
Indo-US Treaty on Civilian
Nuclear Energy
NO
Compromise
India's
deal with the United
States on civilian nuclear
energy has sparked heated
discussion in and outside
parliament with opposition
parties and communist
alliance partners of
the NPA coalition government
saying that the pact
seeks to place India
under strict international
surveillance. Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh
has refuted their charges
and defended the India-US
treaty of July 18, 2005.
He said it was signed
taking into consideration
India's energy interests
and this country will
never bow to any pressure
from the US or any country.
There would no compromise
on any score, he said.
Here are excerpts from
the Prime Minister's
speech to Parliament.
Nuclear
Concerns
Let me now turn to some
of the concerns that
have been expressed
on the second set of
issues regarding possible
deviations from assurances
given by me in this
August House on the
July 18, 2005 Joint
Statement and the March
2, 2006 Separation Plan.
I would like to state
categorically that there
have neither been nor
will there be any compromises
on this score and the
Government will not
allow such compromises
to occur in the future.
Hon'ble Members will
recall that during President
Bush's visit to India
in March this year,
agreement was reached
between India and the
United States on a Separation
Plan in implementation
of the India-United
States Joint Statement
of July 18, 2005. This
Separation Plan had
identified the nuclear
facilities that India
was willing to offer,
in a phased manner,
for IAEA safeguards,
contingent on reciprocal
actions taken by the
United States. For its
part, the United States
Administration was required
to approach the US Congress
for amending its laws
and the Nuclear Suppliers'
Group for adapting its
Guidelines to enable
full civilian nuclear
cooperation between
India and the international
community.
The US Administration
had thereafter approached
the US Congress to amend
certain provisions of
the United States Atomic
Energy Act of 1954,
which currently prohibit
civil nuclear cooperation
with India. The US House
of Representatives International
Relations Committee
passed a Bill on the
subject on 27th June
2006. The House of Representatives
passed the Bill as approved
by its International
Relations Committee
on July 27.

The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee passed its
version of the Bill
on June 29, 2006. The
US Senate is now expected
to vote on this version
of the Bill some time
in September. We have
concerns over both the
House and Senate versions
of the Bill. Since the
two Bills are somewhat
different in content,
according to US practice
they will need to be
reconciled to produce
a single piece of legislation.
After adoption by both
the House and the Senate,
this would become law
when the US President
accords his approval.
The final shape of the
legislation would, therefore,
be apparent only when
the House and the Senate
complete the second
stage of assent/adoption.
Meanwhile, the US Government
has approached the Nuclear
Suppliers' Group to
adapt its guidelines
to enable full civil
nuclear cooperation
between India and the
International community.
In March this year,
the NSG at its plenary
meeting in Brazil held
a preliminary discussion
on this issue. The matter
will be further discussed
by the Nuclear Suppliers'
Group later this year.
On our part, we have
separately raised this
issue with several countries
and urged them to lift
the existing restrictions
on nuclear supplies
to India. I myself have
raised this issue with
the Heads of State or
Government of Russia,
France, UK, Japan, Germany,
Brazil, Norway, Iceland
and Cyprus, among others.
In view of the concerns
voiced by the Hon'ble
Members, I shall try
to address each of these
concerns in some detail.
I shall, however, begin
by affirming that our
approach is guided by
the understandings contained
in the July 2005 Joint
Statement and the March
2006 Separation Plan.
What we can agree with
the United States to
enable nuclear cooperation
must be strictly within
these parameters.
The key provisions to
which references have
been made in Parliament
and outside are the
following:
(i) Full Civil
Nuclear Cooperation:
The central imperative
in our discussions with
the United State on
Civil Nuclear Cooperation
is to ensure the complete
and irreversible removal
of existing restrictions
imposed on India through
iniquitous restrictive
trading regimes over
the years. We seek the
removal of restrictions
on all aspects of cooperation
and technology transfers
pertaining to civil
nuclear energy - ranging
from nuclear fuel, nuclear
reactors, to re-processing
spent fuel, i.e. all
aspects of a complete
nuclear fuel cycle.
This will be the surest
guarantee of India's
acceptance as a full
and equal partner of
the international nuclear
community, even while
preserving the integrity
of our three stage nuclear
programme and protecting
the autonomy of our
scientific research
and development. We
will not agree to any
dilution that would
prevent us from securing
the benefits of full
civil nuclear cooperation
as amplified above.

