Indian-led UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea may be Forced to Withdraw
Nivedita Ray
January 13, 2006
The Indian-led United Nations Mission in Eritrea and Ethiopia (UNMEE), which is monitoring the five-year-old ceasefire between the two countries, is in danger of being withdrawn due to escalation in tensions. Eritrea has imposed restrictions on the movement of UNMEE personnel and has made its functioning almost impossible. The fragile peace maintained by Ethiopia and Eritrea since signing a comprehensive agreement at Algiers in December 2000 seems set to end.
The Indian-led United Nations Mission in Eritrea and Ethiopia (UNMEE), which is monitoring the five-year-old ceasefire between the two countries, is in danger of being withdrawn due to escalation in tensions. Eritrea has imposed restrictions on the movement of UNMEE personnel and has made its functioning almost impossible. The fragile peace maintained by Ethiopia and Eritrea since signing a comprehensive agreement at Algiers in December 2000 seems set to end. Tensions have grown in recent weeks with military build-ups on both sides of the border, raising fears of a repeat of their 1998-2000 border war. Though neither side appears eager for war, growing bilateral tensions cannot be dismissed lightly either. A resumption of conflict will not only have a devastating impact on these two countries but could destabilize the entire Horn of Africa region by fuelling flows of small arms to armed groups, rekindling a proxy war in Somalia and jeopardizing the peace process in Sudan.
After a costly war and five years of stalemate, patience on both the sides of the border has worn thin. The problem arose in the wake of the July 2002 ruling of the independent Boundary Commission, which was established to delimit and demarcate the contested border. It awarded the small border settlement of 'Badme' (the primary bone of contention) to Eritrea , which Ethiopia has found unacceptable. Consequently, Ethiopia has been seeking a revision of the award, though both countries had agreed in advance that the Commission's decision would be final and binding. This is the root of the stalemate that has brought the two countries back to the brink of war.
After seeking revision of the boundary award for three years, Ethiopia , in an October 2005 letter to the UN Security Council, emphasized its eagerness to engage Eritrea in a dialogue for a win-win outcome that is consistent with sustainable peace. But Eritrea saw this offer as a delaying tactic and demanded the full demarcation of the border before any dialogue began.
Apparently frustrated by the stalemate and the belief that the international community is biased towards Ethiopia , Eritrea has targeted UNMEE, which monitors the demilitarised Temporary Security Zone (TSZ) along the border. The restrictions imposed have meant that UNMEE can monitor only 60 per cent of the border, which it moreover asserts is "tense and potentially volatile." Eritrea has also demanded that UNMEE staff drawn from Western countries should leave.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan in his recent report to the Security Council has said that as a result of the restrictions imposed on UNMEE, its position is becoming increasingly untenable and that the time may be fast approaching to take difficult decisions on the Mission 's future. The report outlines six options for the Security Council's consideration ranging from maintenance of the status quo to full withdrawal of UN troops altogether. Annan said that UNMEE could buy time "for diplomatic initiatives to unblock the current dangerous stalemate," or opt for relocation, moving most of the UN staff now in Asmara to Addis Ababa . While making it clear that none of the options was perfect, Annan said that both sides would still have to fully implement UNSC Resolution 1640 passed on November 23, 2005 . The resolution threatened actions, possibly including sanctions, against both countries if, in the case of Eritrea it does not immediately rescind its flight ban, and against both parties if they do not reverse their military build-up.
Annan has asked the Security Council to impose a deadline by which the two countries would have to meet its demands. He has warned that if the parties do not fully commit and cooperate, not only the future of the mission but also the continuation of the peace process between the two nations would be called into question. He has also added that dialogue between the two parties should resume without any precondition and in good faith.
In fact it is the absence of dialogue and the military build-up on both sides of the frontier that has fuelled the friction. To avert this present warlike situation, a dialogue is necessary and before that de-escalation of political and military tensions is essential to bring about an environment favourable for dialogue. This essentially requires both countries to comply with Resolution 1640. Ethiopia has shown certain positive gestures by withdrawing some of its troops, but Eritrea has persisted with its demands.
As for the UNMEE mission, it is apparent that the world body is avoiding a hasty decision on its future. In the January 9, 2006 Council meeting, Under-Secretary-General Jean-Marie Guéhenno stated that there is a sense of urgency and that the status quo is unsustainable. But at the same time he also pointed out that there is a recognition that one should not rush to precipitous decisions. In his view, time has to be given for diplomacy to work. Mr. Guéhenno further added that the troop contributing countries were aware that a decision to withdraw could have "momentous consequences," though at some point tough decisions would have to be made if developments did not go the way they should.
As far as India is concerned, the Indian Mission to the United Nations in New York has not commented on the options given by Annan though Indian Ambassador Nirupam Sen had told a meeting of the Security Council in October 2005 that UNMEE would collapse unless the UNSC took a decisive decision. India has expressed concern about the safety and security of its peacekeepers, as the helicopter ban has complicated urgent evacuations for injured UNMEE troops who must now be taken by ambulance over treacherous roads for medical treatment.
According to the UNMEE spokesperson Gail Bindley Taylor-Sainte, the UN Secretary General has appealed to both India and Jordan to give some time for the resolution of the issue. She added that the situation would become serious if India and Jordan were to withdraw. Currently the two nations provide about 2000 of UNMEE's nearly 3300 troops. Major General Rajender Singh of India heads the mission.
In the present situation UNMEE has been almost immobilized. Its efficiency has degraded by more than 55 per cent in terms of surveillance, logistics, safety and evacuation capability necessary in view of ongoing de-mining operations and also to airlift the sick and the injured. If Eritrea continues with its restrictions, it would jeopardize the integrity of the mission and the safety of the troops. If the environment were to turn hostile and the mission's purpose gets defeated, India could think of pulling its peacekeeping troops out instead of placing their lives at risk. For its part, the Security Council needs to deal with Eritrea 's attempts to restrict UNMEE while at the same time focusing on the larger issue that is driving the conflict, viz., the boundary dispute. Re-engagement by the Algiers Group (AU, EU, UN, and US), which witnessed the June 2000 Peace agreement, is urgently required to calm the immediate crisis and move the peace process into implementation phase. If peace is to be preserved, both defusing the present crisis and addressing the root causes of the problem have to proceed in tandem.
Ethiopia, Eritrea, United Nations Mission in Eritrea and Ethiopia (UNMEE), United Nations
Africa, Latin America, Caribbean & UN
IDSA COMMENT
China's GDP & Asian strategic matrix
C Uday Bhaskar
January 09, 2006
The dramatic revision of China's GDP (Dec 20) by the National Bureau of Statistics in Beijing reveals that the dragon's economic vitality is far more robust than earlier estimated.
The dramatic revision of China's GDP (Dec 20) by the National Bureau of Statistics in Beijing reveals that the dragon's economic vitality is far more robust than earlier estimated.
Many of the anxieties about China bucking macro-econometric tenets and structural fiscal prudence seem to be misplaced and the current quip is that it is not the patient who is ill but the tools used for the diagnosis of the Chinese economy!
Estimates about any quantitative indicator pertaining to China have been famously skewed for decades and this ranges from the claims made in the early decades during the Great Leap Forward about food and steel production to famine deaths and defence expenditure and evidently Beijing is now keen to restore credibility in its official statistics.
The Chinese GDP for 2004 has been revised to $1.97 trillion and this takes it to the fourth position in the global hierarchy - just behind the US, Japan and Germany. The GDP growth rate for 2005 is estimated to be 9.4 % and may slow down fractionally in 2006 but will still be above the enticing 9% mark.
If this scorching pace is sustained, one may infer that China will overtake the US as the world's largest economy around 2035 - that is 30 years from now - telescoping the earlier estimate by about a decade.
The GDP for the last year was estimated to be $12.6 trillion and clearly there is lots of catching up to do in the next three decades but the Chinese determination to attain this perch is not in doubt and the dragon is on a canter.
It is precisely for this reason that the Asian strategic matrix is in a state of slow turbulence and the ripples were discernible at the first East-Asia Summit (EAS) held in Kuala Lumpur in mid-December. But it is not China alone that is the focus of global strategic attention and India - despite its relatively more modest showing at the hustings - is also on the radarscope.
The current buzz is that 2005 will be remembered as the year when gold, China and India were on the rise and while this is heady company, the long-term implications of the current shift in the Eurasian politico-economic tectonic plates merit careful scrutiny to identify the opportunities and challenges for the elephant.
India's GDP in 2004 was closer to $700 billion, a little over a third of China and the GDP growth rate is estimated to be about 7%, creditable given the many disparities that characterise the two political, economic and socio-cultural domains.
Due to their inherent demographic advantages and relative position in the macro-economic 'catch-up' curve, it is estimated that all indicators being equal - the world will become tripolar by about 2050-55 with China, the US and India at the high table.
In other words, China and India that once contributed to half the global wealth will return to this position after a quarter of a millennium and the global strategic centre of gravity will be back in Asia.
However, there are many caveats to this scenario and much of this was on display at the EAS where the simmering historical animosity between China and Japan on one hand and the anxiety of the smaller Asean states and South Korea on the other were on display.
The fact that the US was excluded from the summit while Russia was invited as a guest added to the chess game and the many complementarities within Eurasia including the energy potential of Moscow and a relatively fragile Central Asia were highlighted.
The most abiding fault-line is that between China and Japan and it is instructive that within a day of the Chinese GDP revision, Tokyo voiced its concern about China's defence expenditure and the military build-up. Beijing on the other hand was keen to assure its interlocutors that China's rise was "peaceful" and that a benign dragon was not an oxymoron!
This entire spectrum of strategic animation and Delhi's own politico-economic trajectory in the last decade (including the nuclear tests of May 1998) have made India a 'swing state' of critical import and this is borne out by some seminal developments of 2005 that reverberated at the EAS.
The single most important development is the re-casting of the US-India relationship by the Bush administration that was formalised in the July 18 agreement and the impact this has had on the Eurasian strategic systemic.
One may cautiously aver that if the letter and spirit of the Bush-Manmohan agreement is taken to its maximum potential, the strategic architecture of the 21st century which is poised to be one of a knowledge-based economy, committed to normative, plural democratic values will be radically different from that of the last century.
However, India would have to read the current turbulence and the tea leaves very astutely and evolve a range of pro-active measures across the board.
The primary goal is to ensure that the national discourse moves from the mind-set of an inflexible and arid interpretation of non-alignment and prickly insularity bordering on xenophobia to a more self-assured posture based on credible empirical indicators such as a vibrant democracy, rule of law, equitable economic vitality and a conviction that the Elephant is on the move.
By current projections, India will cross the $1 trillion GDP mark by 2009 and this is happy augury. The year 2005 has been an encouraging one for India from the strategic perspective and evolving meaningful partnerships with the nodes of relevance has been the leit-motif of Dr Manmohan Singh's macro- policy initiatives.
Thus, India may be seen to be moving from the inheritance of non-alignment, which had its validity in the earlier systemic of bi-polarity and the state-regulated command economy, to a more flexible and pragmatic posture of being meaningfully 'unaligned' vis-à-vis the major powers.
This was the refrain at the summit meetings with the US, China, Russia, EU and Japan at the political level and in the interactions with the global business community.
However this potential for meaningful Asian vibrancy that maximises India's interests can be realised only if Delhi deals with its complex domestic and regional challenges both expeditiously and prudently. Strategic acumen in synergising state capability with the aspirations of civil society is imperative.
China
East Asia
IDSA COMMENT
Prospects for Indo-US cooperation in civilian nuclear energy
Arundhati Ghose
January 06, 2006
When the Prime Minister of India and the President of the United States signed a joint Statement on July 18 last year, which included, inter alia, a move towards lifting the three decades old regime of technology denials on India and an implicit recognition of India's nuclear weapons programme, negative reactions were expected: disbelief and distrust in India, and outrage from the non-proliferation lobby in the US, still deeply convinced of the need, even after thirty years, to "cap, roll back and eliminate" India's nuclear weapons ambitions.
When the Prime Minister of India and the President of the United States signed a joint Statement on July 18 last year, which included, inter alia, a move towards lifting the three decades old regime of technology denials on India and an implicit recognition of India's nuclear weapons programme, negative reactions were expected: disbelief and distrust in India, and outrage from the non-proliferation lobby in the US, still deeply convinced of the need, even after thirty years, to "cap, roll back and eliminate" India's nuclear weapons ambitions.
For some time, in particular before the Seventh Review Conference of the NPT in May 2005, ideas were floated on how the "problem three" - the three countries that had stayed out of the Treaty, particularly India, could be brought within its ambit. Amongst those who preoccupied themselves with this issue were analysts such as Strobe Talbott and Geoge Perkovich. However, while Perkovich was of the view that India should on no account be given access to nuclear fuel or technology, the former had in fact referred to the possibility of 'permitting' "the government in New Delhi to receive some of the international help it seeks in developing its civilian nuclear programme"- but, in exchange for India accepting the CTBT, stopping the production of fissile material, accepting safeguards on its nuclear facilities etc. Talbott also linked the arrangement with India to a similar one with Pakistan. It is no wonder that his wish list did not fly. The reason for referring to these proposals is to bring out clearly the differences and similarities with the agreement finally reached in July 2005. For the first time it appeared that an American Administration had accepted a relationship with India on its merits: recognizing India's economic and strategic interests, and the US' own interests in supporting the growth of India's strength and power in Asia.
Since July, however, the pressures from the naysayers has been sustained, vociferous and intense, more so in the US than in India. In India, the serious objections come from ideological quarters which view with dismay the growing closeness of relations between India and the US. This does not appear to have affected the Government's policies in this regard substantially, yet. The other set of doubters in India, much less influential than the former, base their reservations not so much on the 'deal' itself, as the viability of its implementation; this issue will be visited later.
The attack on the 'deal' in the US is currently focused on trying to influence the US Congress as it considers approval (or rejection) of the US Administration's proposals, though there are also efforts to influence international opinion against any exceptional treatment of India by the non-proliferation regime. Both Pakistan and perhaps China seem to be part of this effort, given latest news reports on Pakistan's approach to the IAEA for permission to engage in civilian nuclear cooperation to meet its energy requirements. Since this is obviously unlikely to be accepted, given the A Q Khan history, its only purpose could be to influence NSG members against the proposal to 'island' India within the regime.
The efforts of the US non-proliferation lobby seems to operate on two assumptions and on one, perhaps deliberate, omission: most important, it assumes that in the event of the 'deal' "being modified or (to be) delayed or perhaps (if it) fade a bit," Indo-US relations, particularly strategic relations, will develop normally. This somewhat hopeful prognostication was made by a representative of the Monterey Institute at a recent interaction with India's Foreign Secretary. That this was not merely wishful thinking but egregious reasoning was made clear by the Foreign Secretary, both in his comprehensive presentation when he referred to suggested "improvements" to the Agreement as 'deal-breakers', as well as in his candid and well-articulated responses to questions raised during the interaction. He concluded his presentation by stating that "India US relations are at a crossroads. We have two clear choices before us. One is the road we have travelled before, one that will maintain the status quo and the distance between our two democracies."
The second assumption is that India, in its eagerness to avail of cheaper and higher quality uranium as fuel for its nuclear programmes, and its 'ambition' to be recognized as a Nuclear Weapon State, would be vulnerable to pressures to curtail its strategic programme. This is a road already travelled.
The glaring omission in the arguments of the non-proliferation lobby is the crucial importance, to the US, of India's energy needs; if nuclear energy is not easily available, the gap in requirements would necessarily have to be filled by hydrocarbons, adding pressure to the global market, not to mention the establishment of linkages with countries which would be more forthcoming in energy cooperation. Ashley Tellis has identified US interests that are served by nuclear cooperation with India, in his testimony to the US House Committee on International relations; overlooking this aspect when discussing the agreement is surely a major lacuna.
