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The Daily Star - Opinion Articles - Non-proliferation is on its last legs
Non-proliferation is on its last legs
By Harsh V. Pant
Commentary by
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Two years ago when former US President George W. Bush helped end Indias status as a nuclear pariah, opening the country for civilian nuclear technology sale, the long-term implications were obscure.
With Japan, a long-time critic of Indias weapon bid, lining up for deals with India, and China proposing to offer similar technology to Pakistan, the geopolitical import of the 2008 Indo-US agreement is becoming clear: Japan, concerned by Chinas rise, wants to strengthen India while China counters the US-India partnership by helping Indias nemesis Pakistan. In the process, protecting the nuclear non-proliferation regime has become more complex.
Since the signing of the Indo-US agreement and special dispensation granted to India by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), India has signed civilian nuclear-energy pacts with states as diverse as the United Kingdom, France, Russia, Canada Argentina, Kazakhstan, Namibia and Mongolia. The start of negotiations with Japan is the latest such agreement. China announced its own civil nuclear pact with Pakistan this year though it has yet to receive a waiver from the NSG for selling technology to a non-member of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Behind seemingly innocuous agreements of civilian nuclear cooperation, India, Japan, China and Pakistan engage in a strategic balancing game that could draw in other states, complicate the global non-proliferation agenda and raise serious security concerns about Pakistan as a Wal-Mart of illicit nuclear technology.
The US-India nuclear pact virtually rewrote the rules of the global nuclear regime by underlining Indias credentials as a responsible nuclear state that should be integrated into the global nuclear order, with the Bush administration deciding to dehyphenate American relations with India and Pakistan. The pact creates a major exception to the US prohibition of nuclear assistance to any country that does not accept international monitoring of all its nuclear facilities. The unspoken context of the deal was US concern about Chinas rapid ascendance in the Asia-Pacific. Both India and the US realized that, to prevent China from dominating the region, a close partnership between the worlds two largest democracies was essential. The nuclear deal became the most potent symbol of US-India rapprochement.
But the deal was not merely between India and the US. Successful approval by the NSG allowed India to engage other nuclear powers in civilian nuclear trade and provided new market opportunities to major nuclear powers. Even Japan, a strong critic of Indias nuclear policy, decided to fast-track negotiations for a civilian nuclear deal, planning to sign the accord during the Indian prime ministers visit to Tokyo by year-end the first such agreement between Japan and a country that isnt a signatory to the NPT.
Though Indian-Japanese ties have blossomed in recent years on a range of issues, the nuclear issue has been a major irritant. The new understanding between the two nations underscores Tokyos attempts to come to terms with Indias nuclear status. Japanese nuclear companies are eager for a share of the Indian market. Given involvement of Toshiba, Hitachi and Mitsubishi in US and French nuclear industries, an Indo-Japanese pact is essential for US and French civilian nuclear cooperation with India.
Beyond the commercial dimensions of the deal, political symbolism is even more critical. Such a deal would underline Japans determination to put Indo-Japanese ties in high gear. The rise of China is a major factor in the evolution of Indo-Japanese ties as is the US attempt to build India into a major balancer in the region. Both India and Japan chafe at Chinas not-so-subtle attempts at preventing their rise. An Indian-Japanese civil nuclear pact would signal an Asian partnership to bring stability to the region at a time when China goes all out to dispense civilian nuclear reactors to Pakistan, putting the entire non-proliferation regime in jeopardy.
The Sino-Pakistan nuclear relationship has been the major factor wrecking the foundations of the NPT regime. Chinas nuclear test in 1964 propelled Indias nuclear weaponization culminating in Indias peaceful nuclear explosion in 1974. Sino-Pakistan nuclear cooperation involving the sharing of weapon design and missile technology in the 1990s forced India to go overtly nuclear in 1998.
When Washington announced its civilian nuclear energy cooperation pact with India in 2005, China indicated displeasure by asking India to sign the NPT and dismantle its nuclear weapons. Beijing promptly made that concern pointless by declaring its intention to sell nuclear reactors to Pakistan.
