New Delhi. There is
widespread media speculation on the chances of
the India-International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
safeguards agreement being finalized and submitted
to the board of governors. The issue that is being
hotly debated is whether the Left parties will
allow the safeguards agreement to be processed
further by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA)
government when the Indian delegation concludes
the draft agreement with the IAEA.
This is to be decided in the next UPA-Left coordination
meeting. Reports have appeared in the press that
the UPA will argue that the processing of the
safeguards agreement is not a bilateral issue
between India and the US but a requirement for
civil nuclear cooperation with China, Russia and
France which have made offers of such cooperation
subject to the finalization of the Safeguards
Agreement and obtaining waiver from the 45-member
Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).
If the finalization of the safeguards agreement
is opposed by the Left at this stage it would
inevitably lead to the conclusion that the Left
is opposed to India's civil nuclear cooperation
with China, Russia and France. These are all countries
which are opposed to unilateralism of the US and
which are keen on building a multi-polar world.
After the leaderships of these countries have
publicly pledged cooperation in the civil nuclear
field subject to the international safeguards
regime, India's going back on it will inevitably
generate an impression that India is not interested
in the development of a multi-polar, balance of
power world and India does not consider itself
an adequately significant power to join hands
with others to countervail the unilateralism of
the US.
The US cold warriors would like nothing better.
This would suit the world view of those sections
of US diplomats, military and intelligence establishments
which would like to see the continued hyphenation
of India and Pakistan and India not playing an
autonomous great power role along with China,
Russia and France in the international system.
The Left should make it clear whether it wants
India to play a cooperative role with powers like
China, Russia and France to contribute to multi-polarity
of the international system or not. It is a question
of the mindset whether India, the second largest
nation of the world, should play a role appropriate
for one-sixth of mankind or have a self-image
of itself as a weak power vulnerable to bullying.
It will be an extreme irony of history if those
who claim to be opposed to US unilateralism find
themselves in the company of the US cold warriors
who are opposed to India rising as an autonomous
power to contribute to balance unilateralism in
the international system.
This is not the age of Cold War and confrontation.
Diplomacy in today's world calls for cooperation
as well as independent assertion of views among
major powers.
Russia and China are going along with the US,
Britain, France and Germany in considering sanctions
against Iran for its continued opposition to the
demand to suspend uranium enrichment but at the
same time Russia is completing supplies of enriched
uranium fuel for the Busher reactors.
The Left considers China as a countervailer
of the US though the Chinese supply of consumer
items to the US at very cheap prices by keeping
the yuan value low helps the US economy by keeping
its inflation down by half percent.
Russia builds and maintains the space station
in cooperation with the US and is a member of
the Organization of Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) along with the US, Britain, France,
Germany and other NATO countries.
Russia and China are today partners in technology
denial regimes established by the US during the
Cold War. They do not treat the US as an undifferentiated
adversary but adopt a policy of selective cooperation
and opposition based on issues, which is the distinguishing
characteristic of the balance of power system.
India can contribute to the multi-polarity of
the world only when it succeeds in getting the
international technology apartheid, which was
imposed under US leadership at the height of the
Cold War, removed. This is what Russia, France
and China are aiming at.
Often, the Hyde Act is mixed up with India getting
itself liberated from the technology apartheid.
The Hyde Act has two roles. The first, it exempts
India from the ban on US nuclear cooperation with
nations which are not members of the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT). Secondly it lays down certain conditions
for the US administration to sell nuclear technology
to India.
Most of the conditionalities, to which the Left
and others have raised objections in India, relate
to the second aspect. Exempting India from the
ban for nuclear cooperation in principle even
though it is not a signatory of the NPT is a one-time
waiver and is irrevocable in this context once
given.
Conditionalities of the Hyde Act apply only
if India were to purchase technology or equipment
from the US. Whether India should purchase equipment
and technology from the US is a decision New Delhi
will have to take much later in the light of the
cooperation it is able to mobilize on civil nuclear
cooperation from Russia, France and China.
Under the US constitution, foreign policy is
the prerogative of the president. The US presidents
ignored the Congressional legislation for years
in respect of Pakistan acquiring nuclear weapons
with Chinese help.
Then President Bill Clinton bluffed the US Congress
for six years with the statement that a determination
was yet to be made on Chinese missile supplies
to Pakistan, even after the Pakistani government
had publicly acknowledged the receipt of the missiles.
What counts in reality is the state of relationship
with the US administration in office at a particular
time. Pakistan and China have clearly benefited
out of their understanding of the working of the
US political system.
Therefore those who are ideologically opposed
to unilateralism of the US should support India
going ahead with the conclusion of the IAEA safeguards.
This is what rationality dictates. But in politics
rationality does not always prevail.
History is full of instances of leaders hurting
the interests of their own parties because of
ego drives, leftist or rightist adventurism and
putting personal interests above party or national
interests.
But for such mistakes by leaders like Stalin,
Brezhnev and Mao Zedong, communism as an ideology
would not be finding itself in its present predicament
all over the world. Mistakes of those leaders
in the former USSR and China are now widely acknowledged.
Mohit Sen has something to say of mistakes committed
in India. Other party leaders have committed similar
irrational mistakes as well. The late Indira Gandhi's
decision to impose emergency and BJP-led mobs
demolishing the Babri mosque are instances of
similar irrationality. In this case both the Left's
opposition to finalisation of IAEA safeguards
and the UPA's possible caving in to the Left pressure
will be irrational. There is no guarantee such
developments will not take place.
If the UPA irrationally succumbs to the leftist
pressure then in the next election a major issue
will be who ruled this country from May 2004 -
whether it was Manmohan Singh or Prakash Karat.
There is no prize for guessing who will benefit
out of this.
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