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Beijing could support India’s NSG accession path if it plays by rules

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Beijing could support India’s NSG accession path if it plays by rules
By Fu Xiaoqiang Source:Global Times Published: 2016-6-16 0:18:01
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New Delhi seems to have inched closer to the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) membership after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gained backing from the US, Swiss and Mexico in its bid to join the elite nuclear club earlier this month.

Becoming a member of the NSG, a 48-nation bloc that governs civilian nuclear trade worldwide, will grant India global acceptance as a legitimate nuclear power. If it joins the group, New Delhi will be able to import civilian nuclear technology and fuels from the international market more conveniently, while saving its domestic nuclear materials for military use.

The major goal for India's NSG ambition is to obtain an edge over Islamabad in nuclear capabilities. Once New Delhi gets the membership first, the nuclear balance between India and Pakistan will be broken. As a result, Pakistan's strategic interests will be threatened, which will in turn shake the strategic balance in South Asia, and even cast a cloud over peace and stability in the entire Asia-Pacific region.

The reason why India has scored a big win in garnering support for its NSG membership from some countries is because Washington has started to treat New Delhi as part of the US alliance.

It was only several years ago that Modi could not even get a US visa, but now he has visited the US more often than any other country during his two years in office.

The US recognized New Delhi as a "major defense partner" during Modi's recent visit. It means that the White House has given India the treatment as a US military ally. Over the years, the US has been bending the rules to back India's nuclear projects. Against the backdrop of Washington's accelerated pace of promoting its pivot to the Asia-Pacific region, it will be highly likely to keep supporting New Delhi's nuclear ambitions, in order to make it a stronger power to contain China.

The attitude of the US has had and will undoubtedly have an impact on some other nations. For those countries which also wish to put a finger in the pie of India's market, many of them begin to back India's NSG membership, or at least not oppose it.

However, as a country that has signed neither the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) nor the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), India is not yet qualified for accession into the NSG. That's why the bloc is still divided over the case, and countries including New Zealand, Ireland, Turkey, South Africa and Austria have expressed their firm objections to India's membership.

As a crucial defender of the international system against nuclear proliferation, China does not wish to see the political and legal foundation of global nuclear security to be challenged by any party who does not abide by rules.

For those countries that are developing nuclear technology without the acceptance of the international community, perhaps counting them into the non-proliferation mechanism will better safeguard nuclear security.

Yet before that, a fair and just principle must be made through common consensus of all current members of the NSG, rather than US and India's reckless pushing at the cost of rule-breaking.

So far, all NSG members have signed the NPT. So the question is, if any non-signatory of the treaty wants to join the group, under what condition can it be accepted? If such a standard is to be made one day, then it will be possible for both India and Pakistan to become part of the group.

Beijing welcomes New Delhi playing a role as a major power in global governance, including producing positive effect in a nuclear non-proliferation organization. As long as all NSG members reach a consensus over how a non-NPT member could join the NSG, and India promises to comply with stipulations over the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons while sticking to its policy of independence and self-reliance, China could support New Delhi's path toward the club.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/988607.shtml
 
mutual support is needed without ifs & But..

think critically what NSG membership is meant for India and pakistan. As for India , do we really need 200-300 atomic bomb to wipe out pakistan or china? isn't 100 -110 nukes are too much ? so please think logically . future war not gonna be a nuclear one but economic ... ( both for India & Pakistan)

I appreciate the current stance of Chinese govt on NSG membership , atleast they are ready for further talks..
 
This news will very badly disappoint few cheerleaders who blindly thinks China will do everything they ask. China got its own interest, it will be asking for severe headache to block India when its backed by almost every major power specially US.


Next time they have to pass anything in UN, WTO, any Financial body, ask for loan for themselves or any of the client state they will face opposition beside that they will lose a lot of market share in India and will not be given any Bullet train contract which is worth tens of Billions. If they support they will get some concession. Anyways its upto them to decide that for a namesake membership are they going to take this much headache.

In the present day system you just cant hold the world ransom, if you will, you will pay somewhere else, its purely cost-benefit case, I hope they veto us from NSG.

I personally feel India should not give any concession to China for support, if they oppose let them oppose, its not that big of a membership.
 
I am not even bothered of china. Infact i wish and dare that they do oppose india's entry, and then face the indian music henceforth.
Bye bye to billion dollar trade.India is ready with the pen and paper to backlist the dangerous, poisonour security threat imports from china.
Bye bye to billion dollar bullet train contract.
Get ready for new improved US-India bonhomie.

Rather if it supports in addition to above benefits it will get pie of the nuclear market in india.

And all this for what ? From stopping india entry into NSG club whose benefits we are already reaping. Its gonna be chinas lose and indias gain.
 