The not-so-subtle message was, if Washington decided to play favorites, China would do the same, confirming that China continues to view Pakistan as an asset in countering India.
The Chinese authorities confirmed earlier this year that the China National Nuclear Cooperation signed an agreement with Pakistan for two new nuclear reactors at the Chashma site Chashma III and Chashma IV in addition to the two already under development in Pakistan. This action is in clear violation of NSG guidelines that forbid nuclear transfers to countries not signatories to the NPT or not adhering to comprehensive international nuclear safeguards.
With or without the NSG approval, nuclear cooperation between China and Pakistan will intensify in the coming years as China becomes more assertive. China is concerned about deepening Indo-US relations and Indias attempts to cultivate ties with states in Chinas periphery. The resulting priority of the Sino-Pakistani relationship is evident in Chinese polices toward South Asia.
Moreover, theres a sense in Beijing that the Obama administration would be reluctant to challenge the deal as it needs Chinas help on issues ranging from Iran and North Korea to the global economy. The US no longer seems to have the willingness and clout to enforce the rules requiring credible safeguards before civilian nuclear technology can be exported.
China is not only active in Pakistan. Iran has emerged as the second-largest customer of Chinas defense industry after Pakistan, receiving critical technology, including some that violate stated Chinese policy of adhering to the norms of the non-proliferation regime.
As China becomes more assured of its rising global profile, it will challenge American foreign-policy priorities, and the non-proliferation regime will fast become the first casualty of emerging great power politics.
Its safe to conclude that notwithstanding the hype surrounding the NPT Review Conference held in May, the non-proliferation regime as we have known it is on its last legs. The reason is simple: the changing balance of power, most dramatically in Asia. Its there that the epitaph of the non-proliferation regime is being written. The non-proliferation regime is out of sync with the distribution of global power at the moment. No surprise that its credibility is eroding.
Harsh V. Pant teaches at Kings College, London. This article is reprinted with permission from
YaleGlobal Online (YaleGlobal Online Magazine). Copyright © 2010, Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, Yale University.
Read more: The Daily Star - Opinion Articles - Non-proliferation is on its last legs
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Non-proliferation is on its last legs
By Harsh V. Pant
Commentary by
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Two years ago when former US President George W. Bush helped end Indias status as a nuclear pariah, opening the country for civilian nuclear technology sale, the long-term implications were obscure.
With Japan, a long-time critic of Indias weapon bid, lining up for deals with India, and China proposing to offer similar technology to Pakistan, the geopolitical import of the 2008 Indo-US agreement is becoming clear: Japan, concerned by Chinas rise, wants to strengthen India while China counters the US-India partnership by helping Indias nemesis Pakistan. In the process, protecting the nuclear non-proliferation regime has become more complex.
Since the signing of the Indo-US agreement and special dispensation granted to India by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), India has signed civilian nuclear-energy pacts with states as diverse as the United Kingdom, France, Russia, Canada Argentina, Kazakhstan, Namibia and Mongolia. The start of negotiations with Japan is the latest such agreement. China announced its own civil nuclear pact with Pakistan this year though it has yet to receive a waiver from the NSG for selling technology to a non-member of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Behind seemingly innocuous agreements of civilian nuclear cooperation, India, Japan, China and Pakistan engage in a strategic balancing game that could draw in other states, complicate the global non-proliferation agenda and raise serious security concerns about Pakistan as a Wal-Mart of illicit nuclear technology.
The US-India nuclear pact virtually rewrote the rules of the global nuclear regime by underlining Indias credentials as a responsible nuclear state that should be integrated into the global nuclear order, with the Bush administration deciding to dehyphenate American relations with India and Pakistan. The pact creates a major exception to the US prohibition of nuclear assistance to any country that does not accept international monitoring of all its nuclear facilities. The unspoken context of the deal was US concern about Chinas rapid ascendance in the Asia-Pacific. Both India and the US realized that, to prevent China from dominating the region, a close partnership between the worlds two largest democracies was essential. The nuclear deal became the most potent symbol of US-India rapprochement.
