|
Leftist allies slam Indian Govt over US nuke deal
NEW DELHI—The Indian government’s communist allies do not support a
landmark civil nuclear cooperation deal with the United States, they
said on Monday, criticising conditions attached by the U.S. Congress.
Political analysts said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh should still be
able to force the deal through parliament, but criticism from both his
left-wing partners and the main right-wing opposition party implied
stormy weather ahead. Legislation to allow the United States to sell
nuclear technology to India sailed through Congress on Saturday, ending
three decades of isolation imposed after New Delhi developed nuclear
weapons in contravention of international standards.
The deal has caught the imagination of many in India. But it has also
attracted criticism, which has mounted after it was modified in the U.S.
legislature. The Hindu-nationalist opposition called the deal
“humiliating” on Sunday and said it should be rejected, arguing
Washington wanted to cap India’s nuclear weapons programme. On Monday
India’s communists, who support the government but remain outside the
ruling coalition, also rejected the conditions attached to the deal.
“Once again the goalposts have been shifted,” the Communist Party of
India (Marxist) said in a statement. “This cannot be accepted by India
as it negates the most significant, if not all, assurances made by the
prime minister to the Indian parliament.”
Singh, who first struck the deal with U.S. President George W. Bush in
2005, defused criticism earlier this year by promising parliament he
would not accept significant amendments. He may have to go back to the
house again. “An agreement on this basis will seriously undermine the
pursuit of an independent foreign policy,” the CPI (M) added. Communists
said negotiations on a detailed bilateral pact on nuclear cooperation
should be suspended until there had been a full debate in parliament.
Under the legislation passed by Congress, the U.S. president would be
required to end the export of nuclear materials if India tests another
nuclear device as it did in 1998. The U.S. president is also required to
report to Congress annually on whether India was cooperating with
international efforts to restrain Iran’s nuclear programme.
Critics say the bill has also failed to guarantee uninterrupted fuel
supplies for civilian reactors, imposed intrusive foreign scrutiny of
nuclear facilities and prevented India from reprocessing spent fuel.
But the Times of India said critics had missed the point and predicted
the hardest part of the complex negotiation and approvals process was
now over. “The deal could well go down as one of the greatest foreign
policy achievements of both the Bush and Manmohan Singh governments,” it
said in an editorial.
“This deal makes New Delhi a full-fledged nuclear power ... which means
there are fewer constraints to India’s ambitions to become a
superpower.” Nevertheless, political analyst Pran Chopra said the
conditions attached by Congress would take the gloss off the deal as far
as Indian public opinion was concerned.—Agencies |