Excerpts
from Prime Minister’s Reply to Discussion in Rajya Sabha on Civil Nuclear
Energy Cooperation with the United States on 17.8.2006
At the outset, I would like to convey my gratitude to
all the Hon’ble Members who have participated in this debate. I am grateful for
this opportunity to clarify some of the issues arising from the discussion. I
will do so in a non partisan spirit and I have every reason to believe that
after I have finished that I will be able to carry the whole House with me. Our
Government has never shied away from a full discussion in Parliament on this
important issue. On three previous occasions on July 29, 2005, February 27,
2006 and March 7, 2006, I had made detailed statements and discussed this
important subject in this august House. Once again, several issues have been
raised during the current discussions and I wish to take this opportunity to
respond to them. I also intend to cover developments since my last Suo Motu
statement of March 7 this year.
2. Two types of comments have been made during the discussion
in the House. The first set of issues pertains to the basic orientation of our
foreign policy. Some Hon’ble Members have observed that by engaging in
discussions with, and allegedly acquiescing in the demands made by the United
States, we have compromised the independent nature of our foreign policy.
3. The second set of issues pertain to deviations from the July 18 Joint Statement and the March 2 Separation Plan. Many of the points raised by the Hon’ble Members have also been aired outside Parliament, notably also by some senior members of the scientific establishment. Overall, a listing of the important concerns include the following: that the India-US Nuclear initiative and more particularly the content of the proposed legislation in the US Congress, could undermine the autonomy of our decision-making; limit the options or compromise the integrity of our strategic programme; and adversely affect the future of our scientific research and development. To sum up, this would suggest that India’s strategic nuclear autonomy is being compromised and India is allowing itself to be pressurized into accepting new and unacceptable conditions that are deviations from the commitments made by me to Parliament in July 2005 and in February and March this year.
4. I recognize that many of these concerns
are borne out of genuine conviction that nothing should be done that would
undermine long standing policies that have a bearing on India’s vital national
security interests. I fully share and subscribe to these sentiments. I would
like to assure the Hon’ble Members that negotiations with the US regarding the
civilian nuclear deal have not led to any change in the basic orientation of
our policies, or affected our independent judgment of issues of national
interest. Last year during my visit to the US, I addressed the National Press
Club in the full glare of the media. A question was put to me regarding what I
thought about the US intervention in Iraq. In the full public glare of the
media I said that it was a mistake. I said the same to President Bush when he
visited India. I said India does not find favour with regime change.
5. The thrust of our foreign policy
remains the promotion of our national interest. We are unswerving in our commitment
to an independent foreign policy. We do recognize the complexities present in
an increasingly inter-dependent and multi-polar world. While we recognize that
the United States is a pre-eminent power and good relations with the U.S. are
in our national interest, this has not in any way clouded our judgment. There
are many areas of agreement with the United States, but at the same time there
are a number of areas in which we have differences and we have not shied away
from making these known to the US, as also expressing them in public.
Currently, we are engaged not only with the US but other global powers like
Russia, China, the EU, UK, France and Japan. We are also focusing on ASEAN, as
well as countries in West Asia, Africa and Latin America. More importantly, we
are devoting proportionately larger time and effort in building relations with
countries in our immediate neighbourhood like Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka,
Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Pakistan. Our relations with all these countries are
determined by the dictates of our enlightened national interest and we have not
allowed any other country, including the United States, to influence our
polices. This will not change as long as I am Prime Minister.
6. I would, hence, again reiterate in view
of the apprehensions expressed, that the proposed US legislation on nuclear
cooperation with India will not be allowed to become an instrument to
compromise India’s sovereignty. Our foreign policy is determined solely by our
national interests. No legislation enacted in a foreign country can take away
from us that sovereign right. Thus there is no question of India being bound by
a law passed by a foreign legislature. Our sole guiding principle in
regard to our foreign policy, whether it is on Iran or any other country, will
be dictated entirely by our national interest.
7. 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.
8. 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.
9. 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.
10. 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.
11. 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.
12. 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.
13. 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.
14. 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.
15. 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.
16. 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.
17. 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.
[Prime Minister also gave the following responses to points raised by
the Left parties ]
1. Whether the deal will give “full” civilian nuclear technology
and lift all existing sanctions on dual use technology imposed on India for not
signing the NPT.
Response: The objective of full civil
nuclear cooperation is enshrined in the July Statement. This objective can be
realized when current restrictions on nuclear trade with India are fully
lifted. In accordance with the July Statement, US has initiated steps to amend
its legislation and to approach the NSG to adapt its guidelines. We seek the
removal of restrictions on all aspects of cooperation and technology transfers
pertaining to civil nuclear energy – ranging from supply of nuclear fuel,
nuclear reactors, reprocessing spent fuel, i.e., all aspects of complete
nuclear fuel supply. Only such cooperation would be in keeping with the July
Joint Statement.
2. Cannot accept restrictions on Indian foreign policy to be
imposed such as on Iran, irrespective of whether it is in the policy section or
in the sense of the House section of the legislation.
