Tuesday 28 August 2007

THE RED BLUNDERS - The communists have consistently betrayed national interests




If nationalism, as the historian Jack Gallagher was fond of quipping, devours its parents, communism consumes its own ideology. Communism was born under the sign of internationalism. The project of world revolution did not recognize national boundaries. Thus, it is funny to see Indian communists today positioning themselves as great protectors of national sovereignty.

Indian communists have always had a very uncomfortable relationship with nationalism. Some of the major debates and divisions within the Communist Party of India have revolved around the question of nationalism and the national movement. And, if the truth be told, these debates do not exactly hold up the comrades in an edifying light. On the scorecard of nationalism, the performance of Indian communists is poor to say the least. (On internationalism, their score is irrelevant, since a world communist revolution is not even a pipe dream after the collapse of socialism and the exposure of the many crimes of the socialist regimes in Soviet Russia, in Eastern Europe, in China, in Albania, under Pol Pot in Cambodia and so on.)

To begin with the most notorious example that communists have never been able to live down: 1942. The CPI was officially against the Quit India movement. What needs to be emphasized here is that this decision of the CPI was not based on any understanding of the Indian situation by Indian communists. The opposition to the clarion call of 1942 was the outcome of a diktat emanating from Moscow. When Hitler attacked his erstwhile ally, the Soviet Union, in 1941, the fight against Nazism overnight became a People’s War for all communists. The directive from Moscow was carried by Achhar Singh Chinna, alias Larkin, who travelled from the Soviet Union to India with the full knowledge of the British authorities. In India, it meant communists had to isolate themselves from the mainstream of national life and politics and see British rule as a friendly force since the communists’ “fatherland”, Soviet Russia, was an ally of Britain. A critical decision affecting the strategic and the tactical line of the party was thus taken defying national interests at the behest of a foreign power, whose orders determined the positions and actions of the CPI.

In 1948, within a few months of India becoming independent, the CPI under the leadership of B.T. Randive launched the line that this freedom was fake (yeh azadi jhooti hai), and argued that the situation in India was ripe for an armed revolution. The Randive line led to the expulsion of P.C. Joshi, who believed that freedom from British rule was a substantial achievement and that, tactically, the communist movement would gain by supporting leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru who, Joshi said, represented a “progressive” trend within the Congress. Apart from the inner-party struggle, what needs to be noted here is that the Randive line, which completely misread the national mood, was the direct outgrowth of a policy formulated by the Comintern (or the Cominform, as it had renamed itself), in other words, Moscow. The directive of Moscow to the Indian communists was that Congress should be opposed since it was no more than a satellite of imperialism. The retreat from this line was also sounded from Moscow in the form of an editorial entitled, “For a Lasting Peace”, in the mouthpiece of the Cominform.

The defeat of Joshi in the inner- party struggle camouflaged an important and lasting tension within the CPI. This concerned the party’s ideological and tactical position regarding the Congress. Joshi represented a trend within the party that believed in closer ties with the Congress, especially Nehru. It argued that, given the incipient nature of the proletarian movement in India in the Forties and Fifties, it was necessary to seek an alliance with the Congress since it was the party that was closest to the masses and it had leaders who were favourably inclined to socialism and its global future. It was Joshi’s firm belief that the democratic revolution in India could be completed only through an alliance between the national bourgeoisie represented within the Congress and the CPI. While the opposite trend saw the Congress as a bourgeois party and therefore hostile to the interests of the working class and the communist movement. The Congress could not be trusted, a suspicion that was strengthened when the first communist government in Kerala led by E.M.S. Namboodiripad was dismissed by Nehru in the summer of 1959.

Three years later, in 1962, when the Sino-Indian border conflict occurred, a section of communists, among whom Namboodiripad was prominent, chose to uphold the cause of China and portrayed India as the aggressor. This was yet another occasion when the communist movement found itself isolated from the national mainstream. It led eventually to a split in the CPI with the pro-Chinese faction leaving the parent party to form the Communist Party of India (Marxist). A rump remained as the CPI — a party totally subservient to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and some would say even fully funded by it.

