[The June 2009 issue of the 'Peace Now', referred to below, is now available
at <http://www.cndpindia.org/download.php?list.10>.
And the editorial, and list of contents, at
<http://www.facebook.com/no<http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=205663215436><http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=205663215436>
te.php?note_id=20566321543<http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=205663215436>
6 <http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=205663215436>>.]
http://www.truthout.org/070109B
Strategic Part of India's Civilian Nuclear
Plans<http://www.truthout.org/070109B>

Wednesday 01 July 2009

by: J. Sri Raman, t r u t h o u t | Perspective
<http://www.truthout.org/070109B?print>

    We are beginning by briefly revisiting Kaiga, the site of a nuclear
complex in India's southern State of India, close to the country's west
coast. It was also the venue of a mysterious death. The event was covered in
these columns (Death of an Indian Nuclear Scientist, June 24, 2009). We are
not returning here because we have more clues to the truth about the
tragedy. Not yet.

    Kaiga, meanwhile, has figured in reports of another kind. On June 26, "a
top nuclear scientist," presumably of this atomic power station, let the
media know that the place was "being pushed as the location for US companies
to set up new reactors."

    Around the same time, the US Congress was reportedly told that the
Barack Obama administration expected India to offer two locations for US
nuclear firms to install reactors when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
visits India. She is likely to do so in the second half of July, and New
Delhi has to decide soon on its proposal.

    There are indications that the decision may not be influenced solely and
strictly by considerations of "civilian nuclear energy cooperation" - the
avowed objective of the US-India nuclear deal that has opened the door for
legitimized nuclear commerce to the largest South Asian nation.

    Talking of the questions raised over the mystery death of scientist
Lokanathan Mahalingam, we noted the ones provoked in particular by the
non-civilian aspect of Kaiga's nuclear reactors. The complex, in operation
under the Nuclear Power Corporation of India for over nine years now, has
four of the eight reactors officially acknowledged as strategic and placed
outside the purview of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards.

    The scientist, who told the media on condition of anonymity about the
Kaiga move, said that a governmental committee had "zoomed in" on about a
dozen possible sites for new nuclear power plants. He left very little doubt
that the strong push for Kaiga as a venue for US nuclear ventures was coming
from India.

    Does the proposal have anything to do with New Delhi's keenness to
ensure that IAEA inspections of the new reactors are as non-intrusive as
possible? The assumption is hardly far-fetched, considering the freely aired
hope that such collaborations will culminate in India's eventual admission
into the "nuclear club," members of which have neither intrusive inspections
nor any sanctions to fear.

    As for the size of collaborations envisaged, the Indian government was
recently reported to have told Washington of readiness for a deal worth $150
billion for US nuclear reactors (with a total capacity of 10,000 MWe),
equipment and materials. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Special Envoy Shyam
Saran had also made the mouth-watering promise that the US companies would
"benefit for decades" by bagging a huge chunk of Indian military hardware
orders as well.

    Other collaborations are under active consideration as well.
Negotiations are known to have made much progress with four global players
in the field: General Electric-Hitachi, Toshiba-Westinghouse, Areva of
France, and Atomstroyeksport of Russia. Six to eight reactors, of
1,000-1,650 MW, are to be installed at each of the dozen nuclear parks to be
set up in different States across the country, with a preference for the
already calamity-prone coastal regions.

    India's corporates cannot contain their glee and can hardly wait for the
goodies on the way. In April 2009, the Confederation of Industry (CII)
housed a conference in Mumbai on "Opportunities and challenges for nuclear
power in India." Addressing the conference, Anil Kokadkar, chairman of
India's Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), said: "International nuclear power
firms are now eyeing partnerships and collaborations with Indian companies."

    But he added that the Indian companies should "exercise due diligence
and read the fine print before signing deals with foreign nuclear power
firms," He also stressed that "such agreements should not limit their (the
Indian firms') ability to supply equipment for other segments of the nuclear
market."

    The Indian big business and nuclear establishment (including its bomb
lobby), however, are blithely optimistic about what they consider the
inevitable outcome of the coming series of collaborations. As they see it,
it is the logic of outsourcing that is making the multinational corporations
opt for these collaborations. The logic of the collaborations, in turn, will
make India a de facto member of the "nuclear club," despite provisions of
the discriminatory Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

    Presenting the argument, columnist Swaminathan Aiyar writes: "The
multinationals of France, US and Japan want to manufacture nuclear equipment
in India to meet not just Indian but global demand. Once India becomes part
of the global supply chain, it will become effectively sanctions-proof. As a
supplier of global equipment, it will be in a position to impose sanctions
on others, not just be at the receiving end."

    Playing the ominous oracle, he pronounces: "That's why the biggest hawks
in our nuclear establishment, who badly want nuclear testing in the distant
future, can relax on the issue of sanctions. De facto, India will become a
member of the privileged P 5 when it becomes part of the global supply chain
of nuclear equipment in the next 10 years."

    This is a prospect that the peace movement in India and the region has
to face. The June issue of the journal of India's Coalition for Nuclear
Disarmament and Peace (CNDP), Peace Now, in its editorial, recalls that the
US-India nuclear deal did not figure as an issue in the country's recent
general election (with the far-right opposition dropping even its feigned
opposition to it). The editorial warns: "That would, however, not stop the
ruling party claiming popular endorsement for the deal and the further
process to follow - i.e. installation of new nuclear power plants - is
likely to be stepped considerably up."

    "The only possible hiccup." says the CNDP, "is paucity of investible
funds given the serious downturn in global economy. But that may not be too
great a hurdle."

    Paucity of funds has not stopped the nuclear militarists of this poor
country so far. It certainly won't be a hurdle when they expect the new
reactors to seat them at the world's high nuclear table.

A freelance journalist and a peace activist in India, J. Sri
Raman<srirama...@yahoo.com> is
the author of 
"Flashpoint<http://www.commoncouragepress.com/index.cfm?action=book&bookid=234>"
(Common Courage Press, USA). He is a regular contributor to Truthout.

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