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Thursday, April 1, 2010

India, U.S. push ahead with ground-breaking nuclear deal


For all the hand-wringing in India over getting sidelined by the United States in its regional strategy,  the two countries have gone ahead and just completed an important deal on thereprocessing of spent nuclear fuel from reactors to be built in India. The agreement is a key step in the implementation of the India-U.S.  civil nuclear pact which grants India access to nuclear fuel and technology, even though it has not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty.  Under the agreement India can reprocess U.S.-originated nuclear material under International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards which in itself is a symbolic concession, according to the Washington Post. It said that the Indians were a bit concerned about the idea of American officials running around their  nuclear reactors , a sort of  “a symbolic, sovereignty issue” as  a source in the U.S. nuclear industry said. They would rather submit to oversight by the IAEA, which thus far is a model the United States has only followed for nuclear collaboration with  Europe and Japan. Considering that America has gone to war in Iraq on the grounds that it was building weapons of mass destruction and is at this time pushing for tougher sanctions against Iran for its nuclear programme, it is indeed a big deal. It can  also potentially reshape the strategic landscape in South Asia with the world virtually granting legitimacy to India as a nuclear weapons state while denying that to Pakistan. Pushing the accord through in the U.S. has  been a “wrenching affair” as the Indian Express put it,  riding against the current of proliferation concerns worldwide. Why should the world be making an exception for India just as it is breathing down hard on Iran and North Korea to roll back their nuclear programmes ? Where, after all, is the iron-clad guarantee that India won’t divert some of the  plutonium extracted from the imported spent fuel to its strategic weapons programme, the experts ask.  Blatant double standards, the Union of Concerned Scientists said. No wonder Pakistan asked for a similar deal at high-level talks in Washington last week aimed at putting their tempestuous ties on a more even keel. And so in that sense, the India-US nuclear deal, really the crown jewel of a strategic partnership, will be the elephant in the room as Washington, Islamabad, and New Delhi tackle a complicated three-way relationship in one of the world’s most unstable regions.

India-Pakistan romance shows all's fair in love, war, tennis and cricket


It is one of the bitterest rivalries on the planet – a 63-year-old grudge that occasionally teeters on the brink of nuclear war. But yesterday Indiaand Pakistan were reeling from the news that two of their most feted celebrities had disregarded decades of cross-border enmity by announcing their engagement. It is difficult to fly between the two countries, let alone conduct a love affair across the divide. Yet, against the odds, Sania Mirza – a 23-year-old tennis player who in 2009 became the first Indian woman to win a grand slam title, when she won the mixed doubles at the Australian Open with Mahesh Bhupathi – has fallen for Shoaib Malik, the bad boy of Pakistani cricket. Today, Mirza's father said his daughter and Malik, 28, the former cricket captain of Pakistan, would move to Dubai after the marriage. Reports said the couple, both Muslims, would celebrate with receptions in the Indian city of Hyderabad, where Mirza lives, and the Pakistani city of Lahore. Indian media said Mirza's family have applied for visas for Pakistan to visit Malik and his family. As soon as the betrothal was announced, message boards were buzzing with comment on this modern day Romeo and Juliet. On one forum on the Mumbai-based Rediff, many commentators said Mirza had brought shame on her country by marrying a Pakistani.