To these dates — 1942, 1948, and 1962 — when the communists chose not to serve Indian interests but to act at the behest of either Moscow or Peking (as it was then) can now be added another date: 2007. The communists are poised at the moment to withdraw support from the government led by Manmohan Singh unless the latter agrees to renegotiate the Indo-US nuclear treaty. The opposition of the communists is based not on substantial objections to the terms of the treaty, but to the fact that it brings India closer to the US. Prakash Karat, the general secretary of the CPI(M), made this clear in an article in People’s Democracy. He wrote, “The Left parties have been watching with disquiet the way the UPA government has gone about forging close strategic and military ties with the United States….The Left is clear that going ahead with the agreement will bind India to the United States in a manner that will seriously impair an independent foreign policy and our strategic autonomy.”

These, as anyone will recognize, are a series of ideological assertions and not rational arguments. The Left, since the Nineties, has lost all its ideological moorings: socialism is gone and China has turned to market capitalism; within India it has no political base anywhere save in West Bengal and Kerala. With no policies of its own, it has accepted economic reforms and begun to woo capital with some gusto in West Bengal. With everything gone, the Left clings to its anti-Americanism as a last ideological anchor. In the present context, however, the Left’s anti-US position echoes what the Chinese Communist Party is saying on the Indo-US nuclear deal. Karat, whether he likes it or not, is only parroting, like his predecessors did in 1942, 1947 and 1962, a political line coming out of a foreign country, in this case one that is hostile to India. The intensity of his opposition is a reflection of the enduring discomfort of the communists with a pro-Congress stance.

Given its track record, the Left’s attempt to see itself as a protector of India’s national sovereignty and autonomy is a disgrace. Communists in India have acted, at critical periods, at the behest of the Soviet Union or China. In so doing, communists have sacrificed India’s national interests. They are about to do the same now.

The history of Indian communism is the story of a series of historic blunders. The red flag has never fluttered because those who hold it aloft know only how to blunder. What is pathetic is that even the blunders of the communists are not their own!
-written by Rudrangshu Mukherjee, The Telegraph,