Response: Government is clear that
our commitments are only those that are contained in the July Joint Statement
and in the Separation Plan. We cannot accept introduction of extraneous issues
on foreign policy. Any prescriptive suggestions in this regard are not
acceptable to us.
Our foreign policy is and will be solely determined by our national interests.
No legislation enacted in a foreign country can take away from us this
sovereign right.
3. Signing of IAEA safeguards in perpetuity for the civilian
programme to take place after the US Congress had approved a “123 Nuclear
Cooperation Agreement”. All restrictions on India to be lifted before we sign
the IAEA safeguards.
Response: I had conveyed to Parliament on July 29, 2005 on my
return from Washington that before placing any of our nuclear facilities under
IAEA safeguards, we will ensure all restrictions on India have been lifted.
Under the Separation Plan agreed to with the United States, India has offered
to place under IAEA safeguards 14 of its reactors presently operating or under
constructions between 2006 and 2014. The nuclear facilities listed in the
Separation Plan will be offered for safeguards only after all nuclear
restrictions have been lifted on India. This would include suitable amendments
to the US legislation to allow for such cooperation, the passing of the
bilateral agreement with India and the adaption of the NSG guidelines. It is
clear that India cannot be expected to take safeguards obligations on its
nuclear facilities in anticipation of future lifting of restrictions.
4. Guarantees on fuel as agreed in the March 2006 statement.
In case the US reneges on supply of fuel, they will ensure continuity through
other members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).
Response: Separation Plan includes
elaborate fuel supply assurances given by the United States. Understandings in
the Separation Plan also provide for contingency of disruption of fuel supplies
to India. In such a case, the United States and India would jointly convene a
group of friendly supplier countries (Russia, France and United Kingdom) aimed
at restoring fuel supplies to India. An important assurance is the commitment
of support for India’s right to build strategic reserves of fuel over the life
time of its nuclear reactors. In the event of disruption of fuel supplies despite
the assurances, India will have a right to take corrective measure to ensure
the operation of its nuclear reactors.
5. India will work for an FMCT and for nuclear disarmament with
all nuclear weapon states, in line with the Rajiv Gandhi Plan or Delhi Declaration
in tandem.
Response: Our support for global
nuclear disarmament remains unwaivering. Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi had put
forward an Action Plan in the 1988 UNGA Special Session on Disarmament. We
remain committed to the central goal of this Action Plan, i.e., complete
elimination of nuclear weapons leading to global nuclear disarmament in a
time-bound framework. India has agreed to negotiations in the Conference on
Disarmament in Geneva for a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty. There has been no
change in our position on this matter.
6. In the original deal, there is no provision for US
inspectors, only provision for IAEA inspectors. The draft US Bills contains
such provisions.
Response: In the Separation Plan, we have agreed to offer for
IAEA safeguards nuclear facilities specified in the Separation Plan for that
purpose. The nature of safeguards will be determined by an India specific
safeguards agreement with the IAEA. This will be applied to the safeguarded
nuclear facilities in India. Therefore, there is no question of accepting other
verification measures or third country inspectors to visit our nuclear
facilities, outside the framework of the India specific safeguards agreement.
7. An India-specific protocol and not an Additional Protocol as
per IAEA Standard Modified Protocol.
Response: In the Separation Plan, we
have agreed to conclude an India specific safeguards agreement with the IAEA.
The question of an Additional Protocol will arise only after the India specific
safeguards agreement is in place. As a country with nuclear weapons, there is
no question of India agreeing to a Safeguards agreement or an Additional
Protocol applicable to non-nuclear weapon states of the NPT.
8. References to Iran in the House Bill.
Response: We reject the linkage of
any extraneous issue to the nuclear understanding. India’s foreign policy will
be decided on the basis of Indian national interests only.
9. Reference to Proliferation Security Initiative in the
House and Senate Bills.
Response: The Proliferation Security
Initiative (PSI) is an extraneous issue as it is outside the framework of the
July 18 Joint Statement. Therefore, we cannot accept it as a condition for
implementing the July Statement. Separately, the Government has examined the
PSI. We have certain concerns regarding its legal implications and its linkages
with the NPT. We also have concerns with amendments to the suppression of
Unlawful Activities at Sea Treaty under the International Maritime
Organisation.
10. The
Jackson-Vanik Amendment linking the granting of MFN status to USSR to Jewish
emigration is an example relevant to the current debate.
Response: We have studied the
proposed US legislation very carefully, including the so-called binding and
non-binding provisions. The non-binding provisions do not require mandatory
action, but at the same time, have a certain weight in the implementation of
the legislation as a whole. We have conveyed our concerns to the US
Administration in this respect. Jackson-Vanik Amendment was binding on the Administration
and cannot be cited as a precedent for non-binding references in the current
bills. A more accurate example than the Jackson-Vanik Amendment is the set of
provisions accompanying the renewal of MFN status to China, that included
references to China’s human rights, China’s political and religious prisoners,
protection of Tibetan heritage and freedom of political expression.