Would the opposition, within India and in the US, succeed in derailing the deal? One cannot predict the outcome of a work in progress. It needs to be noted, however, that the US Administration and the Indian Government appear to be serious in pursuing the agreement, whatever doubts think tanks, analysts and political groups may have. All signs appear to be propitious: India has joined ITER, the NSG has had a first round of discussions on exceptionalising India, US Congressional hearings have started; India has presented a blueprint for the separation of its civilian and non-civilian nuclear facilities, and appears to have made some significant advances in identifying the kind of safeguards which could apply. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran, in his interaction referred to above, said: "As long as there is a guarantee of assurance of lifetime supply of fuel, I don't think India would have a problem with lifetime safeguards." This goes a long way to meeting an issue that had been raised by Robert Joseph of the US State Department Non-proliferation department. The US response has apparently been "good", "positive" surprised at the thoroughness of the Indian proposal. So the deal may in fact go through. The problems, in my view, will then begin.
Firstly, India will have to enter into negotiations with the IAEA regarding placing civilian facilities under safeguards; even if the Board of Governors accepts a new type of safeguard for a non-NPT country. For precisely this reason, inspections are likely to be more intrusive and frequent than in the case of the other recognized Nuclear Weapon States. Perhaps for a while this may indeed be the case, but given financial constraints, and if India is able to convince the IAEA, as it has been able to convince the US, that it is a 'responsible' nuclear weapon State, the irritation of inspections might diminish. There is no doubt that the non-proliferation regime, if not the NPT itself, will eventually have to change to adapt itself to the reality of a fourth category, NWS, NNWS, non-NPT countries and India.
Secondly, India has agreed to sign an Additional Protocol; the question surely arises, additional to what? Its original safeguards agreements with the IAEA are Inf.Circ. 66 agreements; the new safeguards would be a variation. Again, it is my own feeling that this would not be an insuperable obstacle. One of the main worries would, however, remain, though in the realm of contingency and some speculation: would our unilateral moratorium on testing stand if one of the P-5, China, for example, or even the US, conducts a test? If, on the basis of reciprocity, India then carries out her own tests, would the arrangement hold? Would supplies of fuel be disrupted leading to an abrogation of the safeguards agreement with the IAEA? These are perhaps bogeys of the future, and need not be addressed now; the point is, however, even if, and when, the July 18 deal is through, there will be years of careful navigation required.
One cannot resist a last thought: in the event the deal does not go through, what would be the consequences? It has been calculated that the impact on India's energy programme would not be so severe as to adversely affect our economic growth; the impact, as has already been pointed out, would be on Indo-US relations as a whole and its potential for economic and commercial interaction. There would also be a possible change in the course of India's foreign policy. In an age of inevitable globalisation, can India again become inward looking? The domestic political fall-out would be greatest; it, therefore, does not fail to surprise, that there is so little political awareness- raising in the country. It is imperative that the issue be taken up politically, by the Government and its allies, if only to forestall the possibility of a backlash.
Civilian and Strategic Nuclear Facilities of India
A. Gopalakrishnan
January 05, 2006
One of the major objectives of the United States in entering into the Indo-US nuclear co-operation agreement is to bring about an early freezing of the Indian weapon-usable nuclear materials stock at the minimum possible level. India, in turn, obviously wants to retain all the accumulated inventory of such materials, as well as the facilities to produce the additional material we consider essential for a minimum deterrence, out of IAEA safeguards. Obviously, each country wants to manoeuvre the separation plan to suit its specific objective.
One of the major objectives of the United States in entering into the Indo-US nuclear co-operation agreement is to bring about an early freezing of the Indian weapon-usable nuclear materials stock at the minimum possible level. India, in turn, obviously wants to retain all the accumulated inventory of such materials, as well as the facilities to produce the additional material we consider essential for a minimum deterrence, out of IAEA safeguards. Obviously, each country wants to manoeuvre the separation plan to suit its specific objective.
Despite the façade that the deal is progressing well, it is clear that most of the originally perceived differences between the two sides are very much present even now. It appears that the US side feels that certain facilities, especially reactors, which India has proposed to retain in the strategic group really belong in the civilian list. In addition, it is clear that the US considers India's time schedule for bringing these facilities in phases into the civilian list is too stretched out, and that we should indeed place them under safeguards at a more rapid pace.
Dhruva and CIRUS are the two weapons-grade plutonium producing reactors which are crucial to the Indian strategic programme. It is now known that Canada has formally asked India & the US that CIRUS, which was built with Canadian assistance under an agreement that it will be used only for peaceful uses, should now be placed in the civilian list. The US side must have raised this issue with Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran during his recent visit to Washington, and he perhaps had no option but to reject this demand.
India is using the limited uranium enrichment capacity available at the Rare Materials Plant (RMP) near Mysore for producing the medium enrichment uranium fuel for our nuclear submarine reactors. Since this plant can be upgraded to produce high-enrichment weapons-grade uranium as well, the US could be asking us to place this facility and the submarine reactor(s) under the civilian list. This, of course, will not be acceptable to India. Similarly , the US may be wanting us to put the laser enrichment programme at the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology (CAT), the De-tritiation Plants in BARC and IGCAR where we separate out tritium from irradiated heavy water, the Beryllium Production Facility at Vashi which supports the weapon-core making, the Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre (VECC), Kolkatta where the proton-beam bombardment of Lithium-6 could be done for tritium production, etc. under safeguards. But, India should insist on keeping all the facilities under the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) and the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research (IGCAR) within our military list and away from safeguards, since they are all either R&D facilities or meant clearly for the use of the weapons programme.
Of the 15 operating nuclear power reactors of India, 4 are already under IAEA safeguards. The remaining 11 are pressurized heavy water reactors (PHWRs) which are currently not under safeguards. Of the total 8 power reactors under construction, the two Russian units at Koodankulam are already earmarked under safeguards, leaving 5 PHWRs and the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) which are currently out of safeguards. When and if the Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR) is built, we need to keep it outside the civilian list, because of its developmental nature.
There is a lack of clarity in the public mind about our indigenous natural uranium resources. It is true that we may not have enough processed natural uranium to fuel the five (5) PHWRs currently under construction, when they are ready for initial fuelling in 2006-2008. But, the highest officials of the AEC now reconfirm the view that we have enough natural uranium ores in the country to fuel 10,000 MWe worth of PHWRs, for their life span of about 40 years. The mismatch between production and consumption of uranium has happened because the government approvals for the PHWRs and their construction have speeded up in the last ten years, while the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) still continued to lag behind in their minerals exploration and uranium mining tasks. While waiting for these activities to pick up momentum in the coming five years, the DAE should go ahead and place under IAEA safeguards the 5 PHWRs now in construction, from their dates of initial fuelling with imported natural uranium, so that there need not be any delay in electricity generation. From the time we enter into this Indo-US nuclear deal, our limited indigenous natural uranium will have to be used judiciously for fuelling the Dhruva & CIRUS reactors to the extent we need additional weapons-grade plutonium, and in the first AHWR developmental unit, while the remaining should be used in the un-safeguarded PHWRs for producing as much reactor-grade plutonium as we can to sustain the operation of the first PFBR(s). The phased placement of the PHWRs under safeguards can be determined only on the basis of this logic, leaving sufficient room for uncertainties in fresh uranium supplies from our mines. In short, if a PHWR of ours can be run with Indian uranium, there is no hurry in placing it in the civil list, because it is then producing plutonium which will serve as feed material for our un-safeguarded breeder reactor(s).
Thus, the right stand to take at this stage is to keep the Indian fast breeder programme outside the IAEA safeguards, by including it in the strategic facilities group. We may revisit this decision after we have commissioned and operated the first PFBR at full power and also stabilized its associated technology programmes connected with fast reactor fuel fabrication, reprocessing of spent-fuel to extract U-233, and the system improvements we may make on the basis of initial operational experience. This decision, however, has its consequent repercussions. The initial PFBR(s) in that case will have to rely on the already accumulated reactor-grade plutonium, and the future continued production of similar material from the un-safeguarded PHWRs, for the initial fuel loading and subsequent annual re-fuelling. This would require us to negotiate and keep all the presently available un-safeguarded reactor-grade plutonium in the PHWR spent-fuel out of IAEA safeguards, even while we may agree to put most of these PHWRs under safeguards, in phases, over a stretched period of time. As and when we wish to put a PHWR into the civilian list and IAEA safeguards, we must first discharge all the Indian spent-fuel in it for storage in our strategic group, and re-fuel the reactor entirely with fresh imported fuel. This way we ensure that our limited indigenous uranium resources are not burned up in a safeguarded reactor nor are we giving away part-of the earlier un-safeguarded spent-fuel. In the long run, whether India can operate enough number of un-safeguarded first-stage breeders based on depleted uranium-plutonium fuel, thereby breeding enough U-233 in their blanket regions to transition into the ultimate self-sustaining stage of thorium-U-233 breeders, is entirely dependent on how much more indigenous uranium we can find from an aggressive prospecting for minerals.
Indian uranium, thorium and rare metal mining operations, mined ores, and their processing plants have to be outside IAEA safeguards. Thus, all facilities of the Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) and the Indian Rare Earths Limited (IREL) should go into the strategic group. Also, we have to ensure that the required minimum number of production plants for heavy water and reprocessing facilities to extract plutonium or U-233 from the spent-fuel are kept outside the civilian list, to match the requirements of the number of research & power reactors we are keeping in the strategic list at any point in time. This may not be too difficult because we have nine heavy water plants and four operational spent-fuel reprocessing plants, and some of these could be put under safeguards, while others are kept in the strategic list. When it comes to the fuel fabrication facilities, there are different processes and plants involved. Most of these are in the Nuclear Fuel Complex (NFC) at Hyderabad. At NFC, however, a few of the critical plants are not duplicated, and today they serve both the civilian & strategic requirements. Here, India will have no other option but to keep one-of-a-kind facilities at NFC, Hyderabad outside safeguards, until such time that duplicate facilities are planned and constructed.
A. Gopalakrishnan is former Chairman of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board of the Government of India.
India-US Relations, Nuclear
Nuclear and Arms Control
IDSA COMMENT
Implementing the Indo-US. Nuclear Deal: A Pyrrhic Struggle
P. R. Chari
January 05, 2006
Two rounds of negotiations have been held between Indian and US officials to negotiate implementing the Indo-US nuclear agreement, embedded in the Joint Statement issued by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President George W Bush on July 18, 2005. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran's talks with Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas D Burns in Washington last week was the second round.
Two rounds of negotiations have been held between Indian and US officials to negotiate implementing the Indo-US nuclear agreement, embedded in the Joint Statement issued by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President George W Bush on July 18, 2005. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran's talks with Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas D Burns in Washington last week was the second round. It ended with ritual incantations that they achieved "considerable advance" and "very positive forward movement" in an "encouraging environment." But, they needed to meet again to iron out differences before President Bush visits India in early 2006.
A parsing of the nuclear deal informs that the Bush administration has pledged to "seek agreement from Congress to adjust U.S. laws and policies, and…. [to] work with friends and allies to adjust international regimes to enable full civil nuclear energy and trade with India, including but not limited to expeditious consideration of fuel supplies for safeguarded nuclear reactors at Tarapur." In consequence, the Bush administration needs to promote India's case before Congress for being excluded from the constraints of US laws, and persuade the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) to dilute its guidelines for permitting nuclear exports to India by its members. These effusive statements cannot disguise the reality that India must be satisfied that the changes contemplated in US laws and guidelines of the NSG will enable it to obtain civilian nuclear energy cooperation in return for placing segments of its nuclear programme under IAEA safeguards.
Further, the US legislation comprises the US Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act (1978) and consequent amendments to the US Atomic Energy Act (1954), which expressly prohibit the United States from pursuing civilian nuclear cooperation with countries that are not NPT signatories or have not placed all their nuclear facilities under fullscope safeguards. This legislation was framed after India exploded its 'peaceful' nuclear device in 1974, which dramatises the internal problems facing the Bush administration in making India an exception to its prohibitions. A radical shift has obviously occurred in American perceptions, since the pre-conditions that India must sign the NPT or accept fullscope safeguards upon its entire nuclear programme before supply of nuclear materials, equipment or technology could be effected is not being insisted upon.
For its part, India has agreed to "identifying and separating [its] civilian and military nuclear facilities and programs in a phased manner and filing a declaration regarding its civilian facilities with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); taking a decision to place voluntarily its civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards; [and] signing and adhering to an Additional Protocol with respect to nuclear facilities." India has also agreed to continue its unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing, working towards the conclusion of a Fissile Material Cut Off Treaty, refraining from transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technologies, passing comprehensive export control legislation and adhering by NSG and Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) guidelines.
These dual sets of obligations are to be "reciprocal," but this is an intrinsic impossibility. An element of tentativeness is built into the American obligations since the Bush administration has to persuade the US Congress and the 44 countries comprising the Nuclear Suppliers Group to make India an exception to their norms, laws, rules and regulations. India can undertake its side of the bargain by executive decision. Hence, India is at a negotiating disadvantage, since the steps taken by it must satisfy not only the executive and legislative branches of the US administration but also the IAEA and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. These negotiating disadvantages provide the backdrop for "identifying and separating [its] civilian and military nuclear facilities and programs in a phased manner and filing a declaration regarding its civilian facilities with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)."
Indian official interlocutors have denied that the Indo-US nuclear deal would compromise India's strategic requirements, and that the identification and separation of civilian and military nuclear facilities would be autonomously decided, and not be adjudicated upon by the United States. Unfortunately, this is not true. The US Ambassador to India, David Mulford, made it clear that India must submit a 'credible' plan for separating its civilian and military facilities before the US administration places this plan before Congress for considering the proposed scheme and taking steps to amend the concerned legislation. The difficulty before India in effecting this identification and separation exercise is that the civilian and military facilities within its nuclear programme have been shaded over. Unlike other nuclear weapon states, India has not dedicated nuclear facilities for military purposes, and the same facilities were used for both civil and military purposes.
For instance, the 40 MW CIRUS reactor imported from Canada had manufactured the weapons grade plutonium used in the 1974 Pokharan I (PNE) device. It has been used for military purposes since, but also produces radioactive isotopes for medical, agricultural and other civil applications. Whether it should be classified as a civilian or military facility is arguable, but this controversy can escalate if the issue is raised that CIRUS was supplied by Canada for peaceful purposes. The issue whether it can be used for plainly military purposes has not been satisfactorily resolved to date. A problem therefore arises with identifying CIRUS for either civilian or military purposes. Will India be able to take an autonomous decision in this regard? Or will it become an issue for negotiation with the United States?
A similar problem arises with India's Fast Breeder Reactor programme on which its Bhabha-envisioned three-phase atomic energy programme hinges. The first phase was premised on building natural-uranium fuelled reactors to produce power. The plutonium by-product was to be used in the second-stage reactors along with thorium - abundantly available in India - for producing uranium-233 to be used in third-stage breeder reactors fuelled with U-233 and thorium. Burning this fuel would produce more U-233 than consumed by fission, thereby breeding the U-233 fuel. For the non-proliferation lobby, Bhabha's vision amounts to a strategy for unbridled proliferation. India would need to accept this logic as its Fast Breeders are intended to augment its atomic power programme. Further, it has agreed to "working with the United States for the conclusion of a multilateral Fissile Material Cut Off Treaty." More broadly, how will India proceed further with its nuclear weapons programme without further testing its nuclear devices with a moratorium on nuclear testing in place?