NDTV POLL results

Left only for ideology, not for GDP growth: Srinivasan

"A strong India and a strong China is good for both countries and also to the world."
A senior member of the Atomic Energy Commission has slammed the Left parties for their opposition to the Indo-US nuclear deal, saying they were only worried about their ideology and do not bother about the country's GDP growth."It does not matter to them whether GDP growth suffers or not so long as they have their ideology," MR Srinivasan, also former Chairman of AEC, said in an address to the Rotary Club in Bangalore on Monday night."A strong India and a strong China is good for both countries and also to the world.""Their main concern is India and the US are coming closer, especially in strategic terms, and they (Left parties) think this is something they cannot stomach," he said.According to him, while India needs to have good relations with China, it is not a good thing to have a strong China and a weak India in a long haul. "A strong India and a strong China is good for both countries and also to the world."Strengthening of relations with the US should be seen as "hedging your risk" so that New Delhi is not left "high and dry," he advocated.
Srinivasan also did not spare the BJP, which has also opposed the agreement, and said the party now keeps saying that the pact affects the country's nuclear independence.He noted that it was Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the then Prime Minister of the BJP-led NDA coalition who announced soon after the 1998 Pokhran tests that India would observe voluntary moratorium on further tests and also made an announcement on a "no first use" of nuclear weapons."These two (announcements)... Well... Looking back... One can ask what prompted him to say so... He could have negotiated... He could have used it as a negotiating tool," Srinivasan said.He indicated that Vajpayee might have made the announcement heeding his advisors who wanted to promote him as a statesman and ideologist. Srinivasan said in case India insists on renegotiation of the agreement following opposition and as a result of Parliamentary debate, the Bush administration is sure to ask New Delhi to wait till the new government takes charge in Washington.The Bush administration would not enter into renegotiation with India as its clout in the US Congress is diminishing, he argued.
He said there is some urgency in operationalising the agreement as Indian-built reactors face uranium crunch. "We need to access uranium for our own reactors which are operating well. Our ability to produce natural uranimum in the country to keep pace with that (projected requirement) is limited because of low quality of ore," and also opposition in some quarters for mining in Meghalaya and Cudappah in Andhra Pradesh. There is a "mismatch" in demand and supply. The Bush administration would not enter into renegotiation with India as its clout in the US Congress is diminishing.But Srinivasan said if political decision making requires that New Delhi renegotiate the agreement, then "we have to accept that, nothing can be done about that."Srinivasan quoted some people, who said while it took China 13 years to negotiate the 123 agreement with the US, it took only two years for India to enter into similar pact with Washington. "So, some people are seeing 13 years as benchmark (for India to operationalise the deal with the US)," he said.Supporting the India-US nuclear agreement, he said, "I think it's an agreement we can live with. It's the best agreement under the circumstances if you move ahead," adding, any deal involves give and take from both sides.He also sought to respond to the position taken by some people that "we have done quite well in isolated mode, and why not continue to isolate ourselves".Srinivasan said as a man who was associated with the nuclear programme for long and as one who fought embargoes, "it's not a good thing to work in isolation. It's good for us to be in the international mode. Science and Technology in some sense flows internationally."Having survived the phase of sanctions and embargoes, India should not make virtue of that situation which came about despite New Delhi not wanting it, he argued.Speaking on the Indian nuclear programme from early times, Srinivasan said towards the end of 1980s when renowned journalist Kuldip Nayar, the former Rajya Sabha member, visited Pakistan, he was told by Pakistanis that Islamabad had nuclear bombs.Pakistan nuclear scientist, AQ Khan had earlier managed to take uranimum from Holland, where he was working, to Pakistan in a clandestine manner and then had a network of equipment suppliers in Europe, according to Srinivasan."Given that situation, it became pretty much inevitable that we had to go ahead (with our nuclear tests)", he said.In the mid-1990s, he said the then Prime Minister PV Narasimha Rao gave the go-ahead signal to conduct the nuclear tests but "it appears that at some point of time...Either American pressure or whatever...He seems to have retracted... that was the general impression."

BJP leaders feel pressure to back nuclear deal

LEADER OF Opposition L K Advani's statement that his party has no objection to the 123 Agreement if the government amends the Indian Atomic Energy Act to ensure strategic independence and smooth reactor fuel supplies is not a turnaround, say the BJP leaders. They say it is merely a reiteration of the BJP's line that the deal should be re-negotiated to take care of India's right to conduct tests and decide its strategic interests. BJP's deputy leader in Lok Sabha VK Malhotra said, "Ad- vani has only said what we have been saying in the Parliament and outside - that the deal needs to be re-negotiated. We are not opposing the deal out of anti-Americanism." A senior BJP general secretary denied that Advani's statement was caused by the pressure on the BJP from pro-deal lobby Malhotra said the party's line was that India's freedom must not be curbed in any manner by a law of another country. "Our apprehension on account of the Hyde Act is largely because it is India-specific." The BJP's stand on the nuclear issue has been firmed up by former union ministers Yashwant Sinha and Arun Shourie after meetings with former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. It is believed that many senior BJP leaders privately do not oppose the deal. Some BJP leaders, considered friendly to the industry, are also against the party opposing the deal. They say the party could not afford to antagonise the middle class that wants more avenues between the two countries. However, the RSS strongly opposing the deal and even praising the Left for its stand may be problematic for the party

Urban India roots for Manmohan

Congress to gain in mid-term polls: NDTV poll

With the furor over the Indo-US nuclear deal continuing to dominate Indian politics, NDTV conducted an exclusive opinion poll to assess the people's views.Over 12,000 people from 120 constituencies were surveyed by the NDTV team, out of which 75 per cent of the respondents were from rural India.The results of the poll show that only 37 per cent of the people trust the Left's stand on the Indo-US nuclear deal.Among those polled, 56 per cent were aware of the nuclear deal, while 44 per cent were not aware of it.Out of those who are aware of the deal, 60 per cent of people want the deal to go ahead.With regard to the people's faith in Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, 63 per cent of those surveyed said that they trusted the prime minister. And 65 per cent of those who trust the PM feel that he should not resign.With reference to the prospect of mid-term polls if the Left withdraws support from the government, the NDTV poll shows the Congress as gaining ground and the BJP and the Left sliding.According to the poll, if an election were held at the moment, the Congress will gain 40 seats across the country, which will mean the party's tally will jump from 145 in 2004 to 185.The other big gainer will be the BSP; its tally is set to rise by 23 seats to 42 seats in all.Meanwhile, the BJP is expected to lose 22 seats, which implies at drop in its national tally from 138 in 2004 to 116.The other big loser will the Left Front, its tally is expected to drop from 64 seats in 2004 to 39 seats.