11. Role
of Parliament in approving foreign policy.
Response: India follows a
Parliamentary model, as specified in our Constitution, wherein treaty making
powers rest with the Executive. However, we have kept Parliament fully in the
picture regarding various stages of our negotiations with the United States.
Broad based domestic consensus cutting across all sections in Parliament and
outside will be necessary. We will work towards that objective by addressing
various concerns as fully as possible.
[Prime Minister also gave
the following responses to points raised by the group of nuclear scientists]
1. “India should continue to be able to hold on to her nuclear
option as a strategic requirement in the real world that that we live in, and
in the ever-changing complexity of the international political system. This
means that we cannot accede to any restraint in perpetuity on our freedom of
action. We have not done this for the last 40 years after the Non-Proliferation
Treaty came into being, and there is no reason why we should succumb to this
now. Universal nuclear disarmament must be our ultimate aim, and until we see
the light at the end of the tunnel on this important issue, we cannot accept
any agreement in perpetuity.”
Response: We are very firm in our determination that agreement with
United States on Civil Nuclear Energy in no way affects the requirements of our
strategic programme. We are fully conscious of the changing complexity of the
international political system. Nuclear weapons are an integral part of our
national security and will remain so, pending the global elimination of all
nuclear weapons and universal non-discriminatory nuclear disarmament. Our
freedom of action with regard to our strategic programmes remains unrestricted.
The nuclear agreement will not be allowed to be used as a backdoor method of
introducing NPT type restrictions on India. Our offer to put nuclear facilities
under safeguards in perpetuity is conditional upon these facilities securing
fuel from international sources for their life time. If the fuel supply
assurances as enumerated in Separation Plan are disrupted, then India will have
the right to take corrective measures to ensure the continued operation of
these reactors.
2. ‘After 1974, when the major powers discontinued cooperation
with us, we have built up our capability in many sensitive technological areas,
which need not and should not now be subjected to external control. Safeguards
are understandable where external assistance for nuclear materials or
technologies are involved. We have agreed to this before, and we can continue
to agree to this in the future too, but strictly restricted to those facilities
and materials imported from external sources.’
Response: Sensitive nuclear
technology facilities have not been covered in the Separation Plan. Therefore,
there is no question of putting them under safeguards or under external controls.
Even with regard to nuclear facilities that have been included in Separation
Plan, safeguards will be applied in phases between 2006 and 2014. These
safeguarded facilities will be eligible for and will receive fuel materials and
technology from international sources. If such supplies cease, then India will
be free to protect its interests through corrective measures. That will be
spelt out clearly in the India specific safeguards agreement.
3. ‘We find that the Indo-US deal, in the form approved by the
US House of Representatives, infringes on our Independence for carrying out
indigenous research and development in nuclear science and technology. Our
R&D should not be hampered by external supervision or control, or by the
need to satisfy any international body. Research and technology development are
the Sovereign rights of any nation. This is especially true when they concern
strategic national defence and energy self-sufficiency.’
Response: Our independence for carrying out independent research
and development in nuclear science and technology will remain unaffected. There
will be no external supervision of our R&D since none of the sensitive
R&D facilities which handle nuclear material have been included in the
Separation Plan. Nothing in the Separation Plan infringes on our sovereign
right to conduct research and technology development concerning our national
defence and energy self-sufficiency. Government is committed to preserve the
integrity of the three stage nuclear power programme, including utilization of
our vast thorium resources. Certain nuclear facilities including centers such
as TIFR, Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics
etc., have been designated as civilian in the Separation Plan. As these
facilities will not handle nuclear material, there is no question of safeguards
being applied to them. We expect these centers to participate as full partners
in international collaboration project.
4. ‘While the sequence of actions to implement the cooperation
could be left for discussion between the two governments, the basic principles
on which such actions will rest is the right of Parliament and the people to
decide. The Prime Minister has already taken up with President George Bush the
issue of the new clauses recommended by the US House of Representatives. If the
US Congress, in its wisdom, passes the bill in its present form, the ‘product’
will become unacceptable to India, and diplomatically, it will be very
difficult to change it later. Hence, it is important for our Parliament to work
out, and insist on, the ground rules for the nuclear deal, at this stage
itself.’
Response: I had taken up with
President Bush our concerns regarding provisions in the two bills. It is clear
that if the final product is in its current form, India will have grave
difficulties in accepting the bills. US has been left in no doubt as to our
position. The ground rules for our discussions are clear. These are the
parameters of the July Statement and the March Separation Plan and commitments
given by me to Parliament in the three Suo Moto Statements and my reply to
today’s discussions will be the guiding principles of our position. Parliament
has been kept fully informed at every stage of the discussions. In their final
form, if US legislation or the NSG guidelines impose extraneous conditions on
India, the Government will draw the necessary conclusions consistent with my
commitments to Parliament.