The harsh truth is that the parties involved in any negotiations bring their vulnerabilities to the negotiating table. The United States is undoubtedly driven by larger geo-strategic considerations - read, the need to contain China and construct a new security architecture for Asia - to broaden its relations with India. But its foreign policy considerations are tempered by its non-proliferation concerns. Can the steadily weakening Bush administration ignore the powerful constituencies within the American policy elite that are impelled by non-proliferation concerns, and forge the bipartisan consensus needed by the US Congress to amend its non-proliferation-related laws? Should the Bush Administration falter in this enterprise, how will it persuade the other members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group, which includes China, to except India from their guidelines to allow nuclear exports by NSG members to India? China would, most likely, demand the same concessions for Pakistan. Russia might demand similar concessions to proceed with its lucrative nuclear exports to Iran.
What are India's vulnerabilities? These relate, unequivocally, to its diminishing supplies of low enriched uranium for its Tarapur reactors (only a few months' supply are left), and dwindling supplies of natural uranium for India's extensive PHWRs programme (this will last for around one year if these reactors work to full capacity.) How did India get into this quagmire? Quite evidently, insufficient attention was paid to these magnifying problems while hoping that low enriched uranium and natural uranium supplies would somehow become available with the efflux of time. Was the political leadership cognizant of these vulnerabilities in India's high profile nuclear programme? India was being targeted by the international nuclear regime, and the proclaimed policy was to rely on indigenous technology and resources. Why then did this situation develop? A better explanation is needed from the concerned authorities.
That said, how should India work out its nuclear deal with the United States? Time is against the Indian side due to dwindling supplies of low-enriched and natural uranium. A clear vision of India's nuclear programme is needed; ideally, it should serve both its security and energy interests. But a choice is being forced on India. Must it develop deterrent capabilities to emulate the other nuclear weapon powers? Or, pragmatically restrict its deterrent to Pakistan? Should it abandon its grandiose futuristic Bhabha plan to progress its light water and PHWR programme and meet its current power needs by imports of enriched and natural uranium? Practical and realistic answers to these questions would ease the problem of identification and separation of civilian and military facilities, and operationalizing the Indo-US. nuclear deal.
India-US Relations, Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Nuclear
Nuclear and Arms Control
IDSA COMMENT
Japan-China Rift and East Asian Security
G. V. C. Naidu
January 05, 2006
The feud between the two Asian giants is getting shriller. No sooner China had announced its 'peaceful development' policy through a White Paper than the Japanese foreign minister voiced his concern about the 'considerable threat' that Beijing posed. The latest spat in the running battle of charges and counter-charges is the controversial suicide by a consular staff in Japan's embassy at Beijing. The frosty relationship between the two countries is bound to cast a big shadow over the entire East Asian region in the coming years.
The feud between the two Asian giants is getting shriller. No sooner China had announced its 'peaceful development' policy through a White Paper than the Japanese foreign minister voiced his concern about the 'considerable threat' that Beijing posed. The latest spat in the running battle of charges and counter-charges is the controversial suicide by a consular staff in Japan's embassy at Beijing. The frosty relationship between the two countries is bound to cast a big shadow over the entire East Asian region in the coming years.
If one were to evaluate major developments in the Asia Pacific in 2005, three stand out: the first-ever East Asia Summit (EAS); India's increased entrenchment in Asia Pacific regional affairs; and further deterioration of relations between Japan and China. Among these, the worsening row between Japan and China will perhaps have a far greater impact on regional security and economic architecture. Obviously, no East Asian community or economic integration can ever fructify so long as these two giants remain at loggerheads. The Chinese (and South Korean) refusal to meet Prime Minister Koizumi on the sidelines of ASEAN Plus Three summit for an informal trilateral meeting, as has been the normal practice, is an indication of how deep the gulf has become. But what really ails the relationship?
Many attribute the recent downslide to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's insistence on visiting the controversial Yasukuni shrine where an estimated 2.5 million war dead (and a thousand or so non-Japanese) who fought for Japan since the Meiji Restoration, including 14 Class A criminals implicated for their role in World War II, are enshrined. China's outrage is a result of what it perceives to be Japan's failure to fully atone for the sins it committed during the occupation of many Asian countries before and during the War. Japan interprets Chinese outbursts as pressure tactics to compel it not to assume a larger political role so that Beijing emerges as the leader of East Asia. While it is true that China and South Korea in particular bore the brunt of Japanese atrocities, there is no way really to measure how genuinely remorseful Japanese leaders have been for their past actions despite nearly 19 official 'apologies' so far.
Though tension has been intensifying in the last few years, bilateral relations probably hit their nadir in April 2005 when violent demonstrations broke out in most major cities across China. The ostensible reason for these protests was Japanese approval of a textbook for high school students (one of 27 cleared so far), which was perceived to be rightwing-inspired and which glosses over what Japanese soldiers did during their occupation of China.
A more serious problem is going to be the strong nationalist feelings a series of events in the last few years have fuelled. This can not only badly undermine regional peace and stability but also affect the economic dynamism that is sweeping across the region.
China is perturbed by what it perceives as attempts by Japan to cleverly use the post-9/11 political environment to break free from self-imposed shackles and remilitarise itself. Japan, for its part, maintains that China's inexorable military modernisation with double-digit defence allocations is causing concern especially because of the non-transparent nature of the Chinese system.
It is true that Japanese security policies are undergoing profound changes and it has taken certain decisions that were unthinkable a few years ago. These changes, however, need to be seen in the context of the changing global and regional security matrix. Ideally, Tokyo would prefer cold war arrangements from which it benefited enormously to continue, but circumstances have changed fundamentally. It is no secret that the US, even as it tries to restructure its forward deployments in East Asia, is exerting enormous pressure on Japan to undertake greater security responsibilities and provide corresponding contributions to justify and sustain the security alliance. For instance, after dithering for nearly two decades, Japan decided in May 2003 to join the US-led ballistic missile defense programme (BMD) and has contributed, more symbolic than substantial, to the American war efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq.
There are other developments as well that have emerged as major security challenges for Japan. The whole debate in South Korea over its 'balancing role' in the future, implying irrelevance of the American troop presence in that country, might tilt the strategic balance against Japan. Further, China's forceful moves on the disputed Senkakus, repeated Chinese naval incursions into the Japanese territorial waters, continued stalemate over the North Korean nuclear issue, and not so subtle Chinese attempts to marginalise Japan from East Asian affairs have unnerved the Japanese. While these have forced Japan to initiate certain measures, they are also seen as opportunities to chart a new course for the country.
There is no doubt that there has been a rightward tilt in the Japanese polity as testified by Koizumi's thumping victory in the September 2005 lower house elections. In fact, though foreign policy issues hardly figured in the pre-election debates, in hindsight it is obvious that China's attitude played a significant role in influencing voters. The impression that Koizumi could stand up to the Chinese, by naming China as a potential threat in the December 2004 New Defence Programme Guidelines (NDPG), by stating Taiwan as a common security concern for Japan and the US in February 2005, and by persisting with visits to the Yasukuni, was instrumental in the ruling LDP's landslide victory. At the same time, what needs underscoring is the maturity with which Japan has reacted to China's hostile actions.
If one were to surmise that Koizumi's Yasukuni sojourns are the root cause of the current rift between Japan and China, it will be like missing the wood for the trees. There are several other fundamental reasons. One, for the first time in the last several centuries Japan has to contend with the rise of a new power centre in its vicinity. Two, if history is any guide, every time there is a rise of a new power it invariably tends to disturb the existing status quo, which means a rising China would tend to be ambitious and would aspire for greater strategic space, political rhetoric about 'peaceful development' notwithstanding. No wonder Japan feels threatened.
Unlike the US-Soviet rivalry, in the case Japan and China there is a strong economic dimension. Bilateral trade has surpassed US $200 billion (including Hong Kong), thus making China Japan's largest trading partner. Japanese have invested nearly $70 billion in China and Tokyo has extended over $33 billion as Official Development Assistance (ODA) to Beijing. Yet, strong economic interdependence has failed to alleviate political differences. On the contrary, recent data suggests that uneasy political relations are beginning to render even economics 'cold.' Japanese exports, which rose by 20 per cent annually since 2001, have slowed to 3.2 per cent in the first eight months of 2005. Further, in the first half of 2005, Japanese direct investments declined by 8.2 per cent over the same period last year. Surely, with the explosion of Chinese trade, today the Chinese market is more important for Japan than the other way round. There could be many reasons for the slow down, but the role of 'cold political relations' cannot be ignored.
What does it all mean to India? Japanese have become more vocal about India as an alternative to China in the sphere of economic interaction. But Chinese aver that India is nowhere near the kind of opportunities that they can offer. It is too simplistic to infer that a loss to China is an automatic gain for India, though soured relations between Japan and China are showing their effect on Japan-India relations, which have qualitatively improved in the recent past especially in the politico-strategic field. India has also caught the attention of Japanese investors, not necessarily because of Tokyo's political problems with Beijing but because of economic opportunities that India offers. The betterment of India's relations with Japan should be seen in the context of the changing East Asian environment and India's potential to contribute to regional stability and development because New Delhi and Tokyo share common interests and concerns and more importantly have no clashing interests. The strategic dimension among Japan, China and India is something that appears to be unavoidable.
India, Japan, China
East Asia
IDSA COMMENT
Intel Inside: Securing IT Cities
C Uday Bhaskar
January 03, 2006
Bangalore's prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) was the venue of an attack by an unidentified gun-toting killer on December 28. Delhi based professor, Professor M.C. Puri - participating in an international conference - was killed and four other scientists seriously injured in the attack. The incident must be termed as one of 'terrorism', even if the identity of the perpetrators is to be definitively established, for it amounted to the pre-meditated killing of innocent people.
Bangalore's prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) was the venue of an attack by an unidentified gun-toting killer on December 28. Delhi based professor, Professor M.C. Puri - participating in an international conference - was killed and four other scientists seriously injured in the attack. The incident must be termed as one of 'terrorism', even if the identity of the perpetrators is to be definitively established, for it amounted to the pre-meditated killing of innocent people. The incident has led to a sombre, reflective mood setting in just as the country prepares for the traditional New Year festivities.
Puri was the hapless and unwitting victim of a pattern of terrorist related violence in India that goes back to the late '80s. From misplaced sub-nationalism to irredentism stoked by external agencies, the causal factors for terrorism in India have been varied and complex and some instances of state complicity have compounded the South Asian narrative. An abiding and distinctive characteristic of the Indian experience is the manner in which the Pakistan security establishment has used a low intensity conflict and terrorist methodology to degrade India's internal security.
In the post 9-11 global security context, Southern Asia has morphed into a complex lattice of terrorist groups and nodes, some of which are linked to major international outfits - such as the International Islamic Front - committed to a supra-national, radical religious agenda. At this juncture, the finger of suspicion points to a reasonably well-established terrorist group that has a network in South India. But in the absence of firm evidence, hasty emotive conclusions must be avoided. The use of an AK-47 by itself does not axiomatically lead to one group or the other, for such firearms are now available in many parts of India, with local militias and criminal gangs. Yet much of the circumstantial evidence points to groups that have distorted Islam. It merits recall that last week the Delhi Police arrested three alleged HuJI (Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami) terrorists who made an instructive confession with a Bangalore link.
India's economic vitality and its information technology affinity have received considerable notice in recent years, so much so that the infrastructure associated with this sector are deemed to be the new nodes of national prosperity, bestowing upon cities such as Bangalore, Chennai and Hyderabad, a high-value status. Consequently they have figured as potential targets on the terrorist list (for any terrorist attack seeks high visibility to maximise the 'terror' impact on society). This has been noted by security agencies. Interrogation of the terrorists arrested in Delhi revealed that they had received training in Bangladesh, which is perceived to be the hub for coordinating operations in south India and parts of Southeast Asia, and that - after a 21-day training capsule - a group of them were instructed to target software centres in Bangalore and Hyderabad.
This is not to suggest a direct link between the IISc incident and the Delhi investigations, but to highlight to the pattern that can be discerned in the larger footprint of terrorism, which will have to be investigated carefully but resolutely. The current Bangalore incident was preceded by the terrorist attacks in Delhi in October on Diwali-Id eve. Both developments raised the same question - more often than not in a near hysterical manner by the audio-visual medium - is India a soft-state that will remain a victim of terrorism into perpetuity?
Empirical data does show that India is high up on the list of nations affected by terrorism, but it is equally true that it is in a politico-geographical framework that is unique. The immediate neighbourhood comprises regimes that are either unable, or unwilling, to quarantine the terrorist structures that target India. In the worst case scenario, they actually abet such constituencies. The Bangalore incident once again draws attention to the urgent need to evolve a national strategy to deal with the scourge of terrorism that will redress the existing inadequacies by way of legislation, security skills, investigation procedures and speedy convictions. An information strategy that is relevant to 24-hours news channels is also called for.
This gap in the Indian response matrix to terrorism is reflective of the nation's diffident strategic culture which has the Somnath syndrome still embedded within it. Every attack or assault is dealt with reactively. But Bangalore symbolises a new and resurgent India. A strategic culture, in sync with the new reality, should evolve. Civil society has a very important role to play in combating terrorism, and the current wave of anger and frustration must be distilled into a steely national resolve, so that the terrorists in this case are tracked and brought to book speedily. This is the New Year resolution that will ensure that Professor Puri didn't die in vain.
Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami (HuJI)
Terrorism & Internal Security
IDSA COMMENT
Russia and Uzbekistan Sign "Treaty of Alliance Relations"
Jyotsna Bakshi
December 27, 2005
The Russia-Uzbekistan Treaty of Alliance Relations signed by President Vladimir Putin and President Islam Karimov at a glittering Kremlin ceremony on November 14, 2005 marked the completion of a full circle in Tashkent's relations with Moscow following the collapse of the Soviet Union. It also signified the Central Asian Republic's return to the Russian orbit.
The Russia-Uzbekistan Treaty of Alliance Relations signed by President Vladimir Putin and President Islam Karimov at a glittering Kremlin ceremony on November 14, 2005 marked the completion of a full circle in Tashkent's relations with Moscow following the collapse of the Soviet Union. It also signified the Central Asian Republic's return to the Russian orbit.
With 26 million people, Uzbekistan is the most populous Central Asian country. Also, a sizeable number of ethnic Uzbeks live in neighbouring states. Located in the very heart of Central Asia and having common borders with all other Central Asian states, it occupies a very important position in the region. Uzbekistan is also richly endowed with natural resources like gold, uranium, gas and oil. It is the fifth largest cotton producer and the second biggest exporter of cotton in the world. Though its oil reserves are not as large as that of its neighbour Kazakhstan, Uzbek oil reserves are still a substantial 297 million barrels (according to the CIA's The World Factbook). With the biggest army in the region, Tashkent has been widely seen as entertaining ambitions of becoming the regional hegemon in the post-Soviet period. Moreover, Uzbekistan - in comparison with other Central Asian states - went the farthest in asserting its independence from Moscow. In March 1999, it withdrew from the Russia-led CIS Collective Security Pact and the Uzbek military began to be trained by the United States. However, on December 11, 1999, Russia and Uzbekistan signed a bilateral military and military-technical cooperation agreement. In June 2001, Uzbekistan joined the Shanghai Co-operation Organization (SCO), which was interpreted as reflecting the Uzbek desire to manoeuvre between Russia and China. The Uzbek elite believes that it is the major bulwark against the spread of political Islam and Islamic militancy in the former Soviet Central Asia.
Unlike Russia and many other former Soviet republics that had opted for economic "shock therapy," Uzbekistan did not suffer any steep decline in its GDP in the initial post-Soviet period largely due to its persistence with the Soviet-era economic structures. President Karimov was often quoted for having emphasized that "one should not destroy the old home till a new home is built". By the middle of the 1990s, however, the Uzbek economic model appeared to have lost steam. Socio-economic distress faced by the bulk of the population is seen as the Achilles' heel of the current system, which may be exploited by religious extremists in the absence of political space allowed to secular political opposition.
