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China on verge of unveiling n-deal with Pakistan: Expert

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New Delhi, June 14 (IANS) China is on the verge of unveiling a nuclear deal with Pakistan that will, in effect, be 'cocking a snook' at the world as it will be outside the purview of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), a noted security expert said Monday.

After the exception the NSG accorded to India in 2008 to enable the implementation of its civilian nuclear pact with the US, Pakistan had sought a similar deal from Washington and after having been turned down, 'it now appears that China will soon announce its deal with Pakistan to export two nuclear reactors', Commodore (retd) C. Uday Bhaskar, director of think tank National Maritime Foundation (NMF), said.

'This will be without NSG concurrence and despite the many misgivings about Pakistan's track record, its linkages to terror and radical ideologies,' he said while addressing a seminar here on 'Nuclear Arsenals post-2010', organised by the Indian Navy-funded NMF.

'One can infer that this is the equivalent of China announcing its own autonomy in the WMD (weapons of mass destruction) domain and that the US is no longer the determining factor in matters nuclear,' Bhaskar contended.

'In effect, this would mean that China is cocking a snook at the NSG, the US and the rest of the world,' he added.

Tracing Pakistan's missile and nuclear acquisitions and the upcoming deal with China, he said these had 'many grave implications' for the region - and particularly India.

'Tracking Pakistan's nuclear acquisitions, it is evident that Pakistan, which began with an enriched uranium weapon is now moving toward the plutonium option. This switch has many grave implications for the region - and India in particular.

'This is primarily due to the distinctive status Pakistan has apropos its nuclear weapon: It is the only country where the army has its finger on the button, the current civilian leadership notwithstanding,' Bhaskar maintained.

He also noted that Pakistan was the only state 'to use the nuclear weapon to enhance its strategic space for pursuing a revisionist agenda that invests in religious radicalism and supports terrorism'.

'China is cognisant of this pattern and has yet chosen to continue its support to Pakistan's nuclear programme,' Bhaskar contended.

In this context, he noted that though the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) had come into being in 1970, 'concurrently, the world spawned a very complex nuclear eco-system often shrouded and deliberately muddied, with a disconnect between rhetoric and reality. States, state representatives and opaque activities led to selective proliferation and spread'.

'One such WMD domain was the one spawned by China, of which the Sino-Pakistan one is the better known, with linkages extending from North Korea to Saudi Arabia,' Bhaskar pointed out.
 
Mr. Bhaskar is a very respected Analyst.

But i find this article misleadimg....

1. The Indian Nuclear Deal has nothing to with weapons but power ..whike article suggests its completely for weapons programme....

2. India needed NSG waiver... Without the same the Highly advanced western technology will be beyond reach....
 
Nothing but bhaskar spiting venom out of frustration after suffering from pangs of intemittent motions.
 
leave this,india have got and will get more than enough frm indo-u.s deal
 
Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) rules already been used for wiping the nose by US in case of US-Indo nuclear deal. so dressing up after that is just useless
 
It an old news Mr. forgetful. China was to supply Pakistan two Nuclear Reactors at the time when these discussions were going almost a decade back.
 
China-Pak nuclear deal breach int protocol

WASHINGTON: China is all set to announce its intent to provide to Pakistan two nuclear-power reactors, according to a prominent American nuclear expert who said this would breach international protocol about the trade of nuclear equipment and material.

China's announcement will also overstep the guidelines of the 46-country Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), which bars nuclear commerce between Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) members like China and non-member states like Pakistan, Mark Hibbs a senior associate in the nuclear policy programme at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said.

"In the coming weeks, China is expected to announce that it intends to export two nuclear-power reactors to Pakistan. The move would breach international protocol about the trade of nuclear equipment and material," Hibbs said in the latest issue of the prestigious Foreign Policy magazine.

Hibbs said once the deal is officially confirmed, the spotlight won't be on either Beijing or Islamabad, it will be on Washington, which concluded a watershed nuclear agreement with India in 2008.

"That deal is the precedent that has opened the door for China, creating an awkward test for a US administration greatly concerned about the risks of nuclear proliferation," he wrote.

"It will leave US President Barack Obama with two options, He can either oppose the transaction and request that China leave the NSG, or grudgingly accept the Chinese exports".

As of last week, when US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with Chinese leaders in Beijing for the three nday US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue, the US was strongly leaning toward the latter, Hibbs said.

The noted author said if the White House does choose to grin and bear the China-Pakistan deal, it will have compelling reasons for doing so.

"The United States has a lot on its plate with China right now. It wants Chinese help on UN Security Council sanctions against Iran, a greater Chinese effort to rein in North Korea, and a significant revaluation of China's currency vis-a-vis the US dollar," he said.

"But more importantly, US made its own NSG rule-suspending nuclear deal with India in 2008.

Beijing could have blocked the NSG exemption for India, but accommodated the pressure of the US and its allies on this issue. Now, the bill is coming due as Islamabad demands equal treatment.

"China would now expect reciprocity from the United States in the NSG, given that it was Washington that started changing the rules," he noted.

Hibbs said a number of NPT countries are watching all this with alarm.

"At last month's NPT Review Conference, they referred to the US-India deal as a dangerous precedent. States that export nuclear equipment, they worried, would feel emboldened to brush aside rules meant to reward NPT membership with nuclear-trade privileges," he said.

China-Pak nuclear deal breach int protocol-Politics/Nation-News-The Economic Times
 
They are that scared and concerned with just two new nuclear reactors? You've got to be kidding me. I mean, grow up please. Whether the world liked it or not, China gave Pakistan much more than just power reactors and the world couldn't do shyt about it. Maybe this time it would be same.
 
hi
don't we already have bombs & and aren't we increasing their numbers already? American's or any other party who has concerns regarding this matter are not only being hypocrites but also proving to the Pakistani's that why they always blame the west, funny such hypocrites from Pakistani side very tactfully advocate idealist approach by provoking the thoughts that the west is not prejudiced, it's our own Mullah's and blah blah.:argh:
 

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