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	<title>Inter Press ServicePOLITICS: India Ditches Iran and Non-alignment for West</title>
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		<title>POLITICS: India Ditches Iran and Non-alignment for West</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/2005/09/politics-india-ditches-iran-and-non-alignment-for-west/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Sep 2005 10:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>IPS Correspondents</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asia-Pacific]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Development & Aid]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Multilateralism Under Siege]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ipsnews.net/?p=17015</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Praful Bidwai]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><p class="wp-caption-text">Praful Bidwai</p></font></p><p>By IPS Correspondents<br />NEW DELHI, Sep 26 2005 (IPS) </p><p>By voting for a Western-sponsored resolution at  the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), meant to reprimand Iran,  India has signalled the collapse of its long-standing policy of non- alignment.<br />
<span id="more-17015"></span><br />
Capping recent agreements signed with the United States on military and civilian nuclear cooperation within an increasingly closer &#8221;strategic partnership&#8221; with it, this constitutes the greatest shift in New Delhi&#8217;s foreign policy since independence from colonial rule in 1947.</p>
<p>&#8221;By taking this disgraceful step, India is indicating that it has become a camp-follower of Washington,&#8221; said Gulshan Dietl, a West Asia expert at the School of International Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University here.</p>
<p>The resolution of the IAEA board of governors came at the end of a week of hectic lobbying and manipulation in Vienna and other major capitals of the world, centred around a draft prepared by Germany, France and Britain or EU-3, a group which claims to have been playing a mediatory role between the U.S. and Iran.</p>
<p>Iran insists that its nuclear activities are entirely peaceful and within the rights and obligations defined by the Nuclear Non- Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The IAEA has not held Iran to be in substantive breach of the NPT, only of not disclosing everything about its uranium enrichment history.</p>
<p>But the U.S. claims that Iran is bent upon developing nuclear weapons and wants it hauled up before the United Nations Security Council for possible sanctions.<br />
<br />
The final resolution is a modified version of the EU-3&#8217;s original draft. It falls short of referring Iran to the Security Council. But it prepares the ground for doing so while citing Iran&#8217;s history of &#8221;concealment&#8221; of its nuclear activities, and the IAEA Director General&#8217;s report on them. It asks Iran to stop all activity related to uranium enrichment.</p>
<p>Further, it says that Iran&#8217;s &#8221;non-compliance&#8221; with NPT safeguards and the IAEA&#8217;s statute &#8221;gives rise to questions that are within the competence of the Security Council&#8221;, given its responsibility for maintaining &#8221;international peace and security&#8221;.</p>
<p>The resolution furnishes the basis for the next logical step, of referring Iran to the Security Council and mounting coercive pressure on it to dismantle its nuclear programme.</p>
<p>The motion was passed 22:1, with 12 countries abstaining. Venezuela was the only state in the 35-strong IAEA board of governors to oppose it. Among those who abstained were Russia, China, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa and even Pakistan.</p>
<p>The U.S. is triumphant over the passage of the resolution and has expressed its gratitude to India for helping out. Iran is outraged and has condemned the resolution as &#8221;illegal and unacceptable&#8221;.</p>
<p>India&#8217;s decision to vote with the U.S. was taken even before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh&#8217;s visit in mid-September to France and the U.S., where he met President George W. Bush. &#8216;The Hindu&#8217; newspaper disclosed on Sep. 17 that New Delhi had already decided to vote in that manner if it came to the crunch.</p>
<p>After the resolution, the crisis over Iran&#8217;s nuclear activities is likely to worsen. This takes the wind out of the sails of New Delhi&#8217;s argument that it voted for the resolution because it expands the room for diplomacy to resolve the crisis and because it avoids an immediate reference to the Security Council.</p>