Uzbek Policy Zigzags
In the post-September 11 period, Uzbekistan was the first among the Central Asian Republics (CARs) to offer a military base at Karshi Khanabad to the USA for supporting military operations in Afghanistan in the war against terrorism. The US deployed about 1,000 military personnel at Karshi-Khanabad also known as the K-2 base. During President Karimov's visit to the USA in March 2002, USA and Uzbekistan signed the "Declaration on Strategic Partnership and Cooperation Framework". From the US point of view, strategic partnership with Uzbekistan and the appearance of the US air bases in Uzbekistan and at the Manas airport in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, were major gains in a region which was not so long ago the exclusive preserve of Moscow. What is more, the US military presence in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan was not viewed only in the context of the ongoing military operations in Afghanistan, but was also seen as a counterweight to both the Russian and the Chinese influence in the region. It naturally evoked the ire of the latter.
The US-Uzbek strategic partnership rested on the horns of a dilemma from the beginning, buffeted as it was by vocal criticism in the West over the absence of democracy and the violation of human rights in the republic. In the fiscal year 2004, the USA withheld $10.5 million in aid, including $6.87 million in military aid, because the State Department could not certify that Uzbekistan was moving toward multiparty democracy. The 'colour' revolutions in Georgia, Ukraine and in Kyrgyzstan between 2003 and 2005 alarmed the Uzbek authorities about the dangers of a close embrace with the West. They suspected that Western NGOs were seeking to prepare opposition forces as an alternative to the present government and consequently began to place restrictions on the activities of West-aided NGOs.
President Karimov had started edging towards Moscow in a bid to follow a 'multi-vector' policy and acquiring space for manoeuvre even prior to recent precipitation of relations with the USA. The turnaround in Uzbek relations with Russia came in September 2003 at the time of President Putin's visit to Samarkand on the way from Malaysia to Moscow. Following informal talks between Putin and Karimov, Uzbek officials were told to "make friends with Russia again". By that time, a certain disenchantment with the West had set in Uzbek circles, especially with regard to the scale of Western aid. Karimov was reported to have remarked at the time, "We had hoped that the international community would meet us with open arms". These aspirations had not come true. On June 16, 2004, Uzbekistan and Russia signed the Treaty on Strategic Partnership. In October 2004, Russia was admitted to CACO (Central Asian Treaty Organization), giving it a greater official role in Central Asian geopolitics.
The May 13 violent incidents in Andijan - the Ferghana Valley city of Uzbekistan - brought to fore the great power rivalry for control over Central Asia. The Uzbek authorities were peeved by the Western demand for an independent international enquiry of the killings, and the airlifting of more than 400 Uzbek refugees to Rumania and other countries. On July 5-6, 2005, the SCO summit at Astana - to which India, Iran and Pakistan were invited as observers for the first time - called upon the USA to specify a time-frame for the withdrawal of its bases from Central Asia. Kyrgyzstan subsequently agreed to the continuation of the US air base at the Manas airport, reportedly in lieu for increased aid. However, on July 29, 2005, Uzbekistan served notice on the USA to evacuate the Karshi-Khanabad base within 180 days. Thereafter, Uzbekistan demonstrably moved closer to Russia and China. President Karimov's June 29, 2005 visit to Moscow was followed by the summit meeting of CACO at St. Petersburg on October 6, 2005, where a decision was taken to merge CACO with the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Community (EEC). President Putin described the move as "the best birthday gift" to him.
Russia-Uzbekistan Treaty of Alliance Relations
Growing camaraderie between Uzbekistan and Russia has been epitomized by the signing of the "Treaty on Alliance Relations" on November 14, 2005. "The Treaty of Alliance Relations" seems to answer the security concerns of the Uzbek regime, while it provides Russia an opportunity to reassert its influence in the geostrategically important region. The security treaty is purported to be in keeping with Article 51 of the UN Charter which allows for 'collective self-defence'. Article 2 of the Uzbek-Russia treaty stipulated that:
"If an act of aggression is committed against one of the sides by any state or group of states, this will be viewed as an act of aggression against both sides….the other side...will provide necessary assistance, including military assistance, as well as giving aid through other means at its disposal."
Article 3 of the treaty stipulates that:
"In case of emergence of a situation, which, according to the view of one of the sides, may pose a threat to peace, disturb peace or touch upon the interest of its security, as well as emergence of threat against one of the sides of the act of aggression, the sides would immediately would bring into force the mechanism of corresponding consultations for agreeing positions and coordinating practical measures for regulating such a situation"
And Article 4 opens up the possibility of a Russian base in Uzbekistan. It provides for granting "the use of military facilities" on the territories of the signatories to each other "when necessary and on the basis of separate treaties" in order to ensure security and maintain peace and stability. However, in order to avoid hurting US sensitivities, the Russians probably do not wish to immediately establish a base in Uzbekistan close on the heels of the departing US troops.
Blow to Western Strategy
Western analysts have regarded these developments as a major blow to Western strategy in the region. They are seeking to draw comfort by harping on the inherent cleavages between Russian and Chinese interests and ambitions vis-à-vis Central Asia. Beijing was reported to have contacted Kyrgyz officials in early 2005 to explore the possibility of establishing a military base in Kyrgyzstan. Subsequently, after the Uzbek government's decision to close the US base, the Russian military analyst Vladimir Mukhin was cited to have remarked that the Chinese made quiet but definite enquiries about the possibility of gaining access to the base. Beijing's moves reportedly galvanized the Russians to quickly conclude the military alliance with Uzbekistan to foreclose the possibility of the Chinese seeking to fill up the vacuum (Stephen Blank, "China Joins the Great Central Asian Base Race", at Eurasia Insight at www.eurasianet.org, November 16, 2005).
As regards the accepted wisdom in the corridors of power in many of the post-Soviet states dominated by the former Communist elites, it is increasingly becoming oriented towards ensuring 'economic' growth and prosperity first, before conditions are considered ripe for 'political' liberalization or democracy. Amidst all this, the struggle for control and influence over the post-Soviet space is intensifying.
Need for Skillful Indian Diplomacy
In view of the geopolitical tug-of-war among the major powers for control over Central Asia, India may be called upon to conduct an extremely skillful diplomacy. Central Asia, which is regarded as India's extended strategic neighbourhood, presents both challenges and opportunities. India needs to play a discreet but pro-active role to create a niche for itself. It can build on good will and considerable 'soft power' in the region in order to have a friendly, secular and stable Central Asia next to its turbulent north-western periphery.
Russia, Uzbekistan, Treaty of Alliance Relations, United States of America (USA)
Europe and Eurasia
IDSA COMMENT
India and the East Asia Summit
G. V. C. Naidu
December 20, 2005
The inaugural East Asian Summit (EAS), representing nearly 50 per cent of the world's population with 20 per cent of global trade, and comprising 16 nations that are on a dynamic path of economic development, is obviously a mega event. For India, it is yet another opening to increasingly align itself with this region and play a commensurate political and security role. There is no question that the centre of gravity is decisively moving to East Asia and developments in this region will offer great economic opportunities and pose serious challenges as well.
The inaugural East Asian Summit (EAS), representing nearly 50 per cent of the world's population with 20 per cent of global trade, and comprising 16 nations that are on a dynamic path of economic development, is obviously a mega event. For India, it is yet another opening to increasingly align itself with this region and play a commensurate political and security role. There is no question that the centre of gravity is decisively moving to East Asia and developments in this region will offer great economic opportunities and pose serious challenges as well. The EAS was touted as the beginning of a new era of economic integration and a progenitor to the creation of an East Asian 'community.' There are however doubts whether the EAS can accomplish this.
When Malaysia offered to host the EAS at last year's ASEAN summit, no one had a clue about its composition or about the agenda it would pursue. It was widely believed that the EAS would provide political impetus to the process of growing regional economic linkages. East Asia is interacting with itself feverishly like never before - intra-regional trade has increased from about 40 per cent a decade back to over 55 per cent now and investments too are increasingly inward bound. The rise of gargantuan economies such as China and India will further expedite this market-driven process. This process is driven by market conditions, but there is no region-wide overarching economic or political mechanism to provide guidance to it.
Conspicuous by its absence is the United States, which has been the most dominant player in the region for more than a century. Interestingly, it is not unduly worried about its exclusion probably knowing pretty well that there has been a spate of new multilateral frameworks that came into being in the last decade and half, none of which have had much impact either economically or politically.
This is the basis for scepticism about the EAS. What can it do that other forums had earlier failed to achieve? In addition to the ASEAN Dialogue Partnership meetings with important economic powers that have been in existence since the mid-1970s, the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) was created in the early nineties with a similar objective of economic integration. It is nowhere near achieving any of its goals notwithstanding grand annual summit meetings and declarations. Another such mechanism is the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), founded in 1994 to address security-related issues exclusively. The 1995 ASEAN Concept Paper envisioned a three-stage development for the ARF -confidence building measures, preventive diplomacy, and conflict resolution. Aside from some progress in CBMs, the ARF has failed to promote transparency and a predictable pattern of relations, which it had set out to do. In fact, the ARF was found to be wanting when crises actually arose such as the East Timor issue or the North Korean nuclear problem. Another forum created in the aftermath of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis was the ASEAN Plus Three (the three being China, Japan and South Korea) to regularly exchange views, promote economic cooperation, and ensure non-recurrence of economic crises. A+3 has also been holding annual summit-level meetings, along with ASEAN summits with India since 2002.
We thus have multiple fora of all sorts and creating one more may not make much of a difference. It is claimed, nonetheless, that the EAS is different since it also aims to create a community in the region. The idea appears to be far-fetched, for 'community' has a different connotation and certain common characteristics are indispensable to build a community. Unlike in Europe, in Asia there is not a single trait that can be said to be common or pan-Asian - religious, linguistic, ethnic, or cultural. Indeed, this region is so vast and complex, with extremely uneven levels of economic development, ridden with a large number of unresolved disputes and a heavy historical baggage of suspicion and animosity, that doubts arise whether the community idea is feasible even as a long-term goal.
Perhaps an equally important dimension is ASEAN's ability to lead the EAS. ASEAN is in a much weaker position especially after the financial crisis and has failed to emerge as an autonomous power centre that can engage the great powers and ensure regional balance. The relationship between the EAS and other fora, the impact of widening rift between Japan and China, and the future role of the United States are other issues that remain ambiguous.
As far as India is concerned, it has been a remarkable turnaround in fortunes. As late as a decade back, it was not considered worthy enough to be a member of APEC nor did it figure in the deliberations when the ARF was created. An invitation to India to the EAS now is recognition of its fast growing economic and political clout. However, a policy centred on multilateralism has its limitations. Hence, bilateral relations become crucial and moreover tend to be longer lasting. There is already a budding rivalry between China and India. India should therefore aim at firming up its ties especially with Japan and qualitatively improve its relations with countries such as Indonesia and Vietnam. With some diplomatic adroitness, India can do this not necessarily at the cost its relations with China.
India, Malaysia, East Asia Summit (EAS), China, Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
East Asia
IDSA COMMENT
Preparing for Pandemics of Infectious Diseases Like Bird Flu
P. K. Gautam
December 20, 2005
Threats to human, national and international security as a result of biological warfare and pandemics are inadequately discussed in the popular media. Non-state actors are expected to use innovative methods to execute acts of terrorism. It is often contended that a terrorist organisation may well get the best results using conventional high explosives. This trend is clearly discernible in the methods used by terrorists worldwide. Manufacturing terror-grade dirty radiological or biological bombs that can be delivered effectively is far more difficult than using conventional explosives.
Threats to human, national and international security as a result of biological warfare and pandemics are inadequately discussed in the popular media. Non-state actors are expected to use innovative methods to execute acts of terrorism. It is often contended that a terrorist organisation may well get the best results using conventional high explosives. This trend is clearly discernible in the methods used by terrorists worldwide. Manufacturing terror-grade dirty radiological or biological bombs that can be delivered effectively is far more difficult than using conventional explosives. Yet the security establishment cannot take the threat of use of bio weapons lightly. Used effectively, it has a very high probability of causing mass disruption if not destruction.
But as we debate and deploy the bulk of our resources on anthropogenic methods for acts of terror on human beings, some viruses as "gifts" of nature seem to be on mission to mutate and spread to humans. The bird or avian flu (H5N1) virus is one contemporary example. Unlike the nearly 40 to 50 million deaths recorded due to the Spanish flu of 1918-1920, this bird flu is forecast to cause nearly 150 to 200 million deaths if it mutates and gets transmitted from human to human. Mainstream international journals and magazines such as Foreign Affairs, Nature, National Geographic, Newsweek and India's very own Economic and Political Weekly amongst others have featured articles on the subject as a call to action. That the threat is hyped and driven by business interests of the powerful pharmaceutical industry is yet another view put forth. We need to remember that with the onset of global warming, the home air conditioning industry is bound to make huge profits or for that matter with the rise of obesity in India the cash registers of neighbourhood health clubs are ringing. Our preparations to deal with this threat must not be bogged down by the debates mentioned above. While all viewpoints must be deliberated upon, it is vital for the national security establishment to be prepared now rather than wait for that disaster to strike and then adopt reactive measures.
In a recently conducted bilateral round table conference between the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) and the National Chengchi University (NCCU), Taiwan, a session was devoted to the challenges of avian flu. Professor Peter W S Chang from Taiwan's Department of Health gave a comprehensive presentation from Taipei's perspective. Taiwan and India have so far been safe from bird flu. One reason for Taiwan avoiding a bird flu outbreak was that it was not on the migratory routes of birds. Its isolation as an island has proved to be a blessing in disguise. According to an Indian official present at the conference, India has escaped a bird flu outbreak so far due to the fact that no major poultry farms exist near the 112 water bodies that are frequented by migratory birds. Interestingly, besides vegetarianism, the Indian habit of frying and deep cooking of chicken meat is also regarded as a reason for the inability of the virus to spread from birds to humans. However, we cannot be assured of comprehensive security by just being vegetarians or relishing the popular cooked chicken dishes or keeping our fingers crossed. The world now is much more integrated and globalised. Recall how pathogens of cholera travelled from Bangladesh to Chile in the ballast of ships. Human to human strains can well move across borders and so can infected vectors of birds and animals.
Taiwan had experienced the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003. This was the closest to the new scenario of bird flu. Taiwan then suffered 73 human deaths and a loss of one per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). If adequate precautions are not taken and bird flu strikes then Taipei expects 10,000 deaths and a much higher loss of GDP. Having undergone the experience, it is very clear about the manner in which to take proactive measures. The reasons for concerns are that the Spanish flu virus is genetically similar to the present H5N1 strain; birds to human transmissions exists, there is 50 per cent mortality in infected human cases; once the bird virus spreads to humans and acquires human genes it can easily transmit between humans and the bird flu can impact globally within three months.
While in India we do not want the public to panic by this scare, in Taiwan the health minister is like a TV performer educating the public via the media on a daily basis. Preparations include announcing Novel Influenza virus infection as a notifiable disease, formulation of a national preparedness plan for influenza pandemics and strategies and defences termed as "3 main strategies and 4 lines of defence plans". The three main strategies comprise of infection prevention and control, Novel flu vaccines and antiviral drugs. Research and Development is in progress to manufacture a vaccine. Anti viral drugs like Tami flu is available for 0.7 per cent of the population in 2005 and this figure would increase to four per cent by 2006. The eventual goal is to stockpile drugs for 10 per cent of the population. In the four lines of defence plans, the strategy is to block the problem outside the country through international cooperation, quarantine of suspected persons on the border, strengthening health care system and health management in the community.
