By
Editorial Board
America’s
relationship with India has blossomed under President Obama, who will meet with
Prime Minister Narendra Modi this week. Ideally, Mr. Obama could take advantage
of the ties he has built and press for India to adhere to the standards on
nuclear proliferation to which other nuclear weapons states adhere.
The problem,
however, is that the relationship with India rests on a dangerous bargain. For
years, the United States has sought to bend the rules for India’s nuclear
program to maintain India’s cooperation on trade and to counter China’s growing
influence. In 2008, President George W. Bush signed a civilian nuclear deal
with India that allowed it to trade in nuclear materials. This has encouraged
Pakistan to keep expanding a nuclear weapons program that is already the
fastest growing in the world.
Now, India has
Mr. Obama’s strong support in its bid to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group, a
48-nation body that governs trade in nuclear-related exports and aims to ensure
that civilian trade in nuclear materials is not diverted for military uses.
Membership would enhance India’s standing as a nuclear weapons state, but it is
not merited until the country meets the group’s standards.
All group
members have signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, either as nuclear
weapons states (the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China) or as
non-nuclear weapons states (everybody else). India has refused, which means it
has not accepted legally binding commitments to pursue disarmament
negotiations, halt the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons and
not test nuclear weapons.
President Bush
squandered an opportunity to demand more of India when he signed the 2008 deal,
which opened the door to American trade in nuclear technology for civilian
energy, something India had insisted was a prerequisite to more cooperation and
lucrative business deals.
As part of the
2008 deal, the Indians promised they would be “ready to assume the same
responsibilities and practices” as other nations with advanced nuclear
technology. But they have fallen far short by continuing to produce fissile
material and to expand their nuclear arsenal.
The Nuclear
Suppliers Group is to discuss India’s
application later this month. Mr. Obama is lobbying for India to
win membership through a special exception. If he succeeds, India would be in a
position to keep Pakistan, which has also applied for membership, from gaining
membership because group decisions must be unanimous. That could give Pakistan,
which at one time provided nuclear technology to North Korea and Iran, new
incentives to misbehave.
Opposition from
China, which is close to Pakistan and views India as a rival, could doom
India’s bid for now. But the issue will not go away. India is growing in
importance and seeking greater integration into organizations that govern
international affairs. If it wants recognition as a nuclear weapons state, it
should be required to meet the nuclear group’s standards, including opening
negotiations with Pakistan and China on curbing nuclear weapons and halting the
production of nuclear fuel for bombs.
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