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Sino-Pak nuclear collaboration

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Sino-Pak nuclear collaboration

News & Views

Mohammad Jamil


Nuclear collaboration between China and Pakistan dates back to 1986, when both countries signed a Comprehensive Nuclear Cooperation Agreement on 15th September in Beijing. The salient clauses of the agreement included that China would construct four nuclear plants in Pakistan namely Chashma 1, 2, 3 and 4 by 2011. This agreement does not fall within the ambit of IAEA or Nuclear Suppliers Group, as China had signed the Protocol Additional to the IAEA Safeguards Agreement in 1998 and in March 2002 it formally completed the domestic legal procedures necessary for the Additional Protocol to enter into force to become member of Non-Proliferation Treaty. Since China had signed nuclear agreement with Pakistan in 1986, China is not under obligation to abide by the conditions laid down in NSG. Speaking on the sidelines of silver jubilee celebrations of the Fast Breeder Test Reactor (FBTR) and Radio Metallurgy Laboratory (RML), the Indian Minister of State for Science and Technology, Prithviraj Chavan said the other day that India had serious concerns about transfer of nuclear technology illegally to Pakistan.

After the news of Pak-China deal for supplying two more nuclear reactors, America had hinted that it would take up the matter in Nuclear Suppliers Group, but it did not dare do it because China could have opted out of the NSG. America’s double standards are obvious from its nuclear deal with India. After signing nuclear deal with India, the US had refused to ink similar deal with energy starved Pakistan. On October 1, 2008, the US Congress had given final approval to an agreement facilitating nuclear cooperation between America and India. The deal was first introduced in a joint statement release by the then President George W Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in 2005. The NSG had approved the agreement between the US and India on September 6, 2008. There is a perception that Indo-US Nuclear Deal has set the precedence and opened the door for any such deal in the future. In fact it has obscured the prospects of stopping Iran and North Korea from pursuing nuclear ambitions. If India, the primary proliferator could be given such a concession by the NSG, why Pakistan be deprived from it?

In June 2010, during Indo-US strategic dialogue, India told the US that it had serious objections to the proposed China-Pakistan nuclear deal. The US also expressed its concern about the deal after the additional UN sanctions were slapped on Iran with the cooperation of China, Russia and France. Before the plenary session of Nuclear Suppliers Group, the US state department spokesperson Gordon Duguid had said: “The US has reiterated to China that the US expects Beijing to cooperate with Pakistan in ways consistent with Chinese nonproliferation obligations”. India had expected that the said deal would be discussed at New Zealand in 46-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) meeting, which monitored such transactions. But that did not happen because all the decisions in NSG are made with consensus, and if one of the suppliers opposed or insisted on its stance, no agreement can be reached. In a statement issued at the end of its two-day plenary meeting in Christchurch, New Zealand, the NSG had only stated that its members “agreed to continue considering ways to further strengthen guidelines dealing with the transfer of ENR technologies”. International media however continues ranting that Pak-China agreement will be a violation of international guidelines forbidding nuclear exports to countries that have not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) or do not have international safeguards on reactors. It has to be mentioned that India is not a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, yet it has been given exemption by the NSG on the recommendation and persuasion of the US, France and Russia despite the fact the NSG is not supposed to supply nuclear-related materials to the country that has not signed the NPT. Anyhow, China took the plea that agreement was inked before it joined the NSG in 2004, which, according to analysts, would exclude the Pak-China deal from the purview of any obligations to the NSG.

As clarified by Qin Gang, the spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry that “the nuclear cooperation between the two countries was for peaceful purposes and totally consistent with its international obligations and safeguards of the International Atomic Energy Agency”. Under the deal, China will export two nuclear power reactors to Pakistan at the cost of $2.375-billion. As regards Pak-China Nuclear Deal it is too well known that it was concluded in 1986 when China had neither signed the NPT nor become member of the NSG neither the member of Nuclear Suppliers Group.

It is common knowledge that India remained outside the international nuclear mainstream since it misused Canadian and US peaceful nuclear assistance to conduct its 1974 nuclear bomb test; refused to sign the nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, and conducted additional nuclear tests in 1998. Though India had been cut off from most US civilian nuclear assistance since 1978 and most international assistance since 1992 because of violation in 1974, yet it claims that India has excellent record as compared with Pakistan. Anyhow, India’s willingness to open some nuclear reactors for international inspection in return for the deal was not enough, as the agreement allowed it to keep its 8 nuclear reactors off-limits. It appears that hypocrisy, strategic interest and greed of the US and the West for approximately a couple of hundred billion dollars had been victorious, and international covenants and laws were trampled when the US Congress put its stamp of approval on the controversial Indo-US nuclear deal, and then the Senate had overwhelmingly voted a Bill paving the way for the implementation of civil nuclear deal between the two countries.

Since, America has created asymmetry in South Asia, and in the past it ditched its ally Pakistan after achieving its objectives, then Pakistan has every right to look for other options for its security. Naturally Pakistan’s first choice is China. Pakistan-China relations began in 1950, and Pakistan was among the first countries to break relations with Taiwan and recognize the People’s Republic of China. Later in 1954, Pakistan joined South East Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) and the next year Baghdad Pact which was renamed as Central Treaty Organization (CENTO) after revolution in Iraq.

