I.
Media Release
9 September 2008

US-India Nuclear Agreement:
Peace Groups Protest Japanese Government's Capitulation in NSG

[Tokyo, 9 September 2008]
Attached is a translation of a statement by Japanese peace groups
protesting the Japanese Government's September 6 approval of an
exemption for India from the nuclear export guidelines of the 45-nation
Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). The statement was handed to the Arms
Control and Disarmament Division of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at
3pm today.

A cover letter addressed to Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and Foreign
Minister Masahiko Koumura demanded an explanation of the government's
decision, which threatens to destroy the international
non-proliferation system, based on the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
The groups stated that in the near future they will submit further
questions and requested a meeting with a government representative.
They demanded an explanation of the background and reasons for the
government's decision and the impact of the decision on the prospects
for nuclear disarmament.

Contact
Philip White Work Phone: +81-3-3357-3800 ¡¡Home Phone: +81-3-3708-2898
International Liaison Officer, Citizens' Nuclear Information Center

c/- Citizens' Nuclear Information Center, Tokyo, Japan
Tel: 81-3-3357-3800 Fax: 81-3-3357-3801 Email 1: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web Site:
http://cnic.jp/english/topics/plutonium/proliferation/usindia.html

------------
Statement Concerning an Amendment to NSG Guidelines Granting an
Exemption for India

After extending its deliberations by one day to September 6, an
extraordinary meeting of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) finally
agreed to amend its guidelines to allow a special exception for India.
The amendment exempts India from the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
requirement that countries may only engage in nuclear trade if they
accept International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) full-scope safeguards,
despite the fact that India developed nuclear weapons outside the NPT
framework. This decision risks shaking the foundations of the NPT
system and is therefore totally unacceptable.

Circumstances evolved rapidly after the agreement between Indian Prime
Minister Singh and US President Bush at the July Toyako G8 Summit to
expedite the US-India Nuclear Agreement. On August 1 the IAEA Board of
Governors approved a safeguards agreement covering some of India's
nuclear facilities. Then on August 21,22 the NSG held an extraordinary
plenary meeting to consider whether to exempt India from its ban on
nuclear trade with countries that have not accepted full-scope IAEA
safeguards. Strong objections were raised by countries including
Austria, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway and Switzerland,
so the NSG reconvened on September 4 and 5. The meeting was extended to
September 6, but regrettably, as a result of strong pressure from the
US, an amendment to NSG Guidelines was finally passed granting an
exemption for India.

Despite the history of the atomic bombing, the government of Japan
accepted the US-India Nuclear Agreement, which affords exceptional
treatment for India, without even making an effort to minimize the blow
to the NPT system. In doing so, it ignored statements issued by groups
representing Hibakusha (A-bomb sufferers) living in both Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, by the Mayors of both these cities, by the Governors of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki Prefectures, by local councils and prefectural
assemblies, as well as the united calls of Hibakusha groups, nuclear
disarmament groups and other peace groups throughout Japan which for
years have been striving for nuclear disarmament. The government also
ignored recent cross-party expressions of opposition by Members of the
Japanese Diet. As citizens of the country that was attacked by nuclear
weapons, we are overwhelmed with shame that we have such a government.

Together with people who fought with us for nuclear disarmament and
non-proliferation on this occasion, we demand a convincing explanation
from the government of its behavior in the NSG. Since there are many US
Congress Members who have expressed opposition, we will also continue
to strive to prevent this Agreement being approved by Congress. And we
maintain our strong demand for the Japanese Government to strive for
the banning and elimination of nuclear weapons and for the government
to initiate a multi-lateral discussion to that end in the near future.

7 September 2008


Hibakusha Groups

Terumi Tanaka
Secretary General
Japan Confederation of A- and H-bomb Sufferers (Nihon Hidankyo)

Kazushi Kaneko
Director General
Hiroshima Council of A-Bomb Sufferers Organizations

Sunao Tuboi
Director General
Hiroshima Council of A-Bomb Sufferers Organizations


Other Hiroshima and Nagasaki Groups

Nobuo Kazashi
Director
NO DU Hiroshima Project

Steven Leeper
Chairman of the Board of Directors
Hiroshima Peace Culture Foundation

Haruko Moritaki
Director
Association for Peace Exchange with Indian & Pakistani Youth