What lessons does this experience and practice of Taiwan for dealing with the bird flu have for India? India is a vast country with a population of over 1 billion in comparison to Taiwan's 22.6 million. There are a number of uncertainties. The effect of Tami Flu is not proven. Vaccines are yet to be manufactured after due research and development. Even if a vaccine is researched for a particular type of strain of the virus, the time for manufacturing and administering vaccines may not be sufficient enough to counter the spread of disease. Another vulnerability is of the disease surveillance system. The private sector provides 75 per cent of curative care in India. The data from private health providers are not included in any disease surveillance. The existing system is passive or has the capacity to report an occurrence. Not all the people have access to government hospitals. Most private hospitals and clinics are not in the chain of reporting of such diseases. Poverty by itself precludes timely treatment for the poor. Economic reforms have made India a tourist destination for chronic diseases, but for infectious diseases and pandemics it is unlikely that the private sector would be able to deliver. Thus an effective passive reporting system in a revived public health care system may be the first step to cope with the threat. Simultaneously, a proactive Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme must be put in place. The National Disaster Management Authority may need to carry out a reappraisal of the looming threat of bird flu. Undoubtedly, security threats have become more complex. In this particular case the link cuts across the human, animal and wildlife divide. A high degree of coordination is expected amongst doctors, veterinarians, wild life experts, the pharmaceutical industry, animal farms, the poultry sector, and the government health service, etc. Much more simulation of disaster management scenarios needs to be done. At the same time mitigation measures must be sustained in coordination with the World Health Organisation. A precautionary principle is considered the best approach.
India, Bird Flu, Taiwan, National Disaster Management Authority
The Indian-led United Nations Mission in Eritrea and Ethiopia (UNMEE), which is monitoring the five-year-old ceasefire between the two countries, is in danger of being withdrawn due to escalation in tensions. Eritrea has imposed restrictions on the movement of UNMEE personnel and has made its functioning almost impossible. The fragile peace maintained by Ethiopia and Eritrea since signing a comprehensive agreement at Algiers in December 2000 seems set to end.
The Indian-led United Nations Mission in Eritrea and Ethiopia (UNMEE), which is monitoring the five-year-old ceasefire between the two countries, is in danger of being withdrawn due to escalation in tensions. Eritrea has imposed restrictions on the movement of UNMEE personnel and has made its functioning almost impossible. The fragile peace maintained by Ethiopia and Eritrea since signing a comprehensive agreement at Algiers in December 2000 seems set to end. Tensions have grown in recent weeks with military build-ups on both sides of the border, raising fears of a repeat of their 1998-2000 border war. Though neither side appears eager for war, growing bilateral tensions cannot be dismissed lightly either. A resumption of conflict will not only have a devastating impact on these two countries but could destabilize the entire Horn of Africa region by fuelling flows of small arms to armed groups, rekindling a proxy war in Somalia and jeopardizing the peace process in Sudan.
After a costly war and five years of stalemate, patience on both the sides of the border has worn thin. The problem arose in the wake of the July 2002 ruling of the independent Boundary Commission, which was established to delimit and demarcate the contested border. It awarded the small border settlement of 'Badme' (the primary bone of contention) to Eritrea , which Ethiopia has found unacceptable. Consequently, Ethiopia has been seeking a revision of the award, though both countries had agreed in advance that the Commission's decision would be final and binding. This is the root of the stalemate that has brought the two countries back to the brink of war.
After seeking revision of the boundary award for three years, Ethiopia , in an October 2005 letter to the UN Security Council, emphasized its eagerness to engage Eritrea in a dialogue for a win-win outcome that is consistent with sustainable peace. But Eritrea saw this offer as a delaying tactic and demanded the full demarcation of the border before any dialogue began.
Apparently frustrated by the stalemate and the belief that the international community is biased towards Ethiopia , Eritrea has targeted UNMEE, which monitors the demilitarised Temporary Security Zone (TSZ) along the border. The restrictions imposed have meant that UNMEE can monitor only 60 per cent of the border, which it moreover asserts is "tense and potentially volatile." Eritrea has also demanded that UNMEE staff drawn from Western countries should leave.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan in his recent report to the Security Council has said that as a result of the restrictions imposed on UNMEE, its position is becoming increasingly untenable and that the time may be fast approaching to take difficult decisions on the Mission 's future. The report outlines six options for the Security Council's consideration ranging from maintenance of the status quo to full withdrawal of UN troops altogether. Annan said that UNMEE could buy time "for diplomatic initiatives to unblock the current dangerous stalemate," or opt for relocation, moving most of the UN staff now in Asmara to Addis Ababa . While making it clear that none of the options was perfect, Annan said that both sides would still have to fully implement UNSC Resolution 1640 passed on November 23, 2005 . The resolution threatened actions, possibly including sanctions, against both countries if, in the case of Eritrea it does not immediately rescind its flight ban, and against both parties if they do not reverse their military build-up.
Annan has asked the Security Council to impose a deadline by which the two countries would have to meet its demands. He has warned that if the parties do not fully commit and cooperate, not only the future of the mission but also the continuation of the peace process between the two nations would be called into question. He has also added that dialogue between the two parties should resume without any precondition and in good faith.
In fact it is the absence of dialogue and the military build-up on both sides of the frontier that has fuelled the friction. To avert this present warlike situation, a dialogue is necessary and before that de-escalation of political and military tensions is essential to bring about an environment favourable for dialogue. This essentially requires both countries to comply with Resolution 1640. Ethiopia has shown certain positive gestures by withdrawing some of its troops, but Eritrea has persisted with its demands.
As for the UNMEE mission, it is apparent that the world body is avoiding a hasty decision on its future. In the January 9, 2006 Council meeting, Under-Secretary-General Jean-Marie Guéhenno stated that there is a sense of urgency and that the status quo is unsustainable. But at the same time he also pointed out that there is a recognition that one should not rush to precipitous decisions. In his view, time has to be given for diplomacy to work. Mr. Guéhenno further added that the troop contributing countries were aware that a decision to withdraw could have "momentous consequences," though at some point tough decisions would have to be made if developments did not go the way they should.
As far as India is concerned, the Indian Mission to the United Nations in New York has not commented on the options given by Annan though Indian Ambassador Nirupam Sen had told a meeting of the Security Council in October 2005 that UNMEE would collapse unless the UNSC took a decisive decision. India has expressed concern about the safety and security of its peacekeepers, as the helicopter ban has complicated urgent evacuations for injured UNMEE troops who must now be taken by ambulance over treacherous roads for medical treatment.
According to the UNMEE spokesperson Gail Bindley Taylor-Sainte, the UN Secretary General has appealed to both India and Jordan to give some time for the resolution of the issue. She added that the situation would become serious if India and Jordan were to withdraw. Currently the two nations provide about 2000 of UNMEE's nearly 3300 troops. Major General Rajender Singh of India heads the mission.
In the present situation UNMEE has been almost immobilized. Its efficiency has degraded by more than 55 per cent in terms of surveillance, logistics, safety and evacuation capability necessary in view of ongoing de-mining operations and also to airlift the sick and the injured. If Eritrea continues with its restrictions, it would jeopardize the integrity of the mission and the safety of the troops. If the environment were to turn hostile and the mission's purpose gets defeated, India could think of pulling its peacekeeping troops out instead of placing their lives at risk. For its part, the Security Council needs to deal with Eritrea 's attempts to restrict UNMEE while at the same time focusing on the larger issue that is driving the conflict, viz., the boundary dispute. Re-engagement by the Algiers Group (AU, EU, UN, and US), which witnessed the June 2000 Peace agreement, is urgently required to calm the immediate crisis and move the peace process into implementation phase. If peace is to be preserved, both defusing the present crisis and addressing the root causes of the problem have to proceed in tandem.
The dramatic revision of China's GDP (Dec 20) by the National Bureau of Statistics in Beijing reveals that the dragon's economic vitality is far more robust than earlier estimated.
The dramatic revision of China's GDP (Dec 20) by the National Bureau of Statistics in Beijing reveals that the dragon's economic vitality is far more robust than earlier estimated.
Many of the anxieties about China bucking macro-econometric tenets and structural fiscal prudence seem to be misplaced and the current quip is that it is not the patient who is ill but the tools used for the diagnosis of the Chinese economy!
Estimates about any quantitative indicator pertaining to China have been famously skewed for decades and this ranges from the claims made in the early decades during the Great Leap Forward about food and steel production to famine deaths and defence expenditure and evidently Beijing is now keen to restore credibility in its official statistics.
The Chinese GDP for 2004 has been revised to $1.97 trillion and this takes it to the fourth position in the global hierarchy - just behind the US, Japan and Germany. The GDP growth rate for 2005 is estimated to be 9.4 % and may slow down fractionally in 2006 but will still be above the enticing 9% mark.
If this scorching pace is sustained, one may infer that China will overtake the US as the world's largest economy around 2035 - that is 30 years from now - telescoping the earlier estimate by about a decade.
The GDP for the last year was estimated to be $12.6 trillion and clearly there is lots of catching up to do in the next three decades but the Chinese determination to attain this perch is not in doubt and the dragon is on a canter.
It is precisely for this reason that the Asian strategic matrix is in a state of slow turbulence and the ripples were discernible at the first East-Asia Summit (EAS) held in Kuala Lumpur in mid-December. But it is not China alone that is the focus of global strategic attention and India - despite its relatively more modest showing at the hustings - is also on the radarscope.
The current buzz is that 2005 will be remembered as the year when gold, China and India were on the rise and while this is heady company, the long-term implications of the current shift in the Eurasian politico-economic tectonic plates merit careful scrutiny to identify the opportunities and challenges for the elephant.
India's GDP in 2004 was closer to $700 billion, a little over a third of China and the GDP growth rate is estimated to be about 7%, creditable given the many disparities that characterise the two political, economic and socio-cultural domains.
Due to their inherent demographic advantages and relative position in the macro-economic 'catch-up' curve, it is estimated that all indicators being equal - the world will become tripolar by about 2050-55 with China, the US and India at the high table.
In other words, China and India that once contributed to half the global wealth will return to this position after a quarter of a millennium and the global strategic centre of gravity will be back in Asia.
However, there are many caveats to this scenario and much of this was on display at the EAS where the simmering historical animosity between China and Japan on one hand and the anxiety of the smaller Asean states and South Korea on the other were on display.
The fact that the US was excluded from the summit while Russia was invited as a guest added to the chess game and the many complementarities within Eurasia including the energy potential of Moscow and a relatively fragile Central Asia were highlighted.
The most abiding fault-line is that between China and Japan and it is instructive that within a day of the Chinese GDP revision, Tokyo voiced its concern about China's defence expenditure and the military build-up. Beijing on the other hand was keen to assure its interlocutors that China's rise was "peaceful" and that a benign dragon was not an oxymoron!
This entire spectrum of strategic animation and Delhi's own politico-economic trajectory in the last decade (including the nuclear tests of May 1998) have made India a 'swing state' of critical import and this is borne out by some seminal developments of 2005 that reverberated at the EAS.
The single most important development is the re-casting of the US-India relationship by the Bush administration that was formalised in the July 18 agreement and the impact this has had on the Eurasian strategic systemic.
One may cautiously aver that if the letter and spirit of the Bush-Manmohan agreement is taken to its maximum potential, the strategic architecture of the 21st century which is poised to be one of a knowledge-based economy, committed to normative, plural democratic values will be radically different from that of the last century.
However, India would have to read the current turbulence and the tea leaves very astutely and evolve a range of pro-active measures across the board.
The primary goal is to ensure that the national discourse moves from the mind-set of an inflexible and arid interpretation of non-alignment and prickly insularity bordering on xenophobia to a more self-assured posture based on credible empirical indicators such as a vibrant democracy, rule of law, equitable economic vitality and a conviction that the Elephant is on the move.
By current projections, India will cross the $1 trillion GDP mark by 2009 and this is happy augury. The year 2005 has been an encouraging one for India from the strategic perspective and evolving meaningful partnerships with the nodes of relevance has been the leit-motif of Dr Manmohan Singh's macro- policy initiatives.
Thus, India may be seen to be moving from the inheritance of non-alignment, which had its validity in the earlier systemic of bi-polarity and the state-regulated command economy, to a more flexible and pragmatic posture of being meaningfully 'unaligned' vis-à-vis the major powers.
This was the refrain at the summit meetings with the US, China, Russia, EU and Japan at the political level and in the interactions with the global business community.
However this potential for meaningful Asian vibrancy that maximises India's interests can be realised only if Delhi deals with its complex domestic and regional challenges both expeditiously and prudently. Strategic acumen in synergising state capability with the aspirations of civil society is imperative.
When the Prime Minister of India and the President of the United States signed a joint Statement on July 18 last year, which included, inter alia, a move towards lifting the three decades old regime of technology denials on India and an implicit recognition of India's nuclear weapons programme, negative reactions were expected: disbelief and distrust in India, and outrage from the non-proliferation lobby in the US, still deeply convinced of the need, even after thirty years, to "cap, roll back and eliminate" India's nuclear weapons ambitions.
When the Prime Minister of India and the President of the United States signed a joint Statement on July 18 last year, which included, inter alia, a move towards lifting the three decades old regime of technology denials on India and an implicit recognition of India's nuclear weapons programme, negative reactions were expected: disbelief and distrust in India, and outrage from the non-proliferation lobby in the US, still deeply convinced of the need, even after thirty years, to "cap, roll back and eliminate" India's nuclear weapons ambitions.
For some time, in particular before the Seventh Review Conference of the NPT in May 2005, ideas were floated on how the "problem three" - the three countries that had stayed out of the Treaty, particularly India, could be brought within its ambit. Amongst those who preoccupied themselves with this issue were analysts such as Strobe Talbott and Geoge Perkovich. However, while Perkovich was of the view that India should on no account be given access to nuclear fuel or technology, the former had in fact referred to the possibility of 'permitting' "the government in New Delhi to receive some of the international help it seeks in developing its civilian nuclear programme"- but, in exchange for India accepting the CTBT, stopping the production of fissile material, accepting safeguards on its nuclear facilities etc. Talbott also linked the arrangement with India to a similar one with Pakistan. It is no wonder that his wish list did not fly. The reason for referring to these proposals is to bring out clearly the differences and similarities with the agreement finally reached in July 2005. For the first time it appeared that an American Administration had accepted a relationship with India on its merits: recognizing India's economic and strategic interests, and the US' own interests in supporting the growth of India's strength and power in Asia.
Since July, however, the pressures from the naysayers has been sustained, vociferous and intense, more so in the US than in India. In India, the serious objections come from ideological quarters which view with dismay the growing closeness of relations between India and the US. This does not appear to have affected the Government's policies in this regard substantially, yet. The other set of doubters in India, much less influential than the former, base their reservations not so much on the 'deal' itself, as the viability of its implementation; this issue will be visited later.
The attack on the 'deal' in the US is currently focused on trying to influence the US Congress as it considers approval (or rejection) of the US Administration's proposals, though there are also efforts to influence international opinion against any exceptional treatment of India by the non-proliferation regime. Both Pakistan and perhaps China seem to be part of this effort, given latest news reports on Pakistan's approach to the IAEA for permission to engage in civilian nuclear cooperation to meet its energy requirements. Since this is obviously unlikely to be accepted, given the A Q Khan history, its only purpose could be to influence NSG members against the proposal to 'island' India within the regime.
The efforts of the US non-proliferation lobby seems to operate on two assumptions and on one, perhaps deliberate, omission: most important, it assumes that in the event of the 'deal' "being modified or (to be) delayed or perhaps (if it) fade a bit," Indo-US relations, particularly strategic relations, will develop normally. This somewhat hopeful prognostication was made by a representative of the Monterey Institute at a recent interaction with India's Foreign Secretary. That this was not merely wishful thinking but egregious reasoning was made clear by the Foreign Secretary, both in his comprehensive presentation when he referred to suggested "improvements" to the Agreement as 'deal-breakers', as well as in his candid and well-articulated responses to questions raised during the interaction. He concluded his presentation by stating that "India US relations are at a crossroads. We have two clear choices before us. One is the road we have travelled before, one that will maintain the status quo and the distance between our two democracies."