http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/videos.aspx?id=16484&slug=Congress+to+gain+in+mid-term+polls

Monday 27 August 2007

'Political formula for N-deal stand-off soon'

So its clear that they (Headless Chickens) are NOT interested for India, progress of India, They are NOT interested for 123 agreement.
They want to play game. Dirty game.
They are our Nuclear scientist.!!!!!
Karats & Yechors, they have 100 years old mentality.

They are destroying the progress of India.
After next election, they will not get a place to hyde.
Come on India. This is our responsibility.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Political_formula_for_N-deal_stand-off_soon/articleshow/2315385.cms

Mr Karat and friends need to realise that parliament isn't a college campus

A blog by Rajdeep Sardesai
http://www.ibnlive.com/blogs/rajdeepsardesai/1/2315/karat-and-stick.html

Another "Historic blunder"

NOW IS THE TIME
Whose party is it, anyway? Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and his comrades in Bengal would do well to ask Prakash Karat this question. And it would be much more than a rhetorical question. Mr Karat, the general secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), can thunder in New Delhi only on the strength of the party in Bengal and Kerala. Yet, the interest of Bengal’s economic development does not seem to be of much concern to Mr Karat and his band of old-fashioned ideologues, who are in the party’s central leadership. Mr Karat’s brinkmanship in New Delhi has, therefore, threatened to spoil the hopes that the chief minister has managed to raise for Bengal’s economy. The Left’s confrontation with the prime minister on the issue of the nuclear deal between India and the United States of America will hit Bengal and Mr Bhattacharjee as badly as it would destabilize Mr Manmohan Singh’s government. The new possibilities for Bengal’s economic modernization will be darkened by political rhetoric in the event of a mid-term poll. Worse, the investors, who had begun to see signs of change in the CPI(M)’s political culture, will be bitterly disappointed.

It is time Mr Bhattacharjee and his men in Bengal asked themselves if they could afford to sacrifice Bengal’s economic interests for partisan politics yet again. When he led the Left Front to its seventh successive electoral win last year, the chief minister did so with the promise of a new Bengal. His reformist agenda has been supported and supplemented by Mr Singh’s government in New Delhi. After several decades of the politics of confrontation, the Centre and the state government have worked in the spirit of mutual accommodation and understanding. Many of the new projects, such as the proposed chemical hub, the expansion and modernization of Calcutta airport and the construction of a deep-sea port in South 24 Parganas, were largely the result of this new cooperation. Even on controversial issues such as the one concerning the Tata group’s small car project in Singur and the land wars in Nandigram, the Congress and the United Progressive Alliance government at the Centre have been generally supportive of Mr Bhattacharjee.

Mr Karat has now not only dismantled this structure of cooperation but also struck a new note of hostility between the Congress and the CPI(M). It is no secret that some of the CPI(M) leaders in Bengal are upset with Mr Karat’s games. But it is not enough for them to keep their arguments to themselves. At another critical juncture in the CPI(M)’s experiments with power at the Centre, Jyoti Basu called his party’s decision a “historic blunder”. If the leaders in Bengal do not stop Mr Karat in his tracks now, they would do the state a historic injustice.

From The Telegraph.

Over to the people


Click it for bigger picture
From HT

This Deal's A STEAL



Click it for bigger picture

Click to read/enlarge

http://digital.dnaindia.com/epaperpdf/26082007/25sunday-pg16-0.pdf
http://digital.dnaindia.com/epaperpdf/26082007/25sunday-pg17-0.pdf

"It's (withdrawal of support) a demand being placed from sections of the CPM Talibans in Delhi."