Mitsuo Okamoto, Goro Kawai, Haruko Moritaki
Co-Directors
Hiroshima Alliance for Nuclear Weapons Abolition

Masanobu Omori
Director
Hiroshima Council Against A and Hydrogen Bombs

Hideo Tsuchiyama
Director
Nagasaki Global Citizens' Assembly for the Elimination of Nuclear
Weapons


Other Japanese NGOs

Hideyuki Ban
Co-Director
Citizens' Nuclear Information Center

Sadao Ichikawa
Chair
Japan Congress Against A- and H-Bombs (Gensuikin)

Michiji Konuma
Secretary-General
Committee of Seven for World Peace Appeals

Masayoshi Naito
Coordinator
Citizens' Network for Nuclear Weapons Abolition

Osamu Niikura
President
Japanese Lawyers International Solidarity Association

Kenichi Ohkubo
Secretary General
Japan Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms (JALANA)

Yoshiko Shidara
Co-Director
Women's Democratic Club

Hiroshi Taka
Secretary General
Japan Council against A- and H-Bombs (Gensuikyo)


II.
http://www.truthout.org/article/how-indias-nuclear-waiver-was-won

How India's Nuclear "Waiver" Was Won
Tuesday 09 September 2008

by: J. Sri Raman, t r u t h o u t | Perspective


Despite opposition from activists, India received a waiver from the nuclear
non-proliferation treaty, a step towards completing the US-India nuclear
deal. (Photo: Reuters)
    According to India's National Security Adviser, M. K. Narayanan, the
country won a waiver of the normal, non-proliferation conditions of the
Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) over the weekend - believe it or not - because
of "divine support."

    Evidence, however, points to a superpower and its outgoing president as
the source of the extra-diplomatic support that enabled India to take this
penultimate step toward "operationalizing" the US-India nuclear deal. The
final step will be formal ratification by the US Congress of the bilateral
agreement on nuclear cooperation, which New Delhi and Washington concluded
in July 2007.

    Narayanan told a television channel that he was in his "puja (prayer)
room" at 1 a.m. when his colleague and Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon
phoned him to share his anxiety over the fate of the deal in the crucial
session of the 45-member NSG in Vienna. The spiritual-minded security
counselor stayed unruffled. He told Menon that he had received an assurance
in the matter from "the highest quarters."

    Those with a different idea of divinity might demur. The waiver has
caused such wild jubilation in Indian circles, which consider a pro-peace
stance as the opposite of patriotism, precisely because it has been won
without the country renouncing its legal right to conduct a nuclear-weapon
test again. And, if India tests again, it will do so only in order to make
bigger and better bombs. To some of us, divine intervention to help a
worshiper acquire more mass-destructive weapons might seem an improbable
idea.

    None of us, however, would consider as anything but natural pro-India
intervention for the same purpose by Washington under George W. Bush -
despite the war it launched on Iraq for finding weapons of mass destruction
that have proven fictitious. Reports from Vienna confirm that the
intervention has not been of a refined, traditionally diplomatic kind
either.

    Many analysts have already noted the irony of the fact that the NSG, set
up in 1975 as a response to India's first and professedly "peaceful nuclear
explosion" of the previous year, has lifted the ban on nuclear commerce for
the country within a decade of its declaration as a nuclear-weapon state.
The other irony of the US, which has given the NSG its clout all these
years, taking the lead in weakening it with the waiver has also drawn
attention.

    To some, the more striking irony is of the privileged signatories to the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) - the P5 comprising the US, Russia,
the UK, France and China - themselves presiding over the liquidation of the
treaty. All five are members of the NSG, which has extended the waiver to
India, a non-signatory to the NPT. To some others, the supreme irony may
seem to be the one about the discriminatory and hypocritical treaty being
glorified as a global non-proliferation guide and depicting the P5 as
harbingers of nuclear disarmament.

    Opposition to the waiver, however, was expected only from other NSG
members. The US had undertaken to assist India in this forum. Nicholas
Burns, assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs, had
said on August 4, 2007, that Washington would act as "India's shepherd" at
the NSG. It was as good as its word, going by the way it herded a handful of
reluctant members into the pro-deal pen.