But the deal was not merely between India and the US. Successful approval by the NSG allowed India to engage other nuclear powers in civilian nuclear trade and provided new market opportunities to major nuclear powers. Even Japan, a strong critic of Indias nuclear policy, decided to fast-track negotiations for a civilian nuclear deal, planning to sign the accord during the Indian prime ministers visit to Tokyo by year-end the first such agreement between Japan and a country that isnt a signatory to the NPT.
Though Indian-Japanese ties have blossomed in recent years on a range of issues, the nuclear issue has been a major irritant. The new understanding between the two nations underscores Tokyos attempts to come to terms with Indias nuclear status. Japanese nuclear companies are eager for a share of the Indian market. Given involvement of Toshiba, Hitachi and Mitsubishi in US and French nuclear industries, an Indo-Japanese pact is essential for US and French civilian nuclear cooperation with India.
Beyond the commercial dimensions of the deal, political symbolism is even more critical. Such a deal would underline Japans determination to put Indo-Japanese ties in high gear. The rise of China is a major factor in the evolution of Indo-Japanese ties as is the US attempt to build India into a major balancer in the region. Both India and Japan chafe at Chinas not-so-subtle attempts at preventing their rise. An Indian-Japanese civil nuclear pact would signal an Asian partnership to bring stability to the region at a time when China goes all out to dispense civilian nuclear reactors to Pakistan, putting the entire non-proliferation regime in jeopardy.
The Sino-Pakistan nuclear relationship has been the major factor wrecking the foundations of the NPT regime. Chinas nuclear test in 1964 propelled Indias nuclear weaponization culminating in Indias peaceful nuclear explosion in 1974. Sino-Pakistan nuclear cooperation involving the sharing of weapon design and missile technology in the 1990s forced India to go overtly nuclear in 1998.
When Washington announced its civilian nuclear energy cooperation pact with India in 2005, China indicated displeasure by asking India to sign the NPT and dismantle its nuclear weapons. Beijing promptly made that concern pointless by declaring its intention to sell nuclear reactors to Pakistan.
The not-so-subtle message was, if Washington decided to play favorites, China would do the same, confirming that China continues to view Pakistan as an asset in countering India.
The Chinese authorities confirmed earlier this year that the China National Nuclear Cooperation signed an agreement with Pakistan for two new nuclear reactors at the Chashma site Chashma III and Chashma IV in addition to the two already under development in Pakistan. This action is in clear violation of NSG guidelines that forbid nuclear transfers to countries not signatories to the NPT or not adhering to comprehensive international nuclear safeguards.
With or without the NSG approval, nuclear cooperation between China and Pakistan will intensify in the coming years as China becomes more assertive. China is concerned about deepening Indo-US relations and Indias attempts to cultivate ties with states in Chinas periphery. The resulting priority of the Sino-Pakistani relationship is evident in Chinese polices toward South Asia.
Moreover, theres a sense in Beijing that the Obama administration would be reluctant to challenge the deal as it needs Chinas help on issues ranging from Iran and North Korea to the global economy. The US no longer seems to have the willingness and clout to enforce the rules requiring credible safeguards before civilian nuclear technology can be exported.
China is not only active in Pakistan. Iran has emerged as the second-largest customer of Chinas defense industry after Pakistan, receiving critical technology, including some that violate stated Chinese policy of adhering to the norms of the non-proliferation regime.
As China becomes more assured of its rising global profile, it will challenge American foreign-policy priorities, and the non-proliferation regime will fast become the first casualty of emerging great power politics.
Its safe to conclude that notwithstanding the hype surrounding the NPT Review Conference held in May, the non-proliferation regime as we have known it is on its last legs. The reason is simple: the changing balance of power, most dramatically in Asia. Its there that the epitaph of the non-proliferation regime is being written. The non-proliferation regime is out of sync with the distribution of global power at the moment. No surprise that its credibility is eroding.
Harsh V. Pant teaches at Kings College, London. This article is reprinted with permission from
YaleGlobal Online (YaleGlobal Online Magazine). Copyright © 2010, Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, Yale University.
Read more: The Daily Star - Opinion Articles - Non-proliferation is on its last legs
(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: Lebanon News :: Middle East News :: The Daily Star - Lebanon)