Bengal CPM's differences with politburo out in the open

KOLKATA: Differences between the Bengal CPM and party bosses in Delhi over withdrawing support to the UPA government came out in the open on Sunday with two politburo members MK Pandhe and Biman Bose strongly differing on the consequences for the government if it went ahead with the Indo-US nuclear deal.

Hours after Pandhe, the Citu general secretary, said in Kolkata that his party would withdraw support if Congress went ahead with negotiations with the IAEA, his colleague and West Bengal party boss Biman Bose told the CPM state committee meeting that Pandhe's comments were not in tune with the understanding of the CPM politburo or the central committee.

Pandhe had said: "If they (the Congress) decide to go ahead with negotiations, we won't hesitate to pull the plug. This is a unanimous decision of the politburo and the central committee. Our central committee will take stock of the situation in its meeting from September 29. We have empowered the politburo to take a decision if anything happens in between." Asked how CPM would fare in the event of a snap poll, Pandhe said: "We may lose some, we may gain some seats. What is of supreme importance to us is the fact that we can't allow our country to become a strategic partner of the US."

Bose, however, struck a completely different note. He told state committee members there was no reason to worry about snap polls and that the politburo was only keeping a watch on the situation. Off the record, CPM's Bengal stalwarts who've kept the party flag flying in the state for 30 years spewed venom on Prakash Karat's hardline. One senior central committee member and MP, who spoke on condition of anonymity to TOI, called Karat's pullout threat a "Talibani stand". His words: "It's (withdrawal of support) a demand being placed from sections of the CPM Talibans in Delhi."

'Nuclear deal is best thing to have happened to India'

A must watch.

DEVIL'S ADVOCATE with RATAN TATA in CNN-IBN

http://www.ibnlive.com/news/nuclear-deal-is-best-thing-to-have-happened-to-india/47490-7.html

Sunday 26 August 2007

123 agreement

http://www.hindu.com/nic/123agreement.pdf

Left, Whose National Interest is it?



Click it for bigger picture.
From The Telegraph.

Nuke deal negotiated very intelligently: France

NEW DELHI: As the government continues to face opposition to the Indo-US nuclear deal on the domestic front, France has hailed the agreement as being a result of "very careful, cautious and intelligent" negotiations and vowed to support it at IAEA and Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).

Refusing to be drawn into the controversy over the issue, France believes Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has "very good set of arguments" to push the agreement.

French Ambassador Dominique Girard said it was for the Indian polity to decide on whether to go ahead with seeking civil nuclear cooperation with the international community and "that is no business of ours".

"I think Manmohan Singh's government and the Prime Minister himself have a very good set of arguments that they have led the negotiations with the Americans in a very careful, cautious and intelligent way," he said.

"Our view is that India has the right and the legitimacy in getting access to civilian nuclear technology given its background, given it behaviour and its attitude," said the envoy, who left for home on Sunday on completion of his term here.

Girard, whose country is keen to have civil nuclear cooperation with India, said France welcomes the Indo-US deal because "it is very much the product of the kind of thinking we had introduced" between India and its partners.

From : TOI

One more Headless

I’ve heard that they’re all made in China and they’re all toxic



I’ve heard that they’re all made in China and they’re all toxic

The nuclear quotient 123 of Our Headless Chickens

see the video in ibnlive.com

http://www.ibnlive.com/videos/47467/the-nuclear-quotient-123-and-mps-begin-bumbling.html

China’s (no big) deal

Parliament will most likely debate the 123 text next week. One big talking point: did China get a better deal? Trawling through both 123 texts, Pranab Dhal Samanta explains why the opposite is true

National Laws

China: Each party shall implement this agreement in accordance with its respective applicable treaties, national laws, regulations and license requirements concerning the use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes (Article 2.1).

India: Each party shall implement this agreement in accordance with its respective applicable treaties, national laws, regulations and license requirements concerning the use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes (Article 2.1).

Reality Check: There is considerable opposition here on the question of the emphasis on “national laws” in the India 123 agreement, thereby underlining the supremacy of the Hyde Act. As is clear, the formulation is identical in China’s case and Beijing is not complaining nor experiencing difficulty.

