| Fix the Proposal
for Renewed Cooperation with India January
7, 2008
Read the Press
release
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, Minister of Foreign Affairs
c/o Nuclear Measures Subdirectorate
Pretoria, Republic of South Africa
cc: Abdul Minty, NSG Chair; Permanent Mission of
South Africa to the IAEA
Dear Minister Dlamini-Zuma:
In the coming weeks the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Board of Governors will likely be asked to consider a new “India-specific”
safeguards agreement that would cover a limited number of additional
“civilian” reactors. Shortly thereafter, the members
of the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) will be asked to
take a position on the Bush administration’s proposal to exempt
India from longstanding NSG guidelines that require full-scope IAEA
safeguards as a condition of supply.
Contrary to the claims of its advocates, the proposed
arrangement fails to bring India further into conformity with the
nonproliferation behavior expected of other states. India's commitments
under the current terms of the proposed arrangement do not justify
making far-reaching exceptions to international nonproliferation
rules and norms. Consequently, the proposed arrangement would damage
the already fragile nuclear nonproliferation system and set back
efforts to achieve universal nuclear disarmament.
We are writing to urge your government to consider
the full implications of the proposed agreement and to play an active
role in proposing and supporting measures that would help ensure
that this controversial proposal does not:
* further undermine the nuclear safeguards system
and efforts to prevent the proliferation of technologies that may
be used to produce nuclear bomb material;
* in any way contribute to nuclear proliferation and/or the expansion
of India’s nuclear arsenal; or
* otherwise grant India the benefits of civil nuclear trade without
holding it to the same standards expected of other states parties
of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
Because the NSG and IAEA traditionally operate
by consensus, your government has a pivotal role to play. Please
consider the following:
1) India is seeking unprecedented "India-specific"
safeguards over the additional facilities it has declared “civilian”.
Such safeguards could allow India to cease IAEA scrutiny if fuel
supplies are cut off because it renews nuclear testing. Indian officials
suggest that they will seek safeguards that are contingent upon
the continued supply of nuclear fuel from foreign suppliers. India
may also assert that it has the option to remove certain “indigenous“
reactors from safeguards if foreign fuel supplies are interrupted,
even if that is because it has resumed nuclear testing. Such proposals
should be rejected whether they might be included in the actual
safeguards agreement or accompanying statements.
As part of the final document of the 1995 NPT
Review and Extension Conference, all NPT states parties endorsed
the principle of full-scope safeguards as a condition of supply.
A decision by the 45-nation NSG to exempt India from this requirement
for India would contradict this important element of the NPT bargain.
We urge your government to actively oppose any
arrangement that would give India any special safeguards exemptions
or would in any way be inconsistent with the principle of permanent
safeguards over all nuclear materials and facilities.
2) India pledged in July 2005 to conclude an Additional
Protocol to its safeguards agreement. Given that India maintains
a nuclear weapons program outside of safeguards, facility-specific
safeguards on a few additional “civilian” reactors provide
no serious nonproliferation benefits. States should insist that
India conclude a meaningful Additional Protocol safeguards regime
before the NSG takes a decision on exempting India from its rules.
3) The United States has put forward a draft NSG
guideline that would allow NSG states to continue providing India
with nuclear supplies even if New Delhi breaks its nuclear test
moratorium pledge. Indian officials say they want changes to NSG
guidelines that do not impinge upon their ability to resume nuclear
testing. The U.S. proposal on India at the NSG would, in the case
of a resumption of nuclear testing by India, make the suspension
of nuclear trade optional for NSG members. Such an approach would
undercut the international norm against nuclear testing and make
a mockery of NSG guidelines. If the NSG members agree by consensus
to exempt India from the full-scope safeguards standard, they should
in the very least clarify that all nuclear trade by NSG member states
shall immediately cease if India resumes nuclear testing for any
reason.
4) India is seeking exemptions from NSG guidelines
and IAEA supply guarantees that would allow supplier states to provide
India with a strategic fuel reserve that could be used to outlast
any fuel supply cut off or sanctions that may be imposed if it resumes
nuclear testing. The U.S.-India bilateral nuclear cooperation agreement
includes political commitments to support an Indian strategic fuel
reserve and an “India-specific” fuel supply arrangement.
If NSG supplier states should agree to supply fuel to India, they
should do so in a manner that is commensurate with ordinary reactor
operating requirements.
5) India is seeking and the United States has
proposed an NSG guideline that would open the way for other nuclear
suppliers to transfer sensitive plutonium reprocessing, uranium
enrichment, or heavy water production technology to India even though
IAEA safeguards cannot prevent such technology from being replicated
and used in its weapons program. India detonated a nuclear device
in 1974 that used plutonium harvested from a heavy water reactor
supplied by Canada and the United States in violation of bilateral
peaceful nuclear use agreements. U.S. officials have stated that
they do not intend to sell such technology, but other states may.
Virtually all NSG states support proposals that would bar transfers
of these sensitive nuclear technologies to non-NPT members and should
under no circumstances endorse an NSG rule that would allow the
transfer of such technology to India.
6) Absent a decision by New Delhi to halt the
production of fissile material for weapons purposes, foreign fuel
supplies would allow India not only to continue but also to potentially
accelerate the buildup of its stockpile of nuclear weapons materials.
This would not only contradict the goal of Article I of the NPT,
but it would also foster further nuclear competition between India
and Pakistan. Has your government conducted an independent assessment
of the impact of foreign fuel supplies on India’s weapons
production capacity and the security balance in South Asia?
7) UN Security Council Resolution 1172 calls on
India and Pakistan to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT)
and stop producing fissile material for weapons. Your government
is bound by the UN Charter to support the implementation of this
resolution. Before India is granted a waiver from the NSG’s
full-scope safeguards standard, it should join the other original
nuclear weapon states by declaring it has stopped fissile material
production for weapons purposes and, like the 177 other states that
have signed the CTBT, make a legally-binding commitment to permanently
end nuclear testing. India’s verbal commitment to support
negotiations of a global verifiable fissile material cut off treaty
is a hollow gesture given the fact that states have failed to initiate
negotiations on such a treaty for over a decade.
Conclusion
If your government is truly dedicated to
the goal of stopping the spread of nuclear weapons, ending nuclear
arms races, and strengthening rules governing the transfer of nuclear
material and technology, it will insist upon these and other vital
nonproliferation measures. We look forward to your responses to
our questions and recommendations.
Sincerely,
Daryl G. Kimball,
Executive Director,
Arms Control Association (Washington, DC, USA)
Steven Staples
Director
Rideau Institute on International Affairs (Canada)
Global Secretariat to Abolition 2000
Hideyuki Ban
Co-Director
Citizens' Nuclear Information Center (Tokyo, Japan) |