One based on mutual economic interest and not on politics.RAPTOR said:And what way is that?
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One based on mutual economic interest and not on politics.RAPTOR said:And what way is that?
RAPTOR said:For an insight on the issue read the article below.sword9 said:Maybe, but the plan is not falling in line with Uncle Sams scheme. We will lay our bets on siding them for the moment, we have gained nothing by being against them all these years.
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And what are you going to gain by being with them?
The truth behind the Indo-U.S. nuclear deal
by Siddharth Varadarajan
July 29, 2005
The Hindu
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In opening the door to nuclear commerce with India, Washington has confirmed how much an alliance with New Delhi is worth to it. But is anybody on the Indian side doing the math?
IN THE fullness of time, last week's nuclear agreement between India and the United States will be seen as one of those decisive moments in international politics when two powers who have been courting each other for some time decide finally to cross the point of no return. The U.S. and India have `come out', so to speak, and the world will never be the same again.
Every world order needs rules in order to sustain itself but sometimes the rules can become a hindrance to the hegemonic strength of the power that underpins that order. Following India's nuclear tests in 1998, the U.S. had two options: continuing to believe the Indian nuclear genie could be put back, or harnessing India's evident strategic weight for its own geopolitical aims before that power grows too immense or is harnessed by others like Europe or China. The U.S. has chosen the latter option, and the joint statement released by President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on July 18 is the most dramatic textual manifestation of what Washington is attempting to do.
India too, had a choice. It could use its nuclear weapons status as a lever to push for a multipolar world system as well as for global restraints on the development of weapons of mass destruction. Or it could use its status as an instrument to help perpetuate an order based on the production of insecurity and violence in which it eventually hoped to be accommodated as a junior partner. The erstwhile Vajpayee Government was never interested in the former option and longed desperately for the latter. The fact that Dr. Singh has managed this is the real source of the BJP's bitterness, not the fact that India's nuclear weapons capability is to be capped (which it is not).
Those in India who marvel at how Mr. Bush could blithely walk away from 40 years of non-proliferation policy do not understand the tectonic shift that is taking place in the bilateral relationship as a result of increasing fears in U.S. business and strategic circles about China. Giving India anything less, or insisting that it cap or scrap its nuclear weapons, is seen by Washington's neo-conservatives as tantamount to strengthening China in the emerging balance of power in Asia. "By integrating India into the non-proliferation order at the cost of capping the size of its eventual nuclear deterrent," Ashley Tellis argued in a recent monograph, "[the U.S. would] threaten to place New Delhi at a severe disadvantage vis-ÃÂ -vis Beijing, a situation that could not only undermine Indian security but also U.S. interests in Asia in the face of the prospective rise of Chinese power over the long term" (India as a New Global Power: An Action Agenda for the United States, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2005). This, then, is the real value of the deal in American eyes and the Indian public should be aware of it.
Predictably, critics in the U.S. have raised objections of one type or another. The non-proliferation lobby argues that President Bush's decision to sell nuclear technology and equipment to India will encourage other countries to go down the nuclear path. Not so say the advocates. Mr. Tellis ââ¬â a former RAND Corporation analyst who served as an advisor to Robert Blackwill when he was U.S. Ambassador to India ââ¬â is most forthright. He acknowledges the contradiction between the two goals of U.S. foreign policy ââ¬â building India up as a counter to China and upholding the non-proliferation regime ââ¬â but says the circle can be squared. His solution: don't jettison the regime "but, rather, selectively [apply] it in practice." In other words, different countries should be treated differently "based on their friendship and value to the U.S." With one stroke of the Presidential pen, India has become something more than a `major non-Nato ally' of the U.S. It has joined the Free World. It has gone from being a victim of nuclear discrimination to a beneficiary. India is not alone. Israel is already there to give it company.
From a strategic perspective, one of the most puzzling aspects of the joint statement was the inclusion of a reiteration by India of its unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing without the U.S. making an explicit reciprocal commitment to abide by its own 1992 moratorium. At stake is not a formal question of protocol but the very real danger that the U.S. might go down the path of testing at some point in the future.
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That is irrelavent. Sino-Indian trade stands at close to $14-15 billion while Sino-Pak trade is $3-4 billion, inspite of China and Pakistan being close strategic partners.RAPTOR said:Speaking of trade....Thailand's trade volume with the US is 5 times more than india.
RAPTOR said:The deal will never get passed by Congress in its present form. It is dangerous and illegal.
sword9 said:That is irrelavent. Sino-Indian trade stands at close to $14-15 billion while Sino-Pak trade is $3-4 billion, inspite of China and Pakistan being close strategic partners.
sword9 said:The Bush admin is not distancing itself from the deal. What is your assumption based on?
Maybe, but the plan is not falling in line with Uncle Sams scheme. We will lay our bets on siding them for the moment, we have gained nothing by being against them all these years.
We'll access it our way not on imposed conditions.
RAPTOR said:Special protection force was used to chase these UFOs but the UFOs disappeared in no time
RAPTOR said:Indian Air Force pilots understood the advanced capabilities of these UFOs. The Migs and Su-27s decided not to fire or even chase these silent spectators
RAPTOR said:who we all know is an idiot