    The official text of the waiver is not available at the moment this
writing. It is, nevertheless, clear that the NSG has been persuaded to grant
the waiver on the "basis" of a statement made by India's External Affairs
Minister, Pranab Mukherjee, in New Delhi, reiterating a "voluntary
moratorium" on testing declared soon after the nuclear-weapon tests of 1998.
Similarly, no details of the US diplomacy in the NSG have been divulged, but
no doubt is left about its unusual character.

    The US and India had to deal, finally, with six holdouts - Austria,
Ireland, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland. The first
three fell in line after an initial show of resistance, but the others
seemed to stand firm until the night of September 5. They demanded a linkage
between the waiver and an Indian commitment not to test again, among other
conditions. China, too, joined the dissenters toward the end. Midnight
diplomacy of a muscular kind, however, made all the difference and
manufactured the waiver of September 6, by all accounts.

    Jayantha Dhanapala, the eminent Sri Lankan who served as the UN
undersecretary general in 1998-2003, talked of this tough diplomacy in his
last-minute appeal to the dissenters to stay firm. He said: "Brutal and
unconscionable pressure has been exerted on the few countries who opposed
the US-India draft...."

    A report in a leading Indian newspaper said "dozens of phone calls" were
made "at the highest levels Thursday and Friday (September 5) night to
various principals across the world to get the deal through." At the
receiving end were Chinese President Hu Jintao and leaders of Ireland,
Austria and New Zealand. "At the highest levels," clarified the report, was
"a euphemism for President Bush, whose single-minded pursuit of this deal
was largely instrumental in getting it through in the waning days of his
second term."

    The account was not too ambiguous about the character of the calls and
the campaign. It said: "Not that Uncle Sam was delicate in the pursuit of
its objective. In fact, the word out of Vienna is that US strong-arm tactics
left plenty of bruised feelings." Another Indian daily quoted a Western
diplomat as complaining that his country and others had been "leaned on at
the highest levels." According to the same paper, it needed a series of
"fairly real-time demarches" by Washington to ensure withdrawal of
objections to the draft waiver.

    "For the first time in my experience of international diplomatic
negotiations, a consensus decision was followed by complete silence in the
room. No clapping, nothing," one European diplomat confided to a news
agency. "It showed a lot of us felt pressured to some extent into a decision
by the Americans and few were totally satisfied."

    The dominant Indian media, representing a dreamy-eyed middle class as
well as demented nuclear militarists, were delighted. Sample this from a
brazen editorial (captioned "Savor the change") in the Indian Express, which
has always batted for Bush and the bomb: "India should have no illusions
that it was sweet reason - for example, the argument that India has
"impeccable" non-proliferation credentials - that ultimately silenced New
Delhi's opponents in the NSG. It was Washington's brutal exercise of power
that forced the recalcitrant members of the NSG, including China, to stand
down."

    The editorial added: "As it reflects on the NSG experience, Indian
diplomacy should lose no more time in moving decisively from its traditional
emphasis on the power of the argument to the more effective argument of
power." The waiver, in other words, reinforced the argument for the US-India
"strategic partnership" that promoted this country as a regional power,
besides promising it at least a secondary place in the "nuclear club" and
the UN Security Council.

    The waiver did not come without earlier indications. As far back as
August 13, 2007, we noted in these columns (Nuclear Suppliers Drop
Opposition to US-India Deal) the readiness of two significant NPT
signatories to renege on their avowed commitment. Germany's ambassador in
India, Bernd Muetzelberg, then announced that his country would try to
"forge a consensus" within the group on the deal and in favor of it. He
said: "It's not an easy task (to forge a consensus) given India's consistent
refusal to join the NPT regime. But we also understand India's security
situation in which it has to operate." Around the same time, the Australian
government, under Prime Minister John Howard, too, promised to consider "the
potential sale of Australian uranium to India fairly soon."

    Germany chaired the NSG session this time and, according to one critic,
"sat on its thumbs," giving the US time and opportunity through repeated
adjournments for its waiver-pushing diplomacy. After Kevin Rudd of the Labor
Party replaced Howard as Australia's prime minister in November 2007, his
government ruled out sale of uranium to India. Last month, however, Rudd
surprised his supporters by announcing his backing for New Delhi in the NSG.
It is not only the stick that has won India the waiver, but also the carrot,
especially for the corporates. France and Russia have made no secret of the
fact that they have been waiting in the wings for the waiver, which would
open the doors to lucrative nuclear trade for them, regardless of what
happens in the US Congress. Even before the finalization of the US-India
bilateral agreement last year, a former chairman of India's Atomic Energy
Commission said: "French and American nuclear businesses, holding talks with
Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL), could go ahead with the
selection of sites for power plants and other modalities."

