INDO-US TALKS
Advantage USASlowly but steadily the
United States seems to be bringing India and Pakistan to see things its way.
By
Manoj Joshi
So far the contest has been one of hard volley and return.
Indias nuclear tests, US sanctions. Indian defiance, American denunciation. Now,
inexorably, the game seems to be getting tougher for India. The partial lifting of US
sanctions and the near certainty of Pakistan signing the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
(CTBT) has taken the post-Pokhran Indo-US dialogue to a new level. Last week, at the end
of what are being called "technical talks" between Indian and US officials in
New Delhi, Indian officials predictably claimed victory citing a US statement expressing
satisfaction over Indias commitment to non-proliferation and acceptance of the need
for enhanced export controls.
But perhaps they did so too soon. At the end of the week,
in a move that had been expected for some time, the US published a list of some 200
entities with whom all dealings were banned. The list led off with the
predictable laboratories and establishments of the Defence Research and Development
Organisation (DRDO) and the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), which in many cases were
already under a US embargo. What was new was the inclusion of every defence establishment,
ordnance factory and defence public sector unit as well as educational institutions like
the Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, the Institute of Physics, Bhubaneshwar,
Mehta Research Institute of Maths and Maths Physics, Allahabad, all departments of
aerospace engineering and space technology at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore,
Department of Physics, Aerospace Engineering and Space Technology cell at the IIT Mumbai
and Chennai.
Speaking on the condition of confidentiality, American
officials said this list was based on a careful reading of US laws. They discounted Indian
claims that last weeks talks on export control had been as successful as claimed by
Indian officials. According to one US delegation member, Washington remains concerned over
what he said were "gaps" in the Indian laws of export controls.
"Of particular concern to us is Indias inability
to check movement of illegal diversion of sensitive technology transiting through
India." He said his delegation would come back with a set of detailed suggestions
next month on what India could do to address US concerns. Another round of talks would
then be held in early January 1999. Indian officials say they welcome any US suggestions
in tightening what they say are already tough laws. But, they point out, diversion of
goods in transit is an issue that the US or the country where the goods originated has to
examine. Indeed, and somewhat tartly, they referred to the way in which Pakistan managed
to smuggle out high-tech goods from the very countries that were now trying to persuade
India to tighten its laws.
"Grey area" commerce, said an Indian official who
participated in the talks, "is a category in itself and the US is quite familiar with
it." Discordant perceptions of the same set of talks arise because of the differing
goals of the two sides. India sees the discussion as a means of engaging the US in a
discourse that would eventually lift the 20-year-old US high-tech embargo of India. But
the US views the talks as a means of getting India to put in place the kind of
restrictions on exports that the member countries of the Missile Technology Control Regime
(MTCR), the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) and the Australia Group (chemical precursors for
weapons) have, without any promise of reward. The US and its allies want additional
shackles embodied in the technology lists specified by these agreements which are actually
private cartels and not international treaties.
For example, the US wants India to add 20 chemicals to its
list of chemicals that are restricted under the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). New
Delhi says the Indian record on restricting the sale of all war material has been
impeccable. It points to the self-imposed restrictions during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war
when almost all arms exporting countries literally made a killing by exporting all manner
of munitions to the combatants. India says that its laws and procedures are more than
adequate to regulate the export of sensitive technologies, especially the ones it is
committed to restrict as per its international treaty commitments such as the CWC.
The discussion on export controls is a satellite to the
wider dialogue between the prime ministers Special Envoy Jaswant Singh and US Deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott. Currently, they are engaged in a more complex
discussion on what precisely India means by the term "minimum nuclear
deterrent". American officials say that in lieu of the Indian unwillingness to spell
this out, they are offering suggestions such as signing CTBT, moratorium on the production
of fissile material and non-deployment of nuclear weapons, missiles and nuclear-capable
aircraft, or the identification and separation of fissile material for civilian and
military use.
Beyond denouncing Washingtons suggestions, New Delhi
has offered little by way of explanation. Part of its inability arises from a reluctance
to allow the armed forces a role in nuclear force planning. But, according to experts,
without the involvement of armed forces it is not possible to decide how much is
enough-civilians are incapable of giving accurate inputs as to what would be the outcome
of a nuclear strike and as to what a "minimal" deterrent would look like. Given
its obstinate refusal to confront these issues, New Delhi is reducing its own room for
manoeuvre.
The US has already begin to up the pressure on India by
easing the sanctions on Pakistan while maintaining it on India. US officials claim that
the difference between the treatment of India and Pakistan in the order lifting sanctions
is a one-time affair designed to help Pakistan overcome its economic crisis. Suspiciously,
this move has been accompanied by reports that the Japanese plan to lift their sanctions
on Pakistan while leaving those against India in place.
There are other straws in the wind as well. Last week,
Pakistani Foreign Minister Sartaj Aziz made known his countrys willingness to sign
the CTBT and discuss with India the non-deployment of nuclear weapons tested in May.
Talbotts statement on November 12 issued at Washingtons Brookings Institution
appears to indicate the limit of US accommodation. The best India can hope for, he seemed
to suggest was some kind of a quasi-nuclear status.
Viewed in this context, the stated US goals of preventing
an escalation of nuclear and missile competition in the region, strengthening the global
non-proliferation regime and promoting dialogue between India and Pakistan remain rooted
in the belief that it can still turn the nuclear clock back in South Asia. To further this
goal, the US remains committed to balancing India and Pakistan, which given
the ground realities seem to mean a pronounced tilt towards Islamabad. New Delhi wants
Washington to overcome its obsession with Pakistan and deal with India as a major global
player. Given the recent developments, India has to now manoeuvre carefully so that it is
not isolated since Pakistan remains determined to play any game that serves to check
India. Some of the straws in the winds indicate that the going may get tougher for New
Delhi. This week, there are indications that the Japanese will lift all the sanctions they
imposed on Pakistan after its nuclear tests, but leave in place similar measures against
India.
At the end of the day, the key decisions will be taken from
a political rather than technical perspective. But Singh and Talbottwho meet in Rome
for the fifth round of their talks later this week need to clear these issues so as to
have a meaningful dialogue. But eventually what will count is Indias ability to
withstand the pressure of the US, its staying power and diplomatic skills. |