I appreciate the current stance of Chinese govt on NSG membership , atleast they are ready for further talks..
Their opposition since start is that India didn't sign NPT. This article serves no purpose.

Bye bye to billion dollar trade.India is ready with the pen and paper to backlist the dangerous, poisonour security threat imports from china.
Blocking imports will directly impact Indian economy, we are too much reliant on their imports, at least for now.
 
Their opposition since start is that India didn't sign NPT

possibility is always there bhai and this is what we are doing atm.. you can clearly see the changing scenario..
 
India has a enough plutonium for potential 900 to 2000 nuclear bombs, The NSG is to legitimize it and get more enriched uranium, all with "prestige"..
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India's stockpile of fissile materials is estimated to include 3.2 ± 0.9 tonnes of HEU, 0.59 ±0 .18 tonnes of weapon-grade plutonium, and 5.5±0.4 tonnes of reactor-grade plutonium, that includes 5.1±0.4 of material considered strategic reserve and 0.4 tonnes of safeguarded plutonium.

India continues to produce fissile materials for weapons. It operates a plutonium production reactor, Dhruva, and a uranium enrichment facility that are not subject to IAEA safeguards.

Highly-enriched uranium
India's uranium enrichment program is believed to be oriented primarily toward production of HEU for the nuclear submarine program. A pilot-scale enrichment plant in the Bhabha Atomic Research Center (BARC) was reported to begin operations in 1985. A larger centrifuge plant, officially known as the Rare Materials Project, reportedly has been operating at Rattehalli in southern India since 1990. The Rattehalli plant is being expanded. Also, India is planning to build an enrichment facility at Chitradurga that will be used for civilian applications.

The HEU produced by India is assumed to be enriched to between 30 percent and 45 percent uranium-235. Assuming an enrichment level of 30 percent, India is estimated to have a stockpile of 3.2 ± 1.1 tons of HEU as of the end of 2014 with a uranium-235 content of 1.0 ± 0.3 tons.

Military plutonium
India's weapon-grade plutonium has been produced in two reactors: the 40 MWt CIRUS and the 100 MWt Dhruva, both located in the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) complex near Mumbai. CIRUS was shut down in 2010. Dhruva, commissioned in 1985, continues to operate. India reportedly has plans to build a new 100 MWt reactor in Vizag, Andhra Pradesh.

The total amount of weapon-grade plutonium in India's stockpile is estimated to be 0.59 ± 0.2 tonnes as of the end of 2014.

In addition to the weapon-grade plutonium, India's current stockpile includes an estiamted 5.1 ± 3.0 tonnes of reactor-grade plutonium separated from unsafeguarded heavy-water power reactors. This material is considered a strategic stockpile that could be used for producing unsafeguarded plutonium in the future. It is accounted for as miltiary material. About 2 tonnes of plutonium may have been fabricated into fuel for the Fast Breeder Test Reactor and for the first core of the 500 MWe Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor which is under construction.

http://fissilematerials.org/countries/india.html
 
This my friends is a polite way to show two finger salute to both America and India.

People keep on forgetting one very important aspect here. Its not all about Pakistan, its China own prestige issue here. China being a new super power, need to show to the world that it can, on its own bulldoze any American project or interest. NSG gives this opportunity to China to flex its muscles. Welcome to the bipolar world.
 
This my friends is a polite way to show two finger salute to both America and India.

People keep on forgetting one very important aspect here. Its not all about Pakistan, its China own prestige issue here. China being a new super power, need to show to the world that it can, on its own bulldoze any American project or interest. NSG gives this opportunity to China to flex its muscles. Welcome to the bipolar world.
Already majority of the countries in NSG are supporting India.its dsnt look like a multi polar world atleast in NSG.
China should play smart,by blocking India what will china achive.we already get what we can get being a member of NSG.but by chian opposing alone ,it will push India towards US.
 
It's quite stupid of Indians to think that they can blackmail China into winning the membership through a bullet train and 'trade'.
China is just looking at how to 'politely' ditch India this time.
On one hand Bhartis are ranting about how this membership is not 'that' important while on the other hand threatning China to cut down the billions of dollars of trade with it over the same membership.
The irony..
 
If the US can go to such lengths to nurture Ind against China,I don't see why China would not do the same to nurture Pakistan against India.
I don't see China letting in India without Pakistan.It's not that the Chinese love us,it's simple geopolitics.
 
Already majority of the countries in NSG are supporting India.its dsnt look like a multi polar world atleast in NSG.
China should play smart,by blocking India what will china achive.we already get what we can get being a member of NSG.but by chian opposing alone ,it will push India towards US.

America has been voting anything against Israel in UN for donkey years despite overwhelming majority against American action but does the majority matter?

India is already in the lap of America and you sealed your fate in NSG by sending your ships to towards south China sea.
 

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