US to push India nuclear-ban waiver (updated II)

by rahul | August 21, 2008 at 12:08 pm
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VIENNA, Austria (AP) - The global body that governs the legal trade in nuclear materials postponed a decision Friday on whether to give New Delhi access to nuclear fuel and technology _ a blow to a landmark deal between Washington and New Delhi.
The Nuclear Suppliers Group's approval of an exemption to its rules is essential for finalizing the civil nuclear cooperation deal. The pact would reverse more than three decades of U.S. policy by allowing the sale of nuclear materials to India, a country that has not signed international nonproliferation accords _ and has tested nuclear weapons.
The 45-nation suppliers group said in a statement Friday that it will meet again soon to continue its deliberations on an agreement. Earlier this month, India fulfilled one prerequisite for the deal by striking an inspections agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency. After the NSG agrees to waive its rules for India, the deal would need approval by the U.S. Congress. Suppliers group approval would enable other countries to strike similar deals with India.

As the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) meets in Vienna today for two-days, the US administration is expected to lobby for a waiver on India. The US has proposed  a mechanism that would give a non signatory country of the NPT -India- access to legal imports of nuclear materials. This is the latest move on the rushing path to have the US-India nuclear deal approved before the end of the Bush Administration. Few weeks ago, the Indian Congress led government confronted a confidential vote at Parliament after its former communist ally left UPA coalition as it rejected moves to approve the nuclear deal with US. Unlike Iran, India has not signed the NPT but received a backing of the IAEA to gain access to nuclear fuel.

  The US is pushing the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) into giving the green light to a controversial deal with India despite objections.

"We are hoping to get as wide an approval as possible so that we can move on with regard to having this agreement for the US Congress to look at, but I don't want to get ahead of the suppliers group meeting," State Department spokesman Robert Wood said. Original source at PressTV

 and will discuss the US-

The US is set to push a consortium of nations into dropping a ban on nuclear trade with India, a move that will help finalise a US-India nuclear deal.The 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group meets in Vienna on Thursday for two-days and will discuss the US-proposed waiver that would help give India access to legal imports of nuclear materials.The India-specific exemption would give New Delhi access to technology and fuel normally reserved only for those who have signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) and allow the full inspection of their nuclear facilities. India has not signed the NPT.Earlier this month, the International Atomic Energy Agency agreed a similar waiver.

'Reservations'

But the suppliers group, which operates by consensus, is thought to be a more difficult prospect, with Ireland, Austria, Switzerland, Norway and New Zealand said to be sceptical of the deal."Like a number of countries we do have reservations about aspects of the content of the draft exemption recently circulated," Phil Goff, New Zealand's defence minister, said in an interview, published on Wednesday, with The Times of India newspaper."We would like to see these reservations given full and effective consideration so that we could have added confidence in the nonproliferation benefits an exemption might bring."He said his country was considering whether the waiver should be made conditional on wider UN inspections of Indian nuclear sites and what would be necessary to prevent the transfer of technologies with possible military use.

Business opportunities

The waiver would provide some nations with the opportunity to do more business with India.But critics fear that exporting nuclear fuel and technology to a country that has not made a legally binding nuclear disarmament pledge could set a dangerous precedent and weaken efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons and materials. A Swiss foreign ministry spokesman said his country's stance would depend on whether agreement is reached on an exemption that contains the "necessary nonproliferation guarantees".Iran, which is locked in a disagreement with Washington and its allies over its own nuclear programme, is likely to argue that India, which developed nuclear arms in secret, is now being rewarded with access to atomic technology.Iran is under UN sanctions for refusing calls to freeze its nuclear activities, which the US argues could produce a nuclear weapon but which Iran says are for peaceful purposes.

Agreement 'likely'

Diplomats close to the suppliers group talks say that France, Russia, Canada, Brazil and South Africa are in favour of an agreement.The Associated Press quoted an unnamed diplomat as saying that there could be up to three meetings before an agreement is reached."At the end of the day there is going to be an agreement," the diplomat said. "It's just a question of how long it's going to take and how much cajoling will be necessary."Once an agreement is reached with the suppliers group, the deal goes to the US congress for approval.The US-India nuclear deal reverses more than three decades of US policy that has barred the sale of nuclear fuel and technology to India.The deal has also been controversial in India, where critics of the plan say it will undermine India's weapons programme and give the US too much influence over Indian foreign policy.

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