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Just PR shows.. they are bind by their laws we are by our laws, stalemate by lawmakers things like this was clear from before, anyways.
If anything this is how democratic countries work. Nothing goes through without chaos & commotion. Australia cleared the uranium sale to India & now the labour party wants it to scraped. Similarly, India got the nuke deal mostly on its terms & the left front wants the govrnment not to go through with it. US Congress took its own sweet time to pass the deal & still there are voices of dissent being heard everyday in their daily newspapers. Guess, this is how democracy works in every country but most important is that in the end everything works out. The nuke deal is done & will prevail. Australia will supply uranium even if labour government has to come in power.
A Labor government would scrap the planned sales to India because the contracts would not be ready for signing before the election, Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Robert McClelland said.
"You have got to ask why isn't India a party to the nuclear non-proliferation regime and the answer is because it doesn't want to commit to disarm its nuclear weapons," he said.
Mr McClelland said the Labor Party was open to selling uranium to Russia because it was a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
The Democrats and the Greens expressed outrage over both proposed deals.
India has not signed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and refuses to become a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, aimed at ridding the globe of atomic weapons, because the treaty only recognises France, China, Russia, Britain and the United States as nuclear powers.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said on Thursday that Australia would not sell uranium to any country that conducted nuclear tests.
Happy Feet,
This is quite contradictory with your own post. Deal can be brokered or blocked in a democracy, the Labor Party has clearly outlined its policy:
Things work clrealy diffrently in Australia compared to USA.
Howard is a US puppet, Labor may not be as loyal to US as he is. Anything can happen, only future will tell.
To be honest, I want this deal to go thru, its the only way to show that NPT is not working and should open doors for others.
It wouldn't make a grain of difference anywhere. The lines have been drawn and it has been clearly marked as to who is on the right side & who isn't.
Wait for China to offer same deal to Pakistan, it's in the pipelines already. It will make a dfference!
There's no right or wrong side when hypocracy rules.
Wait for China to offer same deal to Pakistan, it's in the pipelines already. It will make a dfference!
123 pact: India got better deal than China
NEW DELHI: Where does the Chinese 123 agreement fundamentally differ from the Indian one? A cursory reading of the agreement says that America's international obligations would score over its domestic laws in the observance of the agreement.
But testifying to the US Congress in 1985, the then ACDA chief, Ken Adelman explained, "The agreement is only an umbrella agreement. It permits, but does not require, the export of any nuclear items. Thus, if Chinese behaviour ever became inconsistent with our understanding, we would suspend the licensing of exports. The Chinese know that."
No international obligation can prevail in this understanding, the US side was clear.
None of these prescriptions apply to the Indian agreement. Very briefly, the differences between the two are this: India has a cooperation agreement that envisages fuel supplies.
The Chinese do not. The Chinese agreement was signed in 1985 but ratified by US Congress only in 1998. The Chinese don't have a fuel supply arrangement. India does. In fact, the Chinese agreements with US and Australia are complementary to the extent that it's with the Australians that they have a fuel supplies arrangement. China did not get reprocessing rights for spent fuel. India did.
China has accepted bilateral inspections by US and Australian inspectors. India has not.
The US has linked extraneous provisions like China's relations with Pakistan, its non-proliferation record and its record on Tibet to the agreement. India has successfully resisted such linkages. China has given Australia a role in its separation plan. India has insisted that it has the sole right to decide which of its reactors are civilian.
China has undertaken de facto permanent safeguards without permanent supplies.
They have one concession that India does not: that domestic law will not triumph over international obligations in the US' dealing with China. However, it was this clause that held up the implementation of the US-China nuclear cooperation agreement for years.
In fact, in 1990, the US passed yet another act called the Foreign Relations Authorisation Act 1990-91 which piled on an extra presidential determination that China had not aided proliferation activities of any non-nuclear weapons state, that it would undertake political reform throughout the country including Tibet, as well as assurances on export controls. China also accepted inspectors to check on the imported nuclear material.
Nevertheless, it wasn't until October 1997 that then US president Bill Clinton agreed to provide the certification to the Chinese agreement. He said, "It will allow our companies to apply for licences to sell equipment to Chinese nuclear power plants, subject to US monitoring." It was finally signed and sealed in January 1998. And the Pakistan nuclear tests happened in May, 1998.
CPI(M) opens window of opportunity, suggests mechanism
New Delhi, Aug. 19 (PTI): Opening a possible window of opportunity to end the stand-off on the nuclear issue, the CPI(M) today suggested a mechanism to examine the implications of the controversial Hyde Act as UPA allies favoured an immediate solution to ensure continuance of the UPA government.
The suggestion for setting up of a mechanism to allay fears of Left parties over the American law that can withdraw cooperation with India in case of testing came during a discussion CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Sitaram Yechury had with External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee.
"If they (government) want to set up a mechanism we are ready for that," Yechury said after a meeting with UPA's key negotiator Mukherjee who had called him to seek clarifications on yesterday's Polit Bureau resolution which had said that the deal should not be implemented "till all the objections considered and implications of the Hyde Act evaluated."
Meanwhile, CPI(M) General Secretary Prakash Karat, who had met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh yesterday to serve an ultimatum on the nuclear deal, and his CPI counterpart A B Bardhan made it clear that the bottomline was that the government should not proceed with operationalising the deal.
Ahead of the crucial meeting of the UPA, the government struck an optimistic note of resolving the crisis arising out of the Left's threat over the Indo-US nuclear deal, saying the allies feel that a way out is possible.