(ii) Principle of Reciprocity:
I had earlier assured
the House that reciprocity
is the key to the implementation
of our understanding
contained in the July
2005 Statement. I stand
by that commitment.
When we put forward
the Separation Plan,
we again made it clear
to the United States
that India could not
be expected to take
on obligations such
as placing its nuclear
facilities under safeguards
in anticipation of future
lifting of restrictions.
India and the United
States have held one
round of discussions
on a proposed bilateral
cooperation agreement.
India and the IAEA have
held technical discussions
regarding an India-specific
Safeguards agreement.
Further discussions
are required on both
these documents. While
these parallel efforts
are underway, our position
is that we will accept
only IAEA safeguards
on the nuclear facilities,
in a phased manner,
and as identified for
that purpose in the
Separation Plan only
when all nuclear restrictions
on India have been lifted.
On July 29 last year,
I had stated that before
voluntarily placing
our civil nuclear facilities
under IAEA safeguards,
we will ensure that
all restrictions on
India have been lifted.
There has been no shift
in our position on this
point.
(iii) Certification:
The draft Senate Bill
requires the US President
to make an annual report
to the Congress that
includes certification
that India is in full
compliance of its non-proliferation
and other commitments.
We have made it clear
to the United States
our opposition to these
provisions, even if
they are projected as
non-binding on India,
as being contrary to
the letter and spirit
of the July Statement.
We have told the US
Administration that
the effect of such certification
will be to diminish
a permanent waiver authority
into an annual one.
We have also indicated
that this would introduce
an element of uncertainty
regarding future cooperation
and is not acceptable
to us.

(iv) India
as a State possessing
Advanced Nuclear Technology:
Hon'ble Members may
recall that the July
Statement, had acknowledged
that India should be
regarded as a State
with advanced nuclear
technology enjoying
the same advantages
and benefits as other
states with advanced
nuclear technology,
such as the US. The
July Statement did not
refer to India as a
Nuclear Weapons State
because that has a particular
connotation in the NPT
but it explicitly acknowledged
the existence of India's
military nuclear facilities.
It also meant that India
would not attract full-scope
safeguards such as those
applied to Non-Nuclear
Weapon States that are
signatories to the NPT
and there would be no
curbs on continuation
of India's nuclear weapon
related activities.
In these important respects,
India would be very
much on par with the
five Nuclear Weapon
States who are signatories
to the NPT. Similarly,
the Separation Plan
provided for an India-specific
safeguards agreement
with the IAEA with assurances
of uninterrupted supply
of fuel to reactors
together with India's
right to take corrective
measures in the event
fuel supplies are interrupted.
We have made clear to
the US that India's
strategic programme
is totally outside the
purview of the July
Statement, and we oppose
any legislative provisions
that Mandate scrutiny
of either our nuclear
weapons programme or
our unsafeguarded nuclear
facilities.
(v) Safeguards
Agreement and Fuel Assurances:
In this respect too,
it is worth emphasizing
that the March 2006
Separation Plan provides
for an India-Specific
Safeguards Agreement
with the IAEA, with
assurances of uninterrupted
supply of fuel to reactors
that would be placed
under IAEA safeguards
together with India's
right to take corrective
measures in the event
fuel supplies are interrupted.
We, of course, have
the sovereign right
to take all appropriate
measures to fully safeguard
our interests. An important
assurance is the commitment
of support for India's
right to build up strategic
reserves of nuclear
fuel over the lifetime
of India's reactors.
We have initiated technical
discussions at the expert
level with the IAEA
on an India-Specific
Safeguards Agreement.
Both the Bilateral Nuclear
Cooperation Agreement
with the United States
and the India-Specific
Safeguards Agreement
with the IAEA would
be only within the parameters
of the July Statement
and the March Separation
Plan. There is no question
of India signing either
a Safeguards Agreement
with the IAEA or an
Additional Protocol
of a type concluded
by Non-Nuclear Weapons
States who have signed
the NPT. We will not
accept any verification
measures regarding our
safeguarded nuclear
facilities beyond those
contained in an India-Specific
Safeguards Agreement
with the IAEA. Therefore,
there is no question
of allowing American
inspectors to roam around
our nuclear facilities.