The second assumption is that India, in its eagerness to avail of cheaper and higher quality uranium as fuel for its nuclear programmes, and its 'ambition' to be recognized as a Nuclear Weapon State, would be vulnerable to pressures to curtail its strategic programme. This is a road already travelled.
The glaring omission in the arguments of the non-proliferation lobby is the crucial importance, to the US, of India's energy needs; if nuclear energy is not easily available, the gap in requirements would necessarily have to be filled by hydrocarbons, adding pressure to the global market, not to mention the establishment of linkages with countries which would be more forthcoming in energy cooperation. Ashley Tellis has identified US interests that are served by nuclear cooperation with India, in his testimony to the US House Committee on International relations; overlooking this aspect when discussing the agreement is surely a major lacuna.
Would the opposition, within India and in the US, succeed in derailing the deal? One cannot predict the outcome of a work in progress. It needs to be noted, however, that the US Administration and the Indian Government appear to be serious in pursuing the agreement, whatever doubts think tanks, analysts and political groups may have. All signs appear to be propitious: India has joined ITER, the NSG has had a first round of discussions on exceptionalising India, US Congressional hearings have started; India has presented a blueprint for the separation of its civilian and non-civilian nuclear facilities, and appears to have made some significant advances in identifying the kind of safeguards which could apply. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran, in his interaction referred to above, said: "As long as there is a guarantee of assurance of lifetime supply of fuel, I don't think India would have a problem with lifetime safeguards." This goes a long way to meeting an issue that had been raised by Robert Joseph of the US State Department Non-proliferation department. The US response has apparently been "good", "positive" surprised at the thoroughness of the Indian proposal. So the deal may in fact go through. The problems, in my view, will then begin.
Firstly, India will have to enter into negotiations with the IAEA regarding placing civilian facilities under safeguards; even if the Board of Governors accepts a new type of safeguard for a non-NPT country. For precisely this reason, inspections are likely to be more intrusive and frequent than in the case of the other recognized Nuclear Weapon States. Perhaps for a while this may indeed be the case, but given financial constraints, and if India is able to convince the IAEA, as it has been able to convince the US, that it is a 'responsible' nuclear weapon State, the irritation of inspections might diminish. There is no doubt that the non-proliferation regime, if not the NPT itself, will eventually have to change to adapt itself to the reality of a fourth category, NWS, NNWS, non-NPT countries and India.
Secondly, India has agreed to sign an Additional Protocol; the question surely arises, additional to what? Its original safeguards agreements with the IAEA are Inf.Circ. 66 agreements; the new safeguards would be a variation. Again, it is my own feeling that this would not be an insuperable obstacle. One of the main worries would, however, remain, though in the realm of contingency and some speculation: would our unilateral moratorium on testing stand if one of the P-5, China, for example, or even the US, conducts a test? If, on the basis of reciprocity, India then carries out her own tests, would the arrangement hold? Would supplies of fuel be disrupted leading to an abrogation of the safeguards agreement with the IAEA? These are perhaps bogeys of the future, and need not be addressed now; the point is, however, even if, and when, the July 18 deal is through, there will be years of careful navigation required.
One cannot resist a last thought: in the event the deal does not go through, what would be the consequences? It has been calculated that the impact on India's energy programme would not be so severe as to adversely affect our economic growth; the impact, as has already been pointed out, would be on Indo-US relations as a whole and its potential for economic and commercial interaction. There would also be a possible change in the course of India's foreign policy. In an age of inevitable globalisation, can India again become inward looking? The domestic political fall-out would be greatest; it, therefore, does not fail to surprise, that there is so little political awareness- raising in the country. It is imperative that the issue be taken up politically, by the Government and its allies, if only to forestall the possibility of a backlash.
One of the major objectives of the United States in entering into the Indo-US nuclear co-operation agreement is to bring about an early freezing of the Indian weapon-usable nuclear materials stock at the minimum possible level. India, in turn, obviously wants to retain all the accumulated inventory of such materials, as well as the facilities to produce the additional material we consider essential for a minimum deterrence, out of IAEA safeguards. Obviously, each country wants to manoeuvre the separation plan to suit its specific objective.
One of the major objectives of the United States in entering into the Indo-US nuclear co-operation agreement is to bring about an early freezing of the Indian weapon-usable nuclear materials stock at the minimum possible level. India, in turn, obviously wants to retain all the accumulated inventory of such materials, as well as the facilities to produce the additional material we consider essential for a minimum deterrence, out of IAEA safeguards. Obviously, each country wants to manoeuvre the separation plan to suit its specific objective.
Despite the façade that the deal is progressing well, it is clear that most of the originally perceived differences between the two sides are very much present even now. It appears that the US side feels that certain facilities, especially reactors, which India has proposed to retain in the strategic group really belong in the civilian list. In addition, it is clear that the US considers India's time schedule for bringing these facilities in phases into the civilian list is too stretched out, and that we should indeed place them under safeguards at a more rapid pace.
Dhruva and CIRUS are the two weapons-grade plutonium producing reactors which are crucial to the Indian strategic programme. It is now known that Canada has formally asked India & the US that CIRUS, which was built with Canadian assistance under an agreement that it will be used only for peaceful uses, should now be placed in the civilian list. The US side must have raised this issue with Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran during his recent visit to Washington, and he perhaps had no option but to reject this demand.
India is using the limited uranium enrichment capacity available at the Rare Materials Plant (RMP) near Mysore for producing the medium enrichment uranium fuel for our nuclear submarine reactors. Since this plant can be upgraded to produce high-enrichment weapons-grade uranium as well, the US could be asking us to place this facility and the submarine reactor(s) under the civilian list. This, of course, will not be acceptable to India. Similarly , the US may be wanting us to put the laser enrichment programme at the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology (CAT), the De-tritiation Plants in BARC and IGCAR where we separate out tritium from irradiated heavy water, the Beryllium Production Facility at Vashi which supports the weapon-core making, the Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre (VECC), Kolkatta where the proton-beam bombardment of Lithium-6 could be done for tritium production, etc. under safeguards. But, India should insist on keeping all the facilities under the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) and the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research (IGCAR) within our military list and away from safeguards, since they are all either R&D facilities or meant clearly for the use of the weapons programme.
Of the 15 operating nuclear power reactors of India, 4 are already under IAEA safeguards. The remaining 11 are pressurized heavy water reactors (PHWRs) which are currently not under safeguards. Of the total 8 power reactors under construction, the two Russian units at Koodankulam are already earmarked under safeguards, leaving 5 PHWRs and the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) which are currently out of safeguards. When and if the Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR) is built, we need to keep it outside the civilian list, because of its developmental nature.
There is a lack of clarity in the public mind about our indigenous natural uranium resources. It is true that we may not have enough processed natural uranium to fuel the five (5) PHWRs currently under construction, when they are ready for initial fuelling in 2006-2008. But, the highest officials of the AEC now reconfirm the view that we have enough natural uranium ores in the country to fuel 10,000 MWe worth of PHWRs, for their life span of about 40 years. The mismatch between production and consumption of uranium has happened because the government approvals for the PHWRs and their construction have speeded up in the last ten years, while the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) still continued to lag behind in their minerals exploration and uranium mining tasks. While waiting for these activities to pick up momentum in the coming five years, the DAE should go ahead and place under IAEA safeguards the 5 PHWRs now in construction, from their dates of initial fuelling with imported natural uranium, so that there need not be any delay in electricity generation. From the time we enter into this Indo-US nuclear deal, our limited indigenous natural uranium will have to be used judiciously for fuelling the Dhruva & CIRUS reactors to the extent we need additional weapons-grade plutonium, and in the first AHWR developmental unit, while the remaining should be used in the un-safeguarded PHWRs for producing as much reactor-grade plutonium as we can to sustain the operation of the first PFBR(s). The phased placement of the PHWRs under safeguards can be determined only on the basis of this logic, leaving sufficient room for uncertainties in fresh uranium supplies from our mines. In short, if a PHWR of ours can be run with Indian uranium, there is no hurry in placing it in the civil list, because it is then producing plutonium which will serve as feed material for our un-safeguarded breeder reactor(s).
Thus, the right stand to take at this stage is to keep the Indian fast breeder programme outside the IAEA safeguards, by including it in the strategic facilities group. We may revisit this decision after we have commissioned and operated the first PFBR at full power and also stabilized its associated technology programmes connected with fast reactor fuel fabrication, reprocessing of spent-fuel to extract U-233, and the system improvements we may make on the basis of initial operational experience. This decision, however, has its consequent repercussions. The initial PFBR(s) in that case will have to rely on the already accumulated reactor-grade plutonium, and the future continued production of similar material from the un-safeguarded PHWRs, for the initial fuel loading and subsequent annual re-fuelling. This would require us to negotiate and keep all the presently available un-safeguarded reactor-grade plutonium in the PHWR spent-fuel out of IAEA safeguards, even while we may agree to put most of these PHWRs under safeguards, in phases, over a stretched period of time. As and when we wish to put a PHWR into the civilian list and IAEA safeguards, we must first discharge all the Indian spent-fuel in it for storage in our strategic group, and re-fuel the reactor entirely with fresh imported fuel. This way we ensure that our limited indigenous uranium resources are not burned up in a safeguarded reactor nor are we giving away part-of the earlier un-safeguarded spent-fuel. In the long run, whether India can operate enough number of un-safeguarded first-stage breeders based on depleted uranium-plutonium fuel, thereby breeding enough U-233 in their blanket regions to transition into the ultimate self-sustaining stage of thorium-U-233 breeders, is entirely dependent on how much more indigenous uranium we can find from an aggressive prospecting for minerals.
Indian uranium, thorium and rare metal mining operations, mined ores, and their processing plants have to be outside IAEA safeguards. Thus, all facilities of the Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) and the Indian Rare Earths Limited (IREL) should go into the strategic group. Also, we have to ensure that the required minimum number of production plants for heavy water and reprocessing facilities to extract plutonium or U-233 from the spent-fuel are kept outside the civilian list, to match the requirements of the number of research & power reactors we are keeping in the strategic list at any point in time. This may not be too difficult because we have nine heavy water plants and four operational spent-fuel reprocessing plants, and some of these could be put under safeguards, while others are kept in the strategic list. When it comes to the fuel fabrication facilities, there are different processes and plants involved. Most of these are in the Nuclear Fuel Complex (NFC) at Hyderabad. At NFC, however, a few of the critical plants are not duplicated, and today they serve both the civilian & strategic requirements. Here, India will have no other option but to keep one-of-a-kind facilities at NFC, Hyderabad outside safeguards, until such time that duplicate facilities are planned and constructed.
A. Gopalakrishnan is former Chairman of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board of the Government of India.
Two rounds of negotiations have been held between Indian and US officials to negotiate implementing the Indo-US nuclear agreement, embedded in the Joint Statement issued by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President George W Bush on July 18, 2005. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran's talks with Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas D Burns in Washington last week was the second round.
Two rounds of negotiations have been held between Indian and US officials to negotiate implementing the Indo-US nuclear agreement, embedded in the Joint Statement issued by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President George W Bush on July 18, 2005. Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran's talks with Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas D Burns in Washington last week was the second round. It ended with ritual incantations that they achieved "considerable advance" and "very positive forward movement" in an "encouraging environment." But, they needed to meet again to iron out differences before President Bush visits India in early 2006.
A parsing of the nuclear deal informs that the Bush administration has pledged to "seek agreement from Congress to adjust U.S. laws and policies, and…. [to] work with friends and allies to adjust international regimes to enable full civil nuclear energy and trade with India, including but not limited to expeditious consideration of fuel supplies for safeguarded nuclear reactors at Tarapur." In consequence, the Bush administration needs to promote India's case before Congress for being excluded from the constraints of US laws, and persuade the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) to dilute its guidelines for permitting nuclear exports to India by its members. These effusive statements cannot disguise the reality that India must be satisfied that the changes contemplated in US laws and guidelines of the NSG will enable it to obtain civilian nuclear energy cooperation in return for placing segments of its nuclear programme under IAEA safeguards.
Further, the US legislation comprises the US Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act (1978) and consequent amendments to the US Atomic Energy Act (1954), which expressly prohibit the United States from pursuing civilian nuclear cooperation with countries that are not NPT signatories or have not placed all their nuclear facilities under fullscope safeguards. This legislation was framed after India exploded its 'peaceful' nuclear device in 1974, which dramatises the internal problems facing the Bush administration in making India an exception to its prohibitions. A radical shift has obviously occurred in American perceptions, since the pre-conditions that India must sign the NPT or accept fullscope safeguards upon its entire nuclear programme before supply of nuclear materials, equipment or technology could be effected is not being insisted upon.
For its part, India has agreed to "identifying and separating [its] civilian and military nuclear facilities and programs in a phased manner and filing a declaration regarding its civilian facilities with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); taking a decision to place voluntarily its civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards; [and] signing and adhering to an Additional Protocol with respect to nuclear facilities." India has also agreed to continue its unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing, working towards the conclusion of a Fissile Material Cut Off Treaty, refraining from transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technologies, passing comprehensive export control legislation and adhering by NSG and Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) guidelines.
These dual sets of obligations are to be "reciprocal," but this is an intrinsic impossibility. An element of tentativeness is built into the American obligations since the Bush administration has to persuade the US Congress and the 44 countries comprising the Nuclear Suppliers Group to make India an exception to their norms, laws, rules and regulations. India can undertake its side of the bargain by executive decision. Hence, India is at a negotiating disadvantage, since the steps taken by it must satisfy not only the executive and legislative branches of the US administration but also the IAEA and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. These negotiating disadvantages provide the backdrop for "identifying and separating [its] civilian and military nuclear facilities and programs in a phased manner and filing a declaration regarding its civilian facilities with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)."
Indian official interlocutors have denied that the Indo-US nuclear deal would compromise India's strategic requirements, and that the identification and separation of civilian and military nuclear facilities would be autonomously decided, and not be adjudicated upon by the United States. Unfortunately, this is not true. The US Ambassador to India, David Mulford, made it clear that India must submit a 'credible' plan for separating its civilian and military facilities before the US administration places this plan before Congress for considering the proposed scheme and taking steps to amend the concerned legislation. The difficulty before India in effecting this identification and separation exercise is that the civilian and military facilities within its nuclear programme have been shaded over. Unlike other nuclear weapon states, India has not dedicated nuclear facilities for military purposes, and the same facilities were used for both civil and military purposes.
For instance, the 40 MW CIRUS reactor imported from Canada had manufactured the weapons grade plutonium used in the 1974 Pokharan I (PNE) device. It has been used for military purposes since, but also produces radioactive isotopes for medical, agricultural and other civil applications. Whether it should be classified as a civilian or military facility is arguable, but this controversy can escalate if the issue is raised that CIRUS was supplied by Canada for peaceful purposes. The issue whether it can be used for plainly military purposes has not been satisfactorily resolved to date. A problem therefore arises with identifying CIRUS for either civilian or military purposes. Will India be able to take an autonomous decision in this regard? Or will it become an issue for negotiation with the United States?
A similar problem arises with India's Fast Breeder Reactor programme on which its Bhabha-envisioned three-phase atomic energy programme hinges. The first phase was premised on building natural-uranium fuelled reactors to produce power. The plutonium by-product was to be used in the second-stage reactors along with thorium - abundantly available in India - for producing uranium-233 to be used in third-stage breeder reactors fuelled with U-233 and thorium. Burning this fuel would produce more U-233 than consumed by fission, thereby breeding the U-233 fuel. For the non-proliferation lobby, Bhabha's vision amounts to a strategy for unbridled proliferation. India would need to accept this logic as its Fast Breeders are intended to augment its atomic power programme. Further, it has agreed to "working with the United States for the conclusion of a multilateral Fissile Material Cut Off Treaty." More broadly, how will India proceed further with its nuclear weapons programme without further testing its nuclear devices with a moratorium on nuclear testing in place?
