By Dr Adil Sultan
The India-US joint statement of November 2010 stated that the US
intends to support India’s ‘full membership’ in the multilateral export control
regimes by encouraging the evolution of membership criteria, consistent with
maintaining the core principles of these regimes, including the Nuclear
Suppliers Group (NSG) – an informal arrangement of 48 countries to regulate the
civil nuclear trade.
The US commitment was conditional to India’s “full adoption of
the regimes’ export control requirements to reflect its prospective
membership.”
The recent report published by the Belfer Center, ‘The Three
Overlapping Streams of India’s Nuclear Programs’, highlights that instead of
adopting the regimes’ requirements, India is moving on a completely different
trajectory that not only negates the core principles of the NSG by misusing its
special arrangements with the nuclear cartel, but is also rapidly expanding its
nuclear weapons potential, which could contribute to “an arms race in South
Asia.”
In 2008, India negotiated a civil nuclear cooperation agreement
with the US and submitted its nuclear separation plan to the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which was intended to differentiate between
India’s civil and military nuclear facilities. The separation plan has,
however, evolved into three different streams: civilian safeguarded, civilian
unsafeguarded, and the military.
This unprecedented nuclear separation plan and India’s special
safeguards agreement with the IAEA allows it to use foreign supplied fuel in
its civilian unsafeguarded facilities by putting temporary safeguards in these
facilities. There is no formal verification to know if the facilities
designated as ‘civilian unsafeguarded’ are contributing nuclear material to
India’s nuclear weapons programme.
Taking into consideration the fact that several of India’s
Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs) have reportedly been used as sources
of weapons-grade plutonium for its military programme, this arrangement is cause
for serious concern for countries like Pakistan, as India could use its
unsafeguarded PHWRs to produce nuclear weapons in the future.
Another unique feature of India’s safeguards agreement is that
it can substitute ‘unsafeguarded’ nuclear material for ‘safeguarded’ material
with the IAEA’s consent, and “remove weapons-grade plutonium from safeguards
and use it nuclear weapons, provided it places an equal amount of reactor-grade
plutonium under safeguards”. It is also important to note that India’s reactor-grade
plutonium is not subjected to safeguards and is available for the development
of weapons. Combined together, “there is significant potential for India’s
unsafeguarded stream to feed into its military stream.”
India has also declared that its Fast Breeder Reactors (FBRs)
would be exempt of the IAEA safeguards. These reactors, the prototype of which
is expected to be online in the next few months, are capable of producing large
quantities of plutonium, which could significantly enhance India’s fissile material
capacity. India plans to build six additional FBRs. India’s upcoming Special
Material Enrichment Facility (SMEF) has also been kept exempt of the
safeguards, which is a cause for serious concern because of its “potential to
produce large quantities of enriched uranium for thermonuclear weapons”.
India has a track record of misusing the Canadian-supplied
‘Cirus’ reactor for producing plutonium for its 1974 nuclear weapon test,
“despite being under an obligation not to use the reactor or any products
resulting from its use for military purposes.” This episode became the basis
for the creation of the NSG in 1975. Ironically, the same NSG is now
contemplating granting India full membership.
The Belfer Center report, written by two knowledgeable experts,
has highlighted serious shortcomings in India’ safeguards and concludes that:
“Safeguards should be used to provide meaningful assurance to all states,
including Pakistan, that elements of India’s civil nuclear build up,
particularly those that are being supported by international suppliers, are not
contributing fissile material to India’s growing nuclear arsenal.”
The NSG members must take into consideration the serious
implications of granting another discriminatory favour to India, by allowing it
to become a formal member of the group, without asking it to rectify the
existing anomalies.
Several NSG states that have entered into nuclear cooperation
agreements with India, mainly for commercial gains, could possibly be assisting
India’s nuclear weapons programme, without a verifiable mechanism of tracking
the supplied material. This would not only nullify the very purpose of the NSG,
but these countries should also be held accountable for violating their
obligations under Article 1 of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT),
which makes it obligatory for member states not to assist (directly or
indirectly) the nuclear weapons programme of any other country.
The eagerness of a few major powers to accommodate India within
the group, for their short-sighted strategic and commercial interests, without
addressing the gaps highlighted in the Belfer Center’s report, would only
weaken the NPT-based non-proliferation regime. The responsibility for the
eventual demise of the remaining non-proliferation norms will lie with the NSG
and the major powers that are supporting India’s entry into the NSG.
Such discriminatory trends do not bode well for strategic
stability, as they reduce the incentive for countries like Pakistan, which are
directly affected by India’s massive nuclear build-up, to remain meaningfully
engaged with the international non-proliferation regime.
The writer is visiting faculty at the NDU.
Email: adilsultan66@hotmail.com
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