|
Indian left
issues new threat to US nuke deal
NEW DELHI—India’s communists have fired a fresh salvo at the government
over a controversial nuclear deal with the United States, asking it to
stop talks with a U.N. nuclear watchdog to clinch the pact or prepare
for elections. The new threat by the chief of the largest communist
party, which shores up Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s coalition, is one
of the most explicit in recent months and marked yet another turnaround
in the stance of the left parties.
“When they return after the talks, we will tell them that there is no
need to proceed further,” Prakash Karat, general-secretary of the
Communist Party of India (Marxist), told a party meeting, referring to
negotiations between Indian experts and the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA). “They will have to close this issue by the end of
December,” Karat said in comments that were made late on Saturday and
shown on Times Now TV channel on Sunday. “If they go ahead then we will
have to prepare for elections.” Singh’s Congress party spokesman,
Abhishek Singhvi, sought to downplay Karat’s threat, saying that talks
with the IAEA were being held with the full support of the communists.
The India-U.S. civil nuclear cooperation agreement aims to allow New
Delhi to access American nuclear fuel and reactors by overturning a
three-decade ban imposed after India conducted a nuclear test while
staying out of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
It is seen as the centerpiece of a new, strategic relationship between
Washington and New Delhi and hopes to help India meet its soaring energy
needs. But communist allies of Singh have rejected it, saying it
compromises India’s sovereignty and draws it into the geostrategic
influence of the United States. The stand-off almost led to the collapse
of Singh’s government in October, before the government stepped back and
paused the deal.
Last month, the communists softened their opposition amid hectic
negotiations and allowed conditional talks with the IAEA to conclude a
safeguards agreement needed to clinch the deal. Those talks are expected
to be wrapped up this month and the government had agreed to go back to
the communists with a draft IAEA safeguards pact for their approval
before pushing the deal.
Karat said the communists relented on the deal due to elections in the
western state of Gujarat, where the ruling Congress party is fighting to
wrest power from the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party and unseat
its controversial chief minister, Narendra Modi. “We didn’t want this
government to fall before the elections in Gujarat,” he said, referring
to the two-stage vote due on December 11 and 16.
“We want the BJP to be defeated, the Modi government needs to be
removed, so we didn’t want the government to be disturbed,” said Karat,
whose communist alliance nurses a longstanding rivalry with the Hindu
nationalists. Besides the IAEA pact, the nuclear deal needs to be
approved by the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group and the U.S.
Congress.—Agencies
|