In terms of increasing Indian capability to increase nuclear weapons production manifold, there is very little difference between foreign exports of Uranium being used for civilian purposes or being diverted into weapons production - de facto, not de jure, to apply your argument on rogue states from earlier.
Again you are cleverly manipulating the argument into how it will increase the Indian nuclear weapon stockpile. But the argument is not that.
It is the illegality of diverting the IAEA rules bound imported Uranium and the legality of using of our own Uranium for Weapons.
While the former is the only thing outside countries have mandate on, the latter is purely dependent on Indian strategic doctrine and other 'legally' countries don't have a say in that and do not have a mandate to care about that.
As long as the imported Uranium is used for intended purpose, there is no problem.
Then why was the US actively trying to sabotage and slow down Pakistan's nuclear program? Why did France agree to US demands for not finishing the reprocessing plant in Pakistan? Why was the US attempting to stop shipments of alleged dual use technology to Pakistan, if we were such 'blue eyed boys of the West'?
Because maybe it did not want others eating into it's potential market ? Look one may give a whole lot in intentions to these acts for which the intentions are not spelled out explicitly. There is no use in arguing s you will latch onto your position and I to mine.
The underlying point is the West knew of Pak's weapon program and ignored it tacitly and at times actively helped it..
A FU policy has not bearing on civilian nuclear technology for power generation, and I have already pointed out that the Western record on proliferation is far worse than that of Pakistan's.
Ofcourse it has - no one wants to whet the nuclear appetite of a country that by its own admission has a very low threshold for nuclear tolerance and will use it as and when it deems required. Now that is a sovereign choice of the Pak establishment. Similarly the refusal to deal with Pakistan is the sovereign choice of the technology donor countries.
Again, much of Pakistan's own nuclear industry and infrastructure was set up with proliferation out of the West and Asia - so what defence does the West have, since, as I pointed out, the US was applying significant pressure on various European, Asian and Australian nations to prevent the export of nuclear and dual use technology to Pakistan?
You dont make any sense.
The only point here is that Western 'sharing' (including to Pakistan) and the Pakistani 'proliferation' are two different things.
While in teh West case their own 'nuclear' security was not breached, in Pakistan's case an individual fooled the entire Establishment and breached their nuclear security by clandestinely selling nukes to the highest bidder.
The difference is while the West shared only with whom they considered startegic allies (hence the term 'sharing') the Pakistani prolifertors went for the highest bidder who could well have been non-state actors who could have posed a huge security risk to the world.
And thence world started seeing Pakistani program w,r,t to its security with fear and suspicion and do not trust it,,even though the Generals may say it is safe. Because like A.Q.Khan they might not even know if an individual is there selling the nukes right now.
Why should the world trust the West when it did far worse than Pakistan is alleged to have done?
How can anyone be sure that the individuals in Western nations and in western companies and organizations that assisted the AQ Khan network and others in proliferating technology to Pakistan, Israel and South Africa are not right now continuing to do so with other individuals and through other networks?
Why merely hold Pakistan responsible for individuals violating security and technology restrictions, when the West and Asia have done far worse?
Because you get branded a thief only when you are caught. Don't get caught, you are not a thief.Unfortunately Pakistan was stupid enough to get caught and now has to live with the stigma.
Its as simple as that.
And here another nail in the record -
Pak supporting Syrian nuclear programme: ex-Israeli Army Gen