<p>Strangely enough, India has entered a number of caveats and reservations about the resolution. India is opposed to &#8221;Iran being declared as non- compliant with its safeguards agreements&#8221; and does not agreed that the &#8221;current situation could constitute a threat to international peace and security&#8221;.</p>
<p>&#8221;These objections pertain to the very substance of the motion and warranted at least abstention from, if not opposition to, the vote,&#8221; says Hamid Ansari, India&#8217;s former ambassador to Iran and a West Asia expert, who has closely followed the IAEA&#8217;s debate on Iran.</p>
<p>Yet, India went along with the &#8221;yes&#8221; vote on the plea that it had persuaded the EU-3 to modify its original tough resolution; since its concerns were addressed in the toned-down motion, it would not have been proper to abstain.</p>
<p>&#8221;But that original resolution was a mere ploy,&#8221; says Ansari. &#8221;The EU- 3 knew it wouldn&#8217;t go through and sprang the already-preferred milder draft at the last minute, thus forcing a vote in which India would break ranks with a number of Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) countries such as South Africa, Brazil and Malaysia, the current chair of NAM&#8221;.</p>
<p>Adds Ansari, &#8221;The EU-3 was no longer acting independently, but as a surrogate of the U.S. So India ended up as the surrogate of a surrogate, demeaning its policy of independence. This speaks of poor diplomacy with respect to NAM, as well as a confused foreign policy.&#8221;</p>
<p>For decades, NAM acted in unison at the IAEA. Now, it stands split, with countries like Peru, Ghana and Ecuador joining hands with the U.S.-EU while Malaysia, South Africa, Mexico, Brazil, which have been pro-active in NAM, abstained.</p>
<p>&#8221;The Indian vote,&#8221; says Dietl, &#8221;militates against the national interest and will greatly lower India&#8217;s global stature and credibility. If India could stab a friendly country like Iran in the back, despite its close economic and political relations with it, it won&#8217;t be trusted by many other developing countries.&#8221;</p>
<p>India&#8217;s vote is likely to jeopardise a grand project it is currently negotiating: an Iran-India gas pipeline passing through Pakistan. This enjoys wide domestic support and has been seen as the key to promoting peace and prosperity in the South Asia-West Asia region, as well as opening a conduit to energy-rich Central Asia.</p>
<p>The Manmohan Singh government&#8217;s decision has come under spirited attacks domestically both from the Left and the Right. The Left sees it as &#8221;betrayal&#8221; of the legacy of solidarity with the &#8221;non-aligned and developing countries&#8221; and succumbing to U.S. pressure. The Left, a crucial ally of the ruling United Progressive Alliance, led by the Congress party, says the resolution &#8221;virtually&#8221; converts India into a U.S. ally and camp-follower.</p>
<p>The right-wing, pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) too has opposed India&#8217;s decision to vote for the EU-3 resolution in Vienna and accused the government of &#8221;surreptitiously&#8221; making a major foreign policy shift.</p>
<p>Jaswant Singh, who served as foreign minister during the BJP&#8217;s years in power from 1998 &#8211; 2004 said the government was &#8220;spreading confusion on important policy matters impinging directly on national security&#8221;.</p>
<p>Singh said there was now a serious question mark on the proposed gas pipeline from Iran, especially because the government has refused to spell out whether &#8221;it stands or not&#8221;.</p>
<p>A former senior official of the National Security Council, under the BJP dispensation, said he feared that &#8221;the vote (at the IAEA) will decrease India&#8217;s bargaining power vis-à-vis the U.S. and generate anti- India suspicions in China&#8221;.</p>
<p>India strenuously denies that the vote in Vienna is linked to its eagerness to get the U.S. Congress&#8217;s approval for a far-reaching nuclear cooperation deal it signed in July with Washington. However, &#8216;The New York Times&#8217; and other newspapers have reported that the U.S. explicitly made such a linkage and told Singh in mid-September that India &#8221;must choose&#8221; between Iran and the U.S.</p>
<p>India&#8217;s concern to have its nuclear weapons status normalised has become an obsession. &#8221;This is driving New Delhi to try to gatecrash into the global nuclear order based on the NPT, although it is not even a signatory to that treaty,&#8221; argues Prof Dietl.</p>
<p>&#8221;All in all, the Vienna vote is a remarkably bad bargain, and announces India&#8217;s capitulation to the U.S.,&#8221; Dietl said.</p>
		<p>Excerpt: </p>Praful Bidwai]]></content:encoded>
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