International Law

China: The parties recognise, with respect to the observance of this agreement, the principle of international law that provides that the party may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as a justification for its failure to perform a treaty (Article 2.1). Each proposed export pursuant to the agreement shall be subject to United States’ laws and regulations in effect at the time of each such export (Congressional Joint Resolution, Public Law 99-183, 16 December 1985).

India: This agreement shall be implemented in good faith and in accordance with the principles of international law (Article 16.4). No violation may be considered as being material unless corresponding to the definition of material violation or breach in the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (Article 14.3).

Reality Check: This above provision in the China agreement led to a major debate in the US Congress forcing the then Reagan Administration to concede, as is reflected in the Congressional joint resolution which led to a separate agreement on implementation arrangements. There is particular emphasis on laws in effect “at the time of each export”. There is no such rider for India. Instead, there is correlation drawn to international law and the Vienna convention, which the US agreed despite not being a signatory to this convention.

Certification Issues

China: No export licenses or transfers to China until that country has provided additional information concerning its nuclear non-proliferation policies and the US President certifies that China is not in violation of Section 129 (2) of the US Atomic Energy Act of 1954 regarding assistance to any non-nuclear weapon state in its weapons programme (Congressional Joint Resolution, Public Law 99-183, 16 December 1985). President certifies that China has provided such information (Presidential Determination No.98-10, 12 January 1998).

India: No such provision regarding India’s relations with third countries nor any requirement for certification.

Reality Check: Clearly, China has to consistently prove its non-proliferation credentials which has to be certified by the US President before grant of export licenses. No such provision in India’s agreement.

Verification

China: Establish mutually acceptable arrangements for exchanges of information and visits to material, facilities and components subject to this agreement (Article 8.2). Reciprocal arrangements made pursuant to Article 8 have been designed to be effective in ensuring that any nuclear material, facilities or components provided under this agreement shall be utilised solely for intended peaceful purposes (Presidential Determination No.98-10, 12 January 1998).

India: Safeguards in perpetuity in accordance with the India-specific Safeguards Agreement between India and the IAEA (Article 10.2).

Reality Check: China has agreed to allow American inspectors to visit its sites while the agreement with India is limited to only IAEA safeguards and inspections.

Fuel Supply Assurances

China: The quantity of material transferred under this Agreement shall be the quantity which the parties agree is necessary for any of the following purposes: the loading of reactors... the efficient and continuous operation of such reactors (Article 4.3).

India: Development of a strategic reserve of nuclear fuel to guard against any disruption of supply over the lifetime of India’s reactors (Article 2.2 e). Support an Indian effort to develop a strategic reserve; if despite these arrangements, a disruption of fuel supplies to India occurs, jointly convene a group of friendly supplier countries to pursue such measures as would restore fuel supply to India (Article 5.6 b).

Reality Check: The India 123 agreement clearly goes beyond the Hyde Act provision (Section 103-b) that fuel reserve should be “commensurate with reasonable reactor operating requirements”. As is evident this insertion in the Hyde Act was inspired by the China 123 agreement where the quantity must not exceed what is needed for “efficient and continuous operation”.

Reprocessing

China: Parties undertake the obligation to consider such activities favourably and agree to provide pertinent information on the plans during the consultations. Agree to refrain from actions which either party believes would pre-judge the long-term arrangements for undertaking such activities (Article 5.2). Obligation to consider favourably shall not prejudice the decision of the US to approve or disapprove such a request (Congressional Joint Resolution, Public Law 99-183, 16 December 1985).

India: Parties grant each other consent to reprocess. To bring these rights into effect, India will establish a new national reprocessing facility. Consultations and arrangements will begin within six months of a request and will be concluded within one year (Article 6.iii).

Reality Check: While US only promises to consider a Chinese request for reprocessing in the future, India has a clear and explicit consent. Incidentally, China still hasn’t got this consent.

Cessation of Cooperation

China: Shall endeavour to avoid taking any actions that affect cooperation. If either party at any time does not comply with the provisions of this agreement, the parties shall promptly hold consultations on the problem, it being understood that the other party shall have the rights to cease further cooperation (Article 7.1).