(vi) Integrity
and reliability of our
strategic programme
autonomy of decision-making
and future scientific
research and development:
In my statement of March
7, 2006, I had assured
Parliament that the
Separation Plan would
not adversely affect
our strategic programme.
I reiterate that commitment
today. The Separation
Plan has been so designed
as to ensure adequacy
of fissile material
and other inputs for
our strategic programme,
based on our current
and assessed future
needs. The integrity
of our 3-Stage nuclear
programme will not be
affected. The autonomy
of our Research and
Development activity,
including development
of our fast breeder
reactors and the thorium
programme, in the nuclear
field will remain unaffected.
We will not accept interference
by other countries vis-à-vis
the development of our
strategic programme.
We will not allow external
scrutiny of our strategic
programme in any manner,
much less allow it to
be a condition for future
nuclear cooperation
between India and the
international community.
(vii) Moratorium
on production of fissile
material:
Our position on this
matter is unambiguous.
We are not willing to
accept a moratorium
on the production of
fissile material. We
are only committed to
negotiate a Fissile
Material Cut-off Treaty
in the Conference on
Disarmament in Geneva,
a commitment which was
given by the previous
government. India is
willing to join only
a non-discriminatory,
multilaterally negotiated
and internationally
verifiable FMCT, as
and when it is concluded
in the Conference on
Disarmament, again provided
our security interests
are fully addressed.
(viii)
Non-discriminatory Global
Nuclear Disarmament:
Our commitment towards
non-discriminatory global
nuclear disarmament
remains unwavering,
in line with the Rajiv
Gandhi Action Plan.
There is no dilution
on this count. We do
not accept proposals
put forward from time
to time for regional
non-proliferation or
regional disarmament.
Pending global nuclear
disarmament, there is
no question of India
joining the NPT as a
non-nuclear weapon state,
or accepting full-scope
safeguards as a requirement
for nuclear supplies
to India, now or in
the future.
(ix) Cessation
of Future Cooperation:
There is provision in
the proposed US law
that were India to detonate
a nuclear explosive
device, the US will
have the right to cease
further cooperation.
Our position on this
is unambiguous. The
US has been intimated
that reference to nuclear
detonation in the India-US
Bilateral Nuclear Cooperation
Agreement as a condition
for future cooperation
is not acceptable to
us. We are not prepared
to go beyond a unilateral
voluntary moratorium
on nuclear testing as
indicated in the July
Statement. The same
is true of other intrusive
non-proliferation benchmarks
that are mentioned in
the proposed US legislation.
India's possession and
development of nuclear
weapons is an integral
part of our national
security. This will
remain so.
Hon'ble Members will
appreciate the fact
that an international
negotiation on nuclear
energy cooperation particularly
when it involves dismantling
restrictive regimes
that have lasted for
over three decades is
a complex and sensitive
exercise. What we are
attempting today is
to put in place new
international arrangements
that would overturn
three decades of iniquitous
restrictions. It is
inevitable, therefore,
that there would be
some contradictory pulls
and pressures. This
does not mean that India
will succumb to pressures
or accept conditionalities
that are contrary to
its national interests.

I had personally spoken
to President Bush in
St. Petersburg last
month on this issue,
and conveyed to him
that the proposed US
legislation must conform
strictly to the parameters
of the July 18, 2005
Statement and the March
2, 2006 Separation Plan.
This alone would be
an acceptable basis
for nuclear cooperation
between India and the
United States. India
cannot, and is not prepared
to, take on additional
commitments outside
this agreed framework
or allow any extraneous
issues to be introduced.
I have received an assurance
from the US President
that it was not his
intention to shift goalposts,
and that the parameters
of the scope of cooperation
would be those contained
in the July 2005 Joint
Statement and the March
2006 Separation Plan.
A White House Statement
of Administration Policy
of July 26, 2006 recognizes
some, though not all,
of India's concerns,
and conveyed that the
Administration has voiced
them with the Congress.
I can assure you that
there is no ambiguity
in our position in so
far as it has been conveyed
to the US. The US is
aware of our position
that the only way forward
is strict adherence
to July Statement and
March Separation Plan.
I am hopeful that the
bilateral India-US Civil
Nuclear Cooperation
Agreement when concluded
will take into account
the issues raised here.
However, I must be honest
and frank that I cannot
predict with certainty
the final form of the
US legislation or the
outcome of this process
with the NSG, which
consists of 45 countries
with divergent views.
We are hopeful that
this will lead in a
direction wherein our
interests are fully
protected and that there
is a complete lifting
of restrictions on India
that have existed for
three decades. Such
an outcome if it materializes
will contribute to our
long-term energy security
by enabling a rapid
increase in nuclear
power. It would lead
to the dismantling of
the technology denial
regimes that have hampered
our development particularly
in hi-tech sectors.
I will have wide consultations
including with the members
of the Atomic Energy
Commission, the nuclear
and scientific communities
and others to develop
a broad based national
consensus on this important
matter. I wish to inform
members of the House
that I have invited
members of the Atomic
Energy Commission on
the 26th August for
a meeting. That same
day I have also invited
the group of distinguished
scientists who have
expressed concerns to
meet me.
Finally, I would only
like to state that in
keeping with our commitments
to Parliament and the
nation, we will not
accept any conditions
that go beyond the parameters
of the July 18, 2005
Joint Statement and
the March 2, 2006 Separation
Plan, agreed to between
India and the United
States. If in their
final form the US legislation
or the adapted NSG Guidelines
impose extraneous conditions
on India, the Government
will draw the necessary
conclusions, consistent
with the commitments
I have made to Parliament.