The harsh truth is that the parties involved in any negotiations bring their vulnerabilities to the negotiating table. The United States is undoubtedly driven by larger geo-strategic considerations - read, the need to contain China and construct a new security architecture for Asia - to broaden its relations with India. But its foreign policy considerations are tempered by its non-proliferation concerns. Can the steadily weakening Bush administration ignore the powerful constituencies within the American policy elite that are impelled by non-proliferation concerns, and forge the bipartisan consensus needed by the US Congress to amend its non-proliferation-related laws? Should the Bush Administration falter in this enterprise, how will it persuade the other members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group, which includes China, to except India from their guidelines to allow nuclear exports by NSG members to India? China would, most likely, demand the same concessions for Pakistan. Russia might demand similar concessions to proceed with its lucrative nuclear exports to Iran.
What are India's vulnerabilities? These relate, unequivocally, to its diminishing supplies of low enriched uranium for its Tarapur reactors (only a few months' supply are left), and dwindling supplies of natural uranium for India's extensive PHWRs programme (this will last for around one year if these reactors work to full capacity.) How did India get into this quagmire? Quite evidently, insufficient attention was paid to these magnifying problems while hoping that low enriched uranium and natural uranium supplies would somehow become available with the efflux of time. Was the political leadership cognizant of these vulnerabilities in India's high profile nuclear programme? India was being targeted by the international nuclear regime, and the proclaimed policy was to rely on indigenous technology and resources. Why then did this situation develop? A better explanation is needed from the concerned authorities.
That said, how should India work out its nuclear deal with the United States? Time is against the Indian side due to dwindling supplies of low-enriched and natural uranium. A clear vision of India's nuclear programme is needed; ideally, it should serve both its security and energy interests. But a choice is being forced on India. Must it develop deterrent capabilities to emulate the other nuclear weapon powers? Or, pragmatically restrict its deterrent to Pakistan? Should it abandon its grandiose futuristic Bhabha plan to progress its light water and PHWR programme and meet its current power needs by imports of enriched and natural uranium? Practical and realistic answers to these questions would ease the problem of identification and separation of civilian and military facilities, and operationalizing the Indo-US. nuclear deal.
The feud between the two Asian giants is getting shriller. No sooner China had announced its 'peaceful development' policy through a White Paper than the Japanese foreign minister voiced his concern about the 'considerable threat' that Beijing posed. The latest spat in the running battle of charges and counter-charges is the controversial suicide by a consular staff in Japan's embassy at Beijing. The frosty relationship between the two countries is bound to cast a big shadow over the entire East Asian region in the coming years.
The feud between the two Asian giants is getting shriller. No sooner China had announced its 'peaceful development' policy through a White Paper than the Japanese foreign minister voiced his concern about the 'considerable threat' that Beijing posed. The latest spat in the running battle of charges and counter-charges is the controversial suicide by a consular staff in Japan's embassy at Beijing. The frosty relationship between the two countries is bound to cast a big shadow over the entire East Asian region in the coming years.
If one were to evaluate major developments in the Asia Pacific in 2005, three stand out: the first-ever East Asia Summit (EAS); India's increased entrenchment in Asia Pacific regional affairs; and further deterioration of relations between Japan and China. Among these, the worsening row between Japan and China will perhaps have a far greater impact on regional security and economic architecture. Obviously, no East Asian community or economic integration can ever fructify so long as these two giants remain at loggerheads. The Chinese (and South Korean) refusal to meet Prime Minister Koizumi on the sidelines of ASEAN Plus Three summit for an informal trilateral meeting, as has been the normal practice, is an indication of how deep the gulf has become. But what really ails the relationship?
Many attribute the recent downslide to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's insistence on visiting the controversial Yasukuni shrine where an estimated 2.5 million war dead (and a thousand or so non-Japanese) who fought for Japan since the Meiji Restoration, including 14 Class A criminals implicated for their role in World War II, are enshrined. China's outrage is a result of what it perceives to be Japan's failure to fully atone for the sins it committed during the occupation of many Asian countries before and during the War. Japan interprets Chinese outbursts as pressure tactics to compel it not to assume a larger political role so that Beijing emerges as the leader of East Asia. While it is true that China and South Korea in particular bore the brunt of Japanese atrocities, there is no way really to measure how genuinely remorseful Japanese leaders have been for their past actions despite nearly 19 official 'apologies' so far.
Though tension has been intensifying in the last few years, bilateral relations probably hit their nadir in April 2005 when violent demonstrations broke out in most major cities across China. The ostensible reason for these protests was Japanese approval of a textbook for high school students (one of 27 cleared so far), which was perceived to be rightwing-inspired and which glosses over what Japanese soldiers did during their occupation of China.
A more serious problem is going to be the strong nationalist feelings a series of events in the last few years have fuelled. This can not only badly undermine regional peace and stability but also affect the economic dynamism that is sweeping across the region.
China is perturbed by what it perceives as attempts by Japan to cleverly use the post-9/11 political environment to break free from self-imposed shackles and remilitarise itself. Japan, for its part, maintains that China's inexorable military modernisation with double-digit defence allocations is causing concern especially because of the non-transparent nature of the Chinese system.
It is true that Japanese security policies are undergoing profound changes and it has taken certain decisions that were unthinkable a few years ago. These changes, however, need to be seen in the context of the changing global and regional security matrix. Ideally, Tokyo would prefer cold war arrangements from which it benefited enormously to continue, but circumstances have changed fundamentally. It is no secret that the US, even as it tries to restructure its forward deployments in East Asia, is exerting enormous pressure on Japan to undertake greater security responsibilities and provide corresponding contributions to justify and sustain the security alliance. For instance, after dithering for nearly two decades, Japan decided in May 2003 to join the US-led ballistic missile defense programme (BMD) and has contributed, more symbolic than substantial, to the American war efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq.
There are other developments as well that have emerged as major security challenges for Japan. The whole debate in South Korea over its 'balancing role' in the future, implying irrelevance of the American troop presence in that country, might tilt the strategic balance against Japan. Further, China's forceful moves on the disputed Senkakus, repeated Chinese naval incursions into the Japanese territorial waters, continued stalemate over the North Korean nuclear issue, and not so subtle Chinese attempts to marginalise Japan from East Asian affairs have unnerved the Japanese. While these have forced Japan to initiate certain measures, they are also seen as opportunities to chart a new course for the country.
There is no doubt that there has been a rightward tilt in the Japanese polity as testified by Koizumi's thumping victory in the September 2005 lower house elections. In fact, though foreign policy issues hardly figured in the pre-election debates, in hindsight it is obvious that China's attitude played a significant role in influencing voters. The impression that Koizumi could stand up to the Chinese, by naming China as a potential threat in the December 2004 New Defence Programme Guidelines (NDPG), by stating Taiwan as a common security concern for Japan and the US in February 2005, and by persisting with visits to the Yasukuni, was instrumental in the ruling LDP's landslide victory. At the same time, what needs underscoring is the maturity with which Japan has reacted to China's hostile actions.
If one were to surmise that Koizumi's Yasukuni sojourns are the root cause of the current rift between Japan and China, it will be like missing the wood for the trees. There are several other fundamental reasons. One, for the first time in the last several centuries Japan has to contend with the rise of a new power centre in its vicinity. Two, if history is any guide, every time there is a rise of a new power it invariably tends to disturb the existing status quo, which means a rising China would tend to be ambitious and would aspire for greater strategic space, political rhetoric about 'peaceful development' notwithstanding. No wonder Japan feels threatened.
Unlike the US-Soviet rivalry, in the case Japan and China there is a strong economic dimension. Bilateral trade has surpassed US $200 billion (including Hong Kong), thus making China Japan's largest trading partner. Japanese have invested nearly $70 billion in China and Tokyo has extended over $33 billion as Official Development Assistance (ODA) to Beijing. Yet, strong economic interdependence has failed to alleviate political differences. On the contrary, recent data suggests that uneasy political relations are beginning to render even economics 'cold.' Japanese exports, which rose by 20 per cent annually since 2001, have slowed to 3.2 per cent in the first eight months of 2005. Further, in the first half of 2005, Japanese direct investments declined by 8.2 per cent over the same period last year. Surely, with the explosion of Chinese trade, today the Chinese market is more important for Japan than the other way round. There could be many reasons for the slow down, but the role of 'cold political relations' cannot be ignored.
What does it all mean to India? Japanese have become more vocal about India as an alternative to China in the sphere of economic interaction. But Chinese aver that India is nowhere near the kind of opportunities that they can offer. It is too simplistic to infer that a loss to China is an automatic gain for India, though soured relations between Japan and China are showing their effect on Japan-India relations, which have qualitatively improved in the recent past especially in the politico-strategic field. India has also caught the attention of Japanese investors, not necessarily because of Tokyo's political problems with Beijing but because of economic opportunities that India offers. The betterment of India's relations with Japan should be seen in the context of the changing East Asian environment and India's potential to contribute to regional stability and development because New Delhi and Tokyo share common interests and concerns and more importantly have no clashing interests. The strategic dimension among Japan, China and India is something that appears to be unavoidable.
Bangalore's prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) was the venue of an attack by an unidentified gun-toting killer on December 28. Delhi based professor, Professor M.C. Puri - participating in an international conference - was killed and four other scientists seriously injured in the attack. The incident must be termed as one of 'terrorism', even if the identity of the perpetrators is to be definitively established, for it amounted to the pre-meditated killing of innocent people.
Bangalore's prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) was the venue of an attack by an unidentified gun-toting killer on December 28. Delhi based professor, Professor M.C. Puri - participating in an international conference - was killed and four other scientists seriously injured in the attack. The incident must be termed as one of 'terrorism', even if the identity of the perpetrators is to be definitively established, for it amounted to the pre-meditated killing of innocent people. The incident has led to a sombre, reflective mood setting in just as the country prepares for the traditional New Year festivities.
Puri was the hapless and unwitting victim of a pattern of terrorist related violence in India that goes back to the late '80s. From misplaced sub-nationalism to irredentism stoked by external agencies, the causal factors for terrorism in India have been varied and complex and some instances of state complicity have compounded the South Asian narrative. An abiding and distinctive characteristic of the Indian experience is the manner in which the Pakistan security establishment has used a low intensity conflict and terrorist methodology to degrade India's internal security.
In the post 9-11 global security context, Southern Asia has morphed into a complex lattice of terrorist groups and nodes, some of which are linked to major international outfits - such as the International Islamic Front - committed to a supra-national, radical religious agenda. At this juncture, the finger of suspicion points to a reasonably well-established terrorist group that has a network in South India. But in the absence of firm evidence, hasty emotive conclusions must be avoided. The use of an AK-47 by itself does not axiomatically lead to one group or the other, for such firearms are now available in many parts of India, with local militias and criminal gangs. Yet much of the circumstantial evidence points to groups that have distorted Islam. It merits recall that last week the Delhi Police arrested three alleged HuJI (Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami) terrorists who made an instructive confession with a Bangalore link.
India's economic vitality and its information technology affinity have received considerable notice in recent years, so much so that the infrastructure associated with this sector are deemed to be the new nodes of national prosperity, bestowing upon cities such as Bangalore, Chennai and Hyderabad, a high-value status. Consequently they have figured as potential targets on the terrorist list (for any terrorist attack seeks high visibility to maximise the 'terror' impact on society). This has been noted by security agencies. Interrogation of the terrorists arrested in Delhi revealed that they had received training in Bangladesh, which is perceived to be the hub for coordinating operations in south India and parts of Southeast Asia, and that - after a 21-day training capsule - a group of them were instructed to target software centres in Bangalore and Hyderabad.
This is not to suggest a direct link between the IISc incident and the Delhi investigations, but to highlight to the pattern that can be discerned in the larger footprint of terrorism, which will have to be investigated carefully but resolutely. The current Bangalore incident was preceded by the terrorist attacks in Delhi in October on Diwali-Id eve. Both developments raised the same question - more often than not in a near hysterical manner by the audio-visual medium - is India a soft-state that will remain a victim of terrorism into perpetuity?
Empirical data does show that India is high up on the list of nations affected by terrorism, but it is equally true that it is in a politico-geographical framework that is unique. The immediate neighbourhood comprises regimes that are either unable, or unwilling, to quarantine the terrorist structures that target India. In the worst case scenario, they actually abet such constituencies. The Bangalore incident once again draws attention to the urgent need to evolve a national strategy to deal with the scourge of terrorism that will redress the existing inadequacies by way of legislation, security skills, investigation procedures and speedy convictions. An information strategy that is relevant to 24-hours news channels is also called for.
This gap in the Indian response matrix to terrorism is reflective of the nation's diffident strategic culture which has the Somnath syndrome still embedded within it. Every attack or assault is dealt with reactively. But Bangalore symbolises a new and resurgent India. A strategic culture, in sync with the new reality, should evolve. Civil society has a very important role to play in combating terrorism, and the current wave of anger and frustration must be distilled into a steely national resolve, so that the terrorists in this case are tracked and brought to book speedily. This is the New Year resolution that will ensure that Professor Puri didn't die in vain.
The Russia-Uzbekistan Treaty of Alliance Relations signed by President Vladimir Putin and President Islam Karimov at a glittering Kremlin ceremony on November 14, 2005 marked the completion of a full circle in Tashkent's relations with Moscow following the collapse of the Soviet Union. It also signified the Central Asian Republic's return to the Russian orbit.
The Russia-Uzbekistan Treaty of Alliance Relations signed by President Vladimir Putin and President Islam Karimov at a glittering Kremlin ceremony on November 14, 2005 marked the completion of a full circle in Tashkent's relations with Moscow following the collapse of the Soviet Union. It also signified the Central Asian Republic's return to the Russian orbit.
With 26 million people, Uzbekistan is the most populous Central Asian country. Also, a sizeable number of ethnic Uzbeks live in neighbouring states. Located in the very heart of Central Asia and having common borders with all other Central Asian states, it occupies a very important position in the region. Uzbekistan is also richly endowed with natural resources like gold, uranium, gas and oil. It is the fifth largest cotton producer and the second biggest exporter of cotton in the world. Though its oil reserves are not as large as that of its neighbour Kazakhstan, Uzbek oil reserves are still a substantial 297 million barrels (according to the CIA's The World Factbook). With the biggest army in the region, Tashkent has been widely seen as entertaining ambitions of becoming the regional hegemon in the post-Soviet period. Moreover, Uzbekistan - in comparison with other Central Asian states - went the farthest in asserting its independence from Moscow. In March 1999, it withdrew from the Russia-led CIS Collective Security Pact and the Uzbek military began to be trained by the United States. However, on December 11, 1999, Russia and Uzbekistan signed a bilateral military and military-technical cooperation agreement. In June 2001, Uzbekistan joined the Shanghai Co-operation Organization (SCO), which was interpreted as reflecting the Uzbek desire to manoeuvre between Russia and China. The Uzbek elite believes that it is the major bulwark against the spread of political Islam and Islamic militancy in the former Soviet Central Asia.
Unlike Russia and many other former Soviet republics that had opted for economic "shock therapy," Uzbekistan did not suffer any steep decline in its GDP in the initial post-Soviet period largely due to its persistence with the Soviet-era economic structures. President Karimov was often quoted for having emphasized that "one should not destroy the old home till a new home is built". By the middle of the 1990s, however, the Uzbek economic model appeared to have lost steam. Socio-economic distress faced by the bulk of the population is seen as the Achilles' heel of the current system, which may be exploited by religious extremists in the absence of political space allowed to secular political opposition.