India: Right to terminate this agreement on one year’s written notice and shall provide reasons for seeking such termination. Shall consider the relevant circumstances and promptly hold consultations to address the reasons. Party seeking termination has the right to cease further cooperation if it determines that a mutually acceptable resolution has not been possible or cannot be achieved. Agree to consider carefully the circumstances that may lead to termination or cessation and take into account whether they resulted from a Party’s serious concern about a changed security environment or as a response to similar actions by other States which could impact national security (Articles 14.1 and 14.2).

Reality Check: Both agreements extend this right to either party. However, unlike in the case of China, there are provisions of one-year notice period and consultation on circumstances built into the agreement with India. In China’s case, cooperation can be stopped immediately.

‘Kill deal, kill India’s global dream’

The collapse of the Indo-US nuclear deal would be an enormous setback for Indian aspirations for a greater global status. And the more obvious results would be a continuation of India’s stunted nuclear energy programme and technology sanctions.
The more significant consequence, says Dennis Kux, author of the authoritative history of the Indo-US relationship Estranged Democracies, would be that “people will question whether India is really ready for the international big leagues”. At a time when any bookshop in the world carries half-a-dozen books on the rise of India, the end of the deal would resurrect those voices who have argued India cannot be anything but the basketcase of Asia. European diplomats say the repeated crises that have beset the deal have led many foreign observers to question “whether India is really ready to be a great world power”.
The consequence, says analyst Dennis Kux, would be that ‘people will question whether India is really ready for the international big leagues’.The deal was a symbol of India’s arrival on the global stage, says Lisa Curtis, South Asia expert of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative thinktank. “The Leftists seem to have missed the fact” that a collapse due to domestic conflict “would be a setback for India’s reputation as an emerging global power”.
Anupam Srivastava, nonproliferation expert at the University of Georgia, agrees: “The deal’s failure would signal to the US and the world that India still lacks confidence to play a major role in the international stage… that it lacks the confidence to pursue and safeguard its interests in dealing with major world powers.”
Among other things, India would be seen to have undermined some its own self-proclaimed foreign policy goals. First, New Delhi has fought to get the rights of a de facto nuclear power for 40 years now. When it asked traditional friends Russia and France to help, they refused. China was hostile to anything Pakistan could not get. Even the US said no until George W. Bush’s second term. As Indian ambassador to the US Ronen Sen recently said, India being granted a single-nation exemption to an international regime “is unprecedented” in the history of diplomacy.
Second, India has long sought to delink its international fortunes from those of Pakistan. This deal did just that. The Left may think the deal is bad, but Pakistan is begging the US for something similar. “For the first time since 1954, the US has undertaken an accord with major security implications for India and rejected Pakistan’s request for a similar agreement,” says Kux.
The collapse of the deal would signal to the world that it is pointless to do New Delhi a big favour. “It will send a signal to future (US) administrations that Indian governments cannot be counted on to get support for agreements it accepts,” says AK Mago of the US India Political Action Forum.

Thursday 23 August 2007

Thanks for the beginning....

Thanks for the beginning....

Now , we will show the way in VOTE.

Now wait & watch.

Left will not a get a place to hide.

An Indian

Now the time has come....to do something for our country

Hi,
We have read about Netaji, Bhagat Sing, Jatin Das, Khudiram Bose many more freedom fighter in our history book. Now we are INDEPENDENT country.
But time has come to fight against some force. The Left. The karat, yechuri, and many more.
This time the fight is different not for freedom.
We have to make our country more strong. we need job, education, energy.
We DON'T need BANDH, agitation, Nandigram, keshpur.............
We have to work globally. USA is not our enemy.
We have millions of job in IT, main contribution from USA.
Left is bigger threat than Pakistan.
In 30 years, West Bengal is going against growth.
Lest is there only in Kerala & WB.
First they should work for these two states, then they should work for country.
So this the time for young India to through Left......this situation will not come in 1000 years.
Vande Mataram
Jai hind,
Rang de Basanti