuclear
program who developed a clandestine nuclear bazaar.
Certainly, the US increasingly
sees India as a "good guy," both in terms of the South Asian region
but also in international affairs. President Bush referred to "our shared
values" during Mr. Singh's White House visit Monday, while State Department
officials say the agreement points the way for US-India relations for the coming
decades.
In a speech to Congress
Tuesday, Prime Minister Singh emphasized India's record of guarding its nuclear
technology from a dangerous spread, assuring members of Congress that India
"never will be a source of proliferation of nuclear technologies."
Harrison says the US agreement would also rectify an anomaly in the
"outdated" international nonproliferation regime that allows the US to
sell civilian nuclear technology to China but not to India.
The White House plan does not
formally recognize India as a nuclear power, but some critics say it does grant
de facto recognition.
Karl Inderfurth, a former
assistant secretary of State for South Asian affairs during the Clinton
administration, recognizes the plan will be controversial among many
nonproliferation experts and in Congress. But he adds: "It's the right call
for us and for the world, really. This is a way to bring India into a global
nonproliferation regime, rather than leaving it on the outside."
Yet while the nuclear agreement
signals new thinking on US-India relations, it won't really mean a new chapter
in the partnership unless the administration is willing to fight for the plan
and convince Congress of its merits, Mr. Harrison says. "This is a litmus
test, for Indians and for others as well, as to whether the US is really serious
about seeing India as a key and rising player in global calculations," he
says.
No doubt China will be watching
how far the US plans to take the relationship. So will Europe - in particular a
European Union that does not see the rising challenge of China in the same terms
as the US, but which has put off arms sales to China in response to US concerns.
China is clearly a factor in US calculations on India, experts say, but some
also warn that the US has little to gain if it develops ties to India primarily
as a counterweight to another rising power.