Uzbek Policy Zigzags
In the post-September 11 period, Uzbekistan was the first among the Central Asian Republics (CARs) to offer a military base at Karshi Khanabad to the USA for supporting military operations in Afghanistan in the war against terrorism. The US deployed about 1,000 military personnel at Karshi-Khanabad also known as the K-2 base. During President Karimov's visit to the USA in March 2002, USA and Uzbekistan signed the "Declaration on Strategic Partnership and Cooperation Framework". From the US point of view, strategic partnership with Uzbekistan and the appearance of the US air bases in Uzbekistan and at the Manas airport in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, were major gains in a region which was not so long ago the exclusive preserve of Moscow. What is more, the US military presence in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan was not viewed only in the context of the ongoing military operations in Afghanistan, but was also seen as a counterweight to both the Russian and the Chinese influence in the region. It naturally evoked the ire of the latter.
The US-Uzbek strategic partnership rested on the horns of a dilemma from the beginning, buffeted as it was by vocal criticism in the West over the absence of democracy and the violation of human rights in the republic. In the fiscal year 2004, the USA withheld $10.5 million in aid, including $6.87 million in military aid, because the State Department could not certify that Uzbekistan was moving toward multiparty democracy. The 'colour' revolutions in Georgia, Ukraine and in Kyrgyzstan between 2003 and 2005 alarmed the Uzbek authorities about the dangers of a close embrace with the West. They suspected that Western NGOs were seeking to prepare opposition forces as an alternative to the present government and consequently began to place restrictions on the activities of West-aided NGOs.
President Karimov had started edging towards Moscow in a bid to follow a 'multi-vector' policy and acquiring space for manoeuvre even prior to recent precipitation of relations with the USA. The turnaround in Uzbek relations with Russia came in September 2003 at the time of President Putin's visit to Samarkand on the way from Malaysia to Moscow. Following informal talks between Putin and Karimov, Uzbek officials were told to "make friends with Russia again". By that time, a certain disenchantment with the West had set in Uzbek circles, especially with regard to the scale of Western aid. Karimov was reported to have remarked at the time, "We had hoped that the international community would meet us with open arms". These aspirations had not come true. On June 16, 2004, Uzbekistan and Russia signed the Treaty on Strategic Partnership. In October 2004, Russia was admitted to CACO (Central Asian Treaty Organization), giving it a greater official role in Central Asian geopolitics.
The May 13 violent incidents in Andijan - the Ferghana Valley city of Uzbekistan - brought to fore the great power rivalry for control over Central Asia. The Uzbek authorities were peeved by the Western demand for an independent international enquiry of the killings, and the airlifting of more than 400 Uzbek refugees to Rumania and other countries. On July 5-6, 2005, the SCO summit at Astana - to which India, Iran and Pakistan were invited as observers for the first time - called upon the USA to specify a time-frame for the withdrawal of its bases from Central Asia. Kyrgyzstan subsequently agreed to the continuation of the US air base at the Manas airport, reportedly in lieu for increased aid. However, on July 29, 2005, Uzbekistan served notice on the USA to evacuate the Karshi-Khanabad base within 180 days. Thereafter, Uzbekistan demonstrably moved closer to Russia and China. President Karimov's June 29, 2005 visit to Moscow was followed by the summit meeting of CACO at St. Petersburg on October 6, 2005, where a decision was taken to merge CACO with the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Community (EEC). President Putin described the move as "the best birthday gift" to him.
Russia-Uzbekistan Treaty of Alliance Relations
Growing camaraderie between Uzbekistan and Russia has been epitomized by the signing of the "Treaty on Alliance Relations" on November 14, 2005. "The Treaty of Alliance Relations" seems to answer the security concerns of the Uzbek regime, while it provides Russia an opportunity to reassert its influence in the geostrategically important region. The security treaty is purported to be in keeping with Article 51 of the UN Charter which allows for 'collective self-defence'. Article 2 of the Uzbek-Russia treaty stipulated that:
Article 3 of the treaty stipulates that:
And Article 4 opens up the possibility of a Russian base in Uzbekistan. It provides for granting "the use of military facilities" on the territories of the signatories to each other "when necessary and on the basis of separate treaties" in order to ensure security and maintain peace and stability. However, in order to avoid hurting US sensitivities, the Russians probably do not wish to immediately establish a base in Uzbekistan close on the heels of the departing US troops.
Blow to Western Strategy
Western analysts have regarded these developments as a major blow to Western strategy in the region. They are seeking to draw comfort by harping on the inherent cleavages between Russian and Chinese interests and ambitions vis-à-vis Central Asia. Beijing was reported to have contacted Kyrgyz officials in early 2005 to explore the possibility of establishing a military base in Kyrgyzstan. Subsequently, after the Uzbek government's decision to close the US base, the Russian military analyst Vladimir Mukhin was cited to have remarked that the Chinese made quiet but definite enquiries about the possibility of gaining access to the base. Beijing's moves reportedly galvanized the Russians to quickly conclude the military alliance with Uzbekistan to foreclose the possibility of the Chinese seeking to fill up the vacuum (Stephen Blank, "China Joins the Great Central Asian Base Race", at Eurasia Insight at www.eurasianet.org, November 16, 2005).
As regards the accepted wisdom in the corridors of power in many of the post-Soviet states dominated by the former Communist elites, it is increasingly becoming oriented towards ensuring 'economic' growth and prosperity first, before conditions are considered ripe for 'political' liberalization or democracy. Amidst all this, the struggle for control and influence over the post-Soviet space is intensifying.
Need for Skillful Indian Diplomacy
In view of the geopolitical tug-of-war among the major powers for control over Central Asia, India may be called upon to conduct an extremely skillful diplomacy. Central Asia, which is regarded as India's extended strategic neighbourhood, presents both challenges and opportunities. India needs to play a discreet but pro-active role to create a niche for itself. It can build on good will and considerable 'soft power' in the region in order to have a friendly, secular and stable Central Asia next to its turbulent north-western periphery.
The inaugural East Asian Summit (EAS), representing nearly 50 per cent of the world's population with 20 per cent of global trade, and comprising 16 nations that are on a dynamic path of economic development, is obviously a mega event. For India, it is yet another opening to increasingly align itself with this region and play a commensurate political and security role. There is no question that the centre of gravity is decisively moving to East Asia and developments in this region will offer great economic opportunities and pose serious challenges as well.
The inaugural East Asian Summit (EAS), representing nearly 50 per cent of the world's population with 20 per cent of global trade, and comprising 16 nations that are on a dynamic path of economic development, is obviously a mega event. For India, it is yet another opening to increasingly align itself with this region and play a commensurate political and security role. There is no question that the centre of gravity is decisively moving to East Asia and developments in this region will offer great economic opportunities and pose serious challenges as well. The EAS was touted as the beginning of a new era of economic integration and a progenitor to the creation of an East Asian 'community.' There are however doubts whether the EAS can accomplish this.
When Malaysia offered to host the EAS at last year's ASEAN summit, no one had a clue about its composition or about the agenda it would pursue. It was widely believed that the EAS would provide political impetus to the process of growing regional economic linkages. East Asia is interacting with itself feverishly like never before - intra-regional trade has increased from about 40 per cent a decade back to over 55 per cent now and investments too are increasingly inward bound. The rise of gargantuan economies such as China and India will further expedite this market-driven process. This process is driven by market conditions, but there is no region-wide overarching economic or political mechanism to provide guidance to it.
Conspicuous by its absence is the United States, which has been the most dominant player in the region for more than a century. Interestingly, it is not unduly worried about its exclusion probably knowing pretty well that there has been a spate of new multilateral frameworks that came into being in the last decade and half, none of which have had much impact either economically or politically.
This is the basis for scepticism about the EAS. What can it do that other forums had earlier failed to achieve? In addition to the ASEAN Dialogue Partnership meetings with important economic powers that have been in existence since the mid-1970s, the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) was created in the early nineties with a similar objective of economic integration. It is nowhere near achieving any of its goals notwithstanding grand annual summit meetings and declarations. Another such mechanism is the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), founded in 1994 to address security-related issues exclusively. The 1995 ASEAN Concept Paper envisioned a three-stage development for the ARF -confidence building measures, preventive diplomacy, and conflict resolution. Aside from some progress in CBMs, the ARF has failed to promote transparency and a predictable pattern of relations, which it had set out to do. In fact, the ARF was found to be wanting when crises actually arose such as the East Timor issue or the North Korean nuclear problem. Another forum created in the aftermath of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis was the ASEAN Plus Three (the three being China, Japan and South Korea) to regularly exchange views, promote economic cooperation, and ensure non-recurrence of economic crises. A+3 has also been holding annual summit-level meetings, along with ASEAN summits with India since 2002.
We thus have multiple fora of all sorts and creating one more may not make much of a difference. It is claimed, nonetheless, that the EAS is different since it also aims to create a community in the region. The idea appears to be far-fetched, for 'community' has a different connotation and certain common characteristics are indispensable to build a community. Unlike in Europe, in Asia there is not a single trait that can be said to be common or pan-Asian - religious, linguistic, ethnic, or cultural. Indeed, this region is so vast and complex, with extremely uneven levels of economic development, ridden with a large number of unresolved disputes and a heavy historical baggage of suspicion and animosity, that doubts arise whether the community idea is feasible even as a long-term goal.
Perhaps an equally important dimension is ASEAN's ability to lead the EAS. ASEAN is in a much weaker position especially after the financial crisis and has failed to emerge as an autonomous power centre that can engage the great powers and ensure regional balance. The relationship between the EAS and other fora, the impact of widening rift between Japan and China, and the future role of the United States are other issues that remain ambiguous.
As far as India is concerned, it has been a remarkable turnaround in fortunes. As late as a decade back, it was not considered worthy enough to be a member of APEC nor did it figure in the deliberations when the ARF was created. An invitation to India to the EAS now is recognition of its fast growing economic and political clout. However, a policy centred on multilateralism has its limitations. Hence, bilateral relations become crucial and moreover tend to be longer lasting. There is already a budding rivalry between China and India. India should therefore aim at firming up its ties especially with Japan and qualitatively improve its relations with countries such as Indonesia and Vietnam. With some diplomatic adroitness, India can do this not necessarily at the cost its relations with China.
Threats to human, national and international security as a result of biological warfare and pandemics are inadequately discussed in the popular media. Non-state actors are expected to use innovative methods to execute acts of terrorism. It is often contended that a terrorist organisation may well get the best results using conventional high explosives. This trend is clearly discernible in the methods used by terrorists worldwide. Manufacturing terror-grade dirty radiological or biological bombs that can be delivered effectively is far more difficult than using conventional explosives.
Threats to human, national and international security as a result of biological warfare and pandemics are inadequately discussed in the popular media. Non-state actors are expected to use innovative methods to execute acts of terrorism. It is often contended that a terrorist organisation may well get the best results using conventional high explosives. This trend is clearly discernible in the methods used by terrorists worldwide. Manufacturing terror-grade dirty radiological or biological bombs that can be delivered effectively is far more difficult than using conventional explosives. Yet the security establishment cannot take the threat of use of bio weapons lightly. Used effectively, it has a very high probability of causing mass disruption if not destruction.
But as we debate and deploy the bulk of our resources on anthropogenic methods for acts of terror on human beings, some viruses as "gifts" of nature seem to be on mission to mutate and spread to humans. The bird or avian flu (H5N1) virus is one contemporary example. Unlike the nearly 40 to 50 million deaths recorded due to the Spanish flu of 1918-1920, this bird flu is forecast to cause nearly 150 to 200 million deaths if it mutates and gets transmitted from human to human. Mainstream international journals and magazines such as Foreign Affairs, Nature, National Geographic, Newsweek and India's very own Economic and Political Weekly amongst others have featured articles on the subject as a call to action. That the threat is hyped and driven by business interests of the powerful pharmaceutical industry is yet another view put forth. We need to remember that with the onset of global warming, the home air conditioning industry is bound to make huge profits or for that matter with the rise of obesity in India the cash registers of neighbourhood health clubs are ringing. Our preparations to deal with this threat must not be bogged down by the debates mentioned above. While all viewpoints must be deliberated upon, it is vital for the national security establishment to be prepared now rather than wait for that disaster to strike and then adopt reactive measures.
In a recently conducted bilateral round table conference between the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) and the National Chengchi University (NCCU), Taiwan, a session was devoted to the challenges of avian flu. Professor Peter W S Chang from Taiwan's Department of Health gave a comprehensive presentation from Taipei's perspective. Taiwan and India have so far been safe from bird flu. One reason for Taiwan avoiding a bird flu outbreak was that it was not on the migratory routes of birds. Its isolation as an island has proved to be a blessing in disguise. According to an Indian official present at the conference, India has escaped a bird flu outbreak so far due to the fact that no major poultry farms exist near the 112 water bodies that are frequented by migratory birds. Interestingly, besides vegetarianism, the Indian habit of frying and deep cooking of chicken meat is also regarded as a reason for the inability of the virus to spread from birds to humans. However, we cannot be assured of comprehensive security by just being vegetarians or relishing the popular cooked chicken dishes or keeping our fingers crossed. The world now is much more integrated and globalised. Recall how pathogens of cholera travelled from Bangladesh to Chile in the ballast of ships. Human to human strains can well move across borders and so can infected vectors of birds and animals.
Taiwan had experienced the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003. This was the closest to the new scenario of bird flu. Taiwan then suffered 73 human deaths and a loss of one per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). If adequate precautions are not taken and bird flu strikes then Taipei expects 10,000 deaths and a much higher loss of GDP. Having undergone the experience, it is very clear about the manner in which to take proactive measures. The reasons for concerns are that the Spanish flu virus is genetically similar to the present H5N1 strain; birds to human transmissions exists, there is 50 per cent mortality in infected human cases; once the bird virus spreads to humans and acquires human genes it can easily transmit between humans and the bird flu can impact globally within three months.
While in India we do not want the public to panic by this scare, in Taiwan the health minister is like a TV performer educating the public via the media on a daily basis. Preparations include announcing Novel Influenza virus infection as a notifiable disease, formulation of a national preparedness plan for influenza pandemics and strategies and defences termed as "3 main strategies and 4 lines of defence plans". The three main strategies comprise of infection prevention and control, Novel flu vaccines and antiviral drugs. Research and Development is in progress to manufacture a vaccine. Anti viral drugs like Tami flu is available for 0.7 per cent of the population in 2005 and this figure would increase to four per cent by 2006. The eventual goal is to stockpile drugs for 10 per cent of the population. In the four lines of defence plans, the strategy is to block the problem outside the country through international cooperation, quarantine of suspected persons on the border, strengthening health care system and health management in the community.
What lessons does this experience and practice of Taiwan for dealing with the bird flu have for India? India is a vast country with a population of over 1 billion in comparison to Taiwan's 22.6 million. There are a number of uncertainties. The effect of Tami Flu is not proven. Vaccines are yet to be manufactured after due research and development. Even if a vaccine is researched for a particular type of strain of the virus, the time for manufacturing and administering vaccines may not be sufficient enough to counter the spread of disease. Another vulnerability is of the disease surveillance system. The private sector provides 75 per cent of curative care in India. The data from private health providers are not included in any disease surveillance. The existing system is passive or has the capacity to report an occurrence. Not all the people have access to government hospitals. Most private hospitals and clinics are not in the chain of reporting of such diseases. Poverty by itself precludes timely treatment for the poor. Economic reforms have made India a tourist destination for chronic diseases, but for infectious diseases and pandemics it is unlikely that the private sector would be able to deliver. Thus an effective passive reporting system in a revived public health care system may be the first step to cope with the threat. Simultaneously, a proactive Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme must be put in place. The National Disaster Management Authority may need to carry out a reappraisal of the looming threat of bird flu. Undoubtedly, security threats have become more complex. In this particular case the link cuts across the human, animal and wildlife divide. A high degree of coordination is expected amongst doctors, veterinarians, wild life experts, the pharmaceutical industry, animal farms, the poultry sector, and the government health service, etc. Much more simulation of disaster management scenarios needs to be done. At the same time mitigation measures must be sustained in coordination with the World Health Organisation. A precautionary principle is considered the best approach.
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