http://www.ipcs.org/article/nuclear/indian-membership-to-the-nsg-american-interests-and-chinese-opposition-3698.html
The
recently concluded third India-US Strategic Dialogue has been a remarkable
exhibition of the strengthening bilateral relationship between the two states.
The dialogue meanwhile has also delivered a much needed fillip to the issue of
the prospect of Indian membership to the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). While
this road seems to be fraught with obstacles, could the US assuming chairmanship
of the NSG enhance the Indian bid for membership despite strong opposition from
China?
What is the significance of the Strategic Dialogue for
the bilateral relationship?There have been recent speculations
regarding a lull in the India-US relationship in spite of inherent geo-strategic
and economic interests. Ashley Tellis though counters this assertion as an
unfounded one and believes that this is a long-term relationship and needs to be
viewed as one (
http://bit.ly/Nf2Gop). The short-term problems cannot possibly
sidetrack the phenomenal growth of this bilateral relationship.
On 13
June, as Indian External Affairs Minister SM Krishna met the US Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, widespread consultations were conducted between the two
delegations primarily on the five main areas of trade and investment, science
and technology, education, security and defence cooperation, and finally
cooperation in South and Southeast Asia. What stands out at the very outset of
the joint statement by the two leaders is the overt US encouragement of wider
Indian engagement in the Asia Pacific. The welcoming of the trilateral dialogue
between the US, India and Japan, as well as the Indian promise to help the US
become a dialogue partner with the Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional
Cooperation (of which India is currently the chair) are developments that
Beijing shall track with a wary eye. The commitment to jointly explore
opportunities to work toward the promotion of development in Afghanistan and to
hold a trilateral dialogue with the Afghan government is meanwhile testament to
the US recognition of a larger Indian stake in the country as a regional player.
The fruition of the deal between the US based Westinghouse Electric and
Co and the Nuclear Power Company of India Ltd to build the first US reactor in
India also grabbed headlines during the strategic dialogue. While this is a
clear and heavy indication of progress with regard to the hitherto dormant
Indo-US nuclear deal, India was also praised for its efforts to reduce its
dependence on Iranian oil.
What are the prospects of Indian
membership to the NSG?India is currently simultaneously pursuing
membership into three other export control regimes – the MTCR (Missile
Technology Control Regime), the Australia Group and the Wassenaar Arrangement,
and the precedent of a non-NPT signatory gaining membership into the coveted NSG
may clear the road for India’s membership into the others.
According to
Mark Hibbs and Toby Dalton of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (
http://bit.ly/LoYBtb), the question of Indian membership into
the NSG warrants serious consideration into the future that the institution
envisages for itself. It can either don the mantle of a ‘universal export
control organisation’ that includes all nuclear capable countries within its
fold, or it can choose to be an institution of like-minded states that choose to
uphold the ‘nearly universal global proliferation norms and principles’. The
argument that India’s past nuclear behaviour makes it likely to seek the
loosening of guidelines for nuclear trade and the justification that India’s
non-signature of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) makes it likely to
block any fresh NSG guidelines to combat proliferation is an unconvincing
one.
There is a sense that that the US’ interest in propping up India on
the world stage is with the view of a larger ‘containment’ strategy towards
China. Beijing has opposed Indian membership into the NSG and demands that ‘all
potential groupings’ (ie Pakistan) must also be considered for membership. The
geo-strategic inconvenience for China posed by a clear path for India into the
NSG is one that the former shall try to put off as long as possible. The West’s
concern about China’s nuclear deal with Pakistan has also put Beijing in the
spotlight, making its position highly inflexible. Given the consensus-based
decision-making process of the NSG, the regional geopolitical implications of
Indian membership to the NSG for China shall remain the most potent obstacle to
the fruition of the project.
The US assuming the chairmanship of the NSG,
according to Indian External Affairs Minister SM Krishna, will give a ‘final
impetus’ to Indian membership into the organisation. Coupled with the rising
stakes and current support of both France and Russia in the Indian case, the
time is ripe for progress on the front of Indian membership into the NSG. Though
the process is bound be a long drawn one given Chinese stakes, the US ‘non
paper’ (
http://bit.ly/MPdWG6) on Indian membership and NPT membership
not being a necessary precondition for being in the NSG at the Seattle plenary
session in June 2012 has certainly given a boost to Indian hopes.
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