But despite Pakistan’s joining defence pacts with the West, China valued Pakistan’s sentiments vis-à-vis snapping relations with Taiwan. On its part, China has helped Pakistan in variety of projects including Gwadar Port Project and Saindak Copper Project in Balochistan. Earlier, Machine Tool Factory of Karachi and Heavy Mechanical Complex at Taxila were also established with China’s help. China has extended full cooperation to make Pakistan self-reliant by providing know-how with a view to strengthening and ensuring territorial integrity and sovereignty of Pakistan. At the present Beijing and Islamabad are involved in joint production of JF-17 Thunder aircraft, which has the most sophisticated avionics. Above all, China considers stability of Pakistan as cornerstone of its foreign policy. Pakistan should never forget that.

Sino-Pak nuclear collaboration
 
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China plans fifth nuclear reactor for Pakistan

By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad, James Lamont in New Delhi, and Geoff Dyer in Beijing

Published: November 8 2010

China plans to supply Pakistan with a fifth nuclear energy reactor, accelerating Beijing’s commitments to its energy-starved south Asian ally, according to Pakistani government *officials.

Beijing’s growing support for Pakistan, including military hardware, poses a dilemma for Barack Obama, the US president, who arrived in India on Saturday. New Delhi is also becoming more concerned about Pakistan’s close relationship with China.

The supply of a fifth nuclear reactor to Pakistan comes after confirmation this year of Beijing’s agreement to build two 650MW nuclear energy reactors at Chashma, in the central part of Pakistan’s Punjab province.

China has already built one nuclear energy reactor at Chashma and is expected to complete a second at the same site next year. The Pakistan government declined to comment further on the plans for the fifth reactor.

“We have an ongoing programme of co-operation for the peaceful use of nuclear energy with China,” said Ahmed Mukhtar, Pakistan’s defence minister.

Washington’s relationship with New Delhi was cemented with an agreement in 2008 to supply civil nuclear reactors, even though India has yet to ratify some of the international safeguards to prevent proliferation.

The US has refused a similar civil nuclear agreement with Pakistan, citing concern over Islamabad’s past links to sharing nuclear expertise and technology with Iran, Libya and, possibly, North Korea.

Analysts said Mr Obama was unlikely to criticise China’s supply of nuclear reactors to Pakistan publicly because Washington is probably sensitive to Islamabad’s desire for civil nuclear co-operation after the US-India civil nuclear deal. A Chinese official said in September there had been discussions between the two countries about building a 1GW plant in Pakistan, in addition to the two 300MW plants that Chinese companies are expected to build at Chashma.

Not only is China keen to boost its ties with Pakistan, a long-standing ally, but the new deals also reflect Chinese commercial ambitions to become a significant player in the nuclear industry.

Mark Hibbs, an expert on the nuclear industry at the Carnegie Endowment think-tank in Washington, said China could export smaller 300W reactors using technology that it controls.

However, if it wanted to sell Pakistan, or any other country, 600MW or 1GW reactors, it would probably need the consent of western companies that have licensed Beijing to use key technologies. That would give those companies and their governments a certain amount of leverage, he said.

Although China has been talking publicly for the past two months about its intention to build at least two more reactors in Pakistan, Chinese officials have not yet specified how they intend to get around the rules that bar the sale of nuclear technology to countries such as Pakistan that have not signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.

One option would be to argue that the initial agreement with Pakistan was signed in 2003, before China joined the body that regulates nuclear commerce.

The Financial Times Limited 2010.
 
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why are they concerned when they are doing the same as well breaching all regulations of the world..hypocrisy at best!
 
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why are they concerned when they are doing the same as well breaching all regulations of the world..hypocrisy at best!

Name one resolution/rule/law we breached.

We created newer laws which supersede the existing ones. We did not break any international law/obligation per se.
 
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Name one resolution/rule/law we breached.

We created newer laws which supersede the existing ones. We did not break any international law/obligation per se.

you are right, also this also does not break any international laws...
per say
 
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wonderful news!

So that would be 300mw x 4 = 1200
1 x 650mw = 1200 = 650 = 1850MW

from 5 nuclear reactors?

isn't it?

I hope thats true
 
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wonderful news!

So that would be 300mw x 4 = 1200
1 x 650mw = 1200 = 650 = 1850MW

from 5 nuclear reactors?

isn't it?

I hope thats true

n the year is ??:undecided:

looong way to go...
 
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Great news, Pakistan must make use of all possible sources of energy including Nuclear. I think this news has many dimensions and carry message for many.
 
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This plan and use of this energy supply is a looooong way off and vital for the long term, yes........but for the shorgt term, and immediate need, Pakistan seriously needs to exploit its coal reserve.

Nuclear experts in Pakistan have already suggested and briefed the President that they already have the equipment which is used to detect other minerals and can be dual used to detect more mineral like copper, another abundance in Pakistan.

Experts have made clear that a energy producing plant built atop the coal reserves burning coal in situ would be cheap, very cheap actually as you will not need to extract the coal and burn in where it is, and produce energy not just to make up for the 5000 MW shortage but have surplus energy which will last 100 years at least, thanks to the canadian team who discovered the large deposit.

Obviously, like anything else, this is too easy for our leaders, so we have to put together a nuclear formula for everything which we will not see in our generation. AGAIN
 
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