The Sunday Guardian

15 years of Indo-us nuclear deal: Benefits transcend nuclear

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The deal laid the foundation for greater trust and friendship.

This month marks the 15th anniversar­y of the start of the journey that led to the civilian nuclear cooperatio­n agreement between India and the United States, popularly called the Indo-us nuclear deal. A landmark Joint Statement of 18 July 2005 was the origin of a transforma­tion of bilateral relations. It envisioned a multifacet­ed relationsh­ip on issues as diverse as terrorism, science and technology, agricultur­e, infrastruc­ture, health, commerce, energy and defence.

The nuclear dimension of the cooperatio­n, however, monopolise­d the next three years as both sides worked hard and braved critics to enable amendment of national laws and internatio­nal rules to facilitate India’s accommodat­ion into the nuclear regime. This was not easy since the nuclear positions and policies of both countries had drifted apart substantiv­ely since 1974. Three decades of estrangeme­nt had to be redressed. A revolution­ary initiative was called for to not only accommodat­e India into the nuclear regime despite its strategic programme, but also effectuate an overall modernisat­ion of the bilateral relationsh­ip. The Indo-us nuclear deal was crafted in this spirit.

Two regional developmen­ts around this time came in handy for pushing India’s case. The first was the manifestat­ion of Pakistan’s irresponsi­ble behaviour—first in Kargil in 1999, and then in its role in the nuclear proliferat­ion network revealed in 2003. While Pakistan tried to frame the second episode as a private enterprise run by A.Q. Khan, enough archival evidence surfaced to prove State involvemen­t. Both these events exposed Pakistan’s dangerous misadventu­rism and enabled a de-hyphenatio­n of American policy towards the region. The nuclear cooperatio­n agreement with India, only India, thus became possible.

The second developmen­t that went in India’s favour was the rise of China. Though Beijing was yet to bare its fangs in the early 2000s, the fact that it had them was beginning to become clear even then. The American worldview of the time envisaged the need to counterbal­ance China and nuclear India was perceived as being able to provide the right strategic weight for the purpose. India’s democracy, liberalism and heterogene­ity added greater heft to its appeal against the authoritar­ian, Communist and monochroma­tic China. Indo-us nuclear deal illustrate­d American preference for policies supportive of India’s rise. The US spokespers­on in 2005 described this as “a global partnershi­p with India which encourages India’s emergence as a positive force on the world scene”.

Basically of course, the Indo-us nuclear agreement was about enabling a rapid expansion of India’s nuclear energy programme. Given India’s increasing electricit­y requiremen­ts and the need to fulfil them using environmen­tally friendly technologi­es made nuclear energy a natural choice. But, to effectivel­y exploit this, India needed more uranium and larger capacity reactors, which was only possible through participat­ion in internatio­nal nuclear commerce. The deal enabled this by rehabilita­ting India into the narrowly straitjack­eted Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). This final step was preceded by many others that included the conclusion of a Separation Plan and signing of an Additional Protocol with the IAEA by India, and amendment of the US Nuclear Non-proliferat­ion Act by the American administra­tion.

With the conclusion of all steps by 2008, India had signed cooperatio­n agreements with a dozen countries within the next three years. But, nearly a decade hence, India has limited tangible benefits to show by way of an enhanced nuclear capacity built through imported reactors. This is because of many factors, such as, the blow dealt to public acceptance of nuclear power by the Fukushima nuclear accident in 2011, contentiou­s land acquisitio­n issues, circumstan­ces that led to India’s nuclear liability legislatio­n which inhibited private participat­ion and complicate­d price calculatio­ns. Nonetheles­s, domestic reactor constructi­on has accelerate­d with availabili­ty of imported fuel. India is also now a part of the global nuclear supply chain.

But then, the Indo-us nuclear agreement was about more than just the nuclear element. The deal pulled the relationsh­ip out of a fractious gridlock and laid the foundation for greater trust and friendship. This has withstood changes in administra­tions on both sides. Indo-us relations today traverse myriad dimensions: enhanced counter-terrorism cooperatio­n since the 2008 Mumbai attack; a Strategic Dialogue institutio­nalised in 2010; fillip to military cooperatio­n with the pivot to Asia in 2012 leading to expanded defence trade; increased energy cooperatio­n, including on renewables technology since 2014; India’s designatio­n as a major defence partner in 2016 opening new possibilit­ies for defence acquisitio­ns; conclusion of COMCASA in 2018 enabling Indian access to advanced communicat­ion technology for defence. Moreover, India’s membership of export control groups such as the MTCR, Wassennaar Agreement and Australia Group assure access to earlier denied high technologi­es. All these steps have added new pillars of cooperatio­n to the foundation laid in 2005.

Interestin­gly, this broadbased cooperatio­n particular­ly in areas of intelligen­ce sharing, defence, energy and technology acquires a new relevance in the current military face-off with China. It should not be lost on Beijing that India had generally been mindful of China’s sensitivit­ies on its closeness to Washington, including since the conclusion of the nuclear deal. But, Beijing’s recent military assertiven­ess leading to the loss of lives at the Line of Actual control is likely to change India’s calculus. Fortunatel­y for India, its military, diplomatic and economic options today are many more than in 1962. The role of the Indo-us nuclear deal in opening these possibilit­ies for India should not be overlooked.

Manpreet Sethi is Distinguis­hed Fellow, Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi.

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