    As noted before, expert projections made in December 2006 envisage an
increase in India's nuclear arsenal by 40 to 50 weapons a year as a result
of the deal. The country is also expected to acquire 40 nuclear reactors
over the next two decades or so. India has announced plans to expand its
current installed nuclear-energy capacity from 3,500 megawatts to 60,000
megawatts by 2040. The expansion is valued at $150 billion. All this offers
mouth-watering prospects for megaplayers in the world nuclear industry.

    Indian corporate houses are no less excited. According to one report,
the "end of India's nuclear isolation" will pave the way for a minimum
investment of Indian rupees 840 billion ($18.9 billion) in nuclear power
generation capacity in the near future. This, suggest other reports, may be
an underestimate. The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
(Assocham) did not wait long after the waiver to announce that about 40
Indian firms are in talks with companies abroad to set up power plants,
envisaging an investment of about Indian rupees 2,000 billion ($165.5
billion) over 15 years. The US-India agreement cannot realistically be
expected to encounter insuperable opposition in the Congress, though the
anti-nuclear movement will certainly mount an offensive against the
ratification. Bipartisan support for the agreement, once considered beyond
the realm of possibility, did come through in time for the treaty's
finalization. The welcome extended to the waiver by both John McCain and
Barack Obama is more than a straw in the wind.

    In India, the left has vowed to terminate the deal after the general
election due in early 2009. The far-right Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP),
which initiated the US-India "strategic partnership," talks of renegotiating
the deal once it returns to power. Neither of the threats is receiving wide
and serious attention, even as nuclear militarists and their media call for
a national celebration of the victory in Vienna.

III.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/09/opinion/09tue2.html?ref=opinion

September 9, 2008
Editorial
A Bad Deal

President Bush has failed to achieve so many of his foreign policy goals,
but last weekend he proved that he can still get what he really wants. The
administration bullied and wheedled international approval of the
president's ill-conceived nuclear deal with India.

The decision by the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (which sets rules for
nuclear trade) means that for the first time in more than 30 years — since
New Delhi used its civilian nuclear program to produce a bomb — the world
can sell nuclear fuel and technology to India.

Mr. Bush and his aides argued that India is an important democracy and
dismissed warnings that breaking the rules would make it even harder to
pressure Iran and others to abandon their nuclear ambitions.

The White House will now try to wheedle and bully Congress to quickly sign
off on the deal. Congress should resist that pressure.

The nuclear agreement was a bad idea from the start. Mr. Bush and his team
were so eager for a foreign policy success that they gave away the store.
They extracted no promise from India to stop producing bomb-making material.
No promise not to expand its arsenal. And no promise not to resume nuclear
testing.

The administration — and India's high-priced lobbyists — managed to persuade
Congress in 2006 to give its preliminary approval. But Congress insisted on
a few important conditions, including a halt to all nuclear trade if India
tests another weapon.

That didn't stop the White House from insisting on more generous terms from
the suppliers' group. When New Zealand and a group of other sensible
countries tried to impose similar restrictions, the administration pulled
out all of the diplomatic stops. (Officials proudly reported that Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice made at least two dozen calls to governments
around the world to press for the India waiver.)

The suppliers' group gave its approval after India said it would abide by a
voluntary moratorium on testing — but it does not require any member to cut
off trade if India breaks that pledge.

That means that if India tests a nuclear weapon, it could still bypass
American suppliers and keep buying fuel and technology from other less
exacting sellers. Let us be clear about this. It is the administration that
disadvantaged American companies when it argued for more lenient rules from
the suppliers group than those written into American law.

And let us also be clear that Congress's restrictions were a sensible effort
to limit the damage from this damaging deal and maintain a few shreds of
American credibility when it comes to restraining the spread of nuclear
weapons.

Lawmakers should hold off considering the deal at least until the new
Congress takes office in January. And they must insist that at a minimum,
the restrictions already written into American law are strictly adhered to.

The next president will have to do a far better job containing the world's
growing nuclear appetites. And for that, he will need all of the moral
authority and leverage he can muster.

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