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China notes
differences on India US nuke deal
BEIJING—China said on Thursday there were “different views” about a
nuclear power pact between the United States and India and called for
such deals to stay in line with international safeguards — but left its
own stance ambiguous. The agreement between New Delhi and Washington
would offer India U.S. fuel and reactors while allowing it to stay out
of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, keep nuclear arms and protect
its military atomic complex from international inspections. Even if the
agreement survives opposition from Indian leftists, China’s veto could
kill it at an international level.
Indian newspapers have suggested that Beijing could block the deal at
the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), a 45-nation club that works by
consensus. Washington will need to go to the NSG, which is supposed to
discourage nuclear trade with countries outside full safeguards, to ask
for special leeway for India. Noting various opinions on the deal in the
NSG, China’s Foreign Ministry suggested that Washington and New Delhi
should address worries that it would damage safeguards against the
spread of nuclear weapons.
“We have also noted that within the Nuclear Suppliers Group there are
different views about relaxing the restrictions on nuclear exports to
India,” ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told a regular news briefing.
“China believes that, with the precondition of abiding by their
international responsibilities, all countries can develop cooperation in
the peaceful exploitation of nuclear power.” Leftist Indian parties have
demanded that New Delhi put on hold talks with the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) to secure a safeguards pact needed to clinch the
deal.
Jiang said any international atomic power cooperation should serve to
“protect and strengthen” barriers against the spread of nuclear arms.
She refused to say whether China itself had concerns about the deal.
Some Scandinavian countries have privately expressed concerns about
making exceptions for India. Jiang’s comments appeared to be China’s
latest step in a delicate diplomatic game of signalling concerns about
the deal without sparking a stand-off with India.
Experts have said China is unlikely to stymie the nuclear deal and risk
pushing Delhi closer to Washington — just when Beijing is seeking to
avoid a destabilising confrontation with its rising Asian neighbour and
longtime rival. But many have also said that Beijing worries about how
the deal will affect regional security and arms controls. India
conducted nuclear test blasts in 1998 during tense rivalry with
neighbour Pakistan, which also tested then. Both countries refuse to
abandon their nuclear shield and join the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
China and India have been trying to expand diplomatic and trade ties
after decades of rivalry that included a brief war over disputed
territory in 1962.—Agencies |