People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXIII
No.
31
August
02, 200
|
More
Steps towards Being
US Ally
Prakash
Karat
IN
the two months of the
second edition of the UPA government, the signs are clear -- the
strategic
alliance with the United
States will be widened and deepened.
This
has been confirmed by the outcome of the visit of US
secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, to India.
The
crux of this
strategic alliance is military collaboration. Four years are complete
of the
ten-year Defence Cooperation Agreement with the United States.
In June 2005, the
UPA government had entered into an agreement titled New Framework
for the US
India Defence Relationship. The United
States
accords priority to the defence collaboration which is the key to
making India
its
strategic ally.
Military
Collaboration
The
Indo-US nuclear deal
was a quid pro quo for this defence agreement. This was
confirmed
on the eve of the Clinton
visit by the US
assistant secretary
of state, Philip J Crowley who stated that the End Use Monitoring is
"part
of the fulfillment of an important initiative that India
and the US
have signed in the area of nuclear cooperation". The End Use Monitoring
Agreement was the key issue for the US
side during the Clinton
visit. It marks an important step in the plans of the United States to sell large scale
defence
equipment to India.
The
Congress-led
government has always been shy of spelling out the implications of the
framework agreement. The then Defence minister, Pranab Mukherjee, had
stated in
parliament that "The framework contains only enabling provisions. It
does
not contain any commitments or obligations." What was not spelt out was
that a series of agreements would flow out of this framework agreement.
The
Pentagon was more forthcoming about the scope of the military
collaboration. In
March 2006 during the Bush visit to India, the Pentagon had
issued a
statement explaining the benefits of the new relationship. It stated:
"These
will serve key objectives of our strategic partnership by helping to
build ties
among our defence establishments and industries and to develop
interoperability
among our armed forces. Defence technology cooperation will contribute
to
strengthened military capabilities and will also result in economic
benefits
through expanded trade."
In
2006, the Maritime
Security Cooperation Agreement to have joint operations between the two
navies
was arrived at. Next to follow was the Logistics Support Agreement.
This would
have facilitated the use of Indian ports and air bases by US armed
forces for
refuelling, maintenance, servicing, communications etc. This agreement
could
not go forward due to the strong opposition put up by the Left when it
was
supporting the government.
Earlier
during the
BJP-led government's tenure, a "General Security and Military
Information
Agreement" (GSOMIA) was signed between the two countries. This
agreement
was a prerequisite for closer military ties and transfer of military
technology
and equipment to India.
The agreement provides for confidentiality for supplies from the United States.
The US
had been insisting on such an agreement from the time of the Narasimha
Rao
government.
EUMA
Stranglehold
The
United States
insists on End Use Monitoring Arrangements (EUMA) for supplying
high-level
military equipment. It has such arrangements with all its NATO and
other
allies. The intrusive inspections will enable the United States
to monitor not only
the equipment it supplies but also collect data on related Indian
equipment and
its technological capabilities. The United
States
will not allow modification of its equipment nor permit India
to
indigenously make spare parts for such equipment. The end use condition
would
also mean India
will not be
able to use the defence equipment in any manner other than what the United States
provides for.
Foreign
minister S M
Krishna was wrong in stating in parliament that such agreements have
been
signed with other countries. Russia and earlier the Soviet Union,
which has
been the biggest supplier of weaponry to India has not ever asked
for any
end use agreement. Neither have the French or the other countries. The
UPA
government is already in the process of buying US
defence equipment. Since the
framework agreement, India
has bought naval reconnaissance planes, military transport planes and
the ship
USS Trenton. The intrusive terms of the End Use agreement for the Trenton include
the
condition that it cannot be used for offensive operations.
The
EUMA will pave the
way for largescale buying of US weapons which is one of the main
factors for
the US
wanting this defence relationship. Along with the 50 and odd joint
exercises
between the two armed forces already conducted, this will be the key
step for
ensuring "interoperability" between the two armed forces. The United States
wants to ensure that there is compatibility between the equipment and
technology
used by the two armed forces which is essential for joint operations.
Under
the Defence
Framework Agreement, the growing coordination between the two armed
forces is
evident. The US Pacific Command Chief visits India
every six months. India
falls
under the Pacific Command jurisdiction. The collaboration is
institutionalised
through the Defence Policy Group which meets every year and by the
various
sub-groups set up.
The
next stage in the
implementation of the framework agreement will require the signing of
the
Communications Interoperability and Security Memorandum of Agreement
(CISMOA)
and the Logistics Support Agreement. This would signify the graduation
of India as a full
fledged military ally of the United States.
Nuclear
Deal :
Technology
Denied
The
Indo-US nuclear deal
is also part of this unequal alliance. The decision by the G8 countries
to ban
the transfer of Enrichment and Reprocessing (ENR) technologies to
countries
which have not signed the NPT is going to affect India.
The stand taken by Finance minister,
Pranab Mukherjee, that this decision has no relevance for India
as it has
got a clean exemption from the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) will not
wash. The
NSG is currently engaged in formulating the guidelines on transfer of
ENR
technology. India while getting the
exemption
from the NSG had committed to accepting all the guidelines of the NSG.
When the
G8 decision is translated into an NSG guideline, India
will be shut out of accessing
ENR technology.
The
deception practiced
by the Manmohan Singh government that it has got full civilian nuclear
cooperation which includes access to technology for the full fuel cycle
is
about to be exposed. For those in the know, this is not a surprise. The
Hyde
Act had specifically prohibited transfer of such technology to India.
The 123
agreement also states that the United States will have to
make a new law for
providing such technology. When the NSG puts in place its new
guidelines, then
the government's claim that it can access such technology from other
countries
will also be negated.
Subordinate
Relations
The
subordinate
relationship to the United
States which has been established by
the
Congress-led government has wide repercussions. During the BJP-led
government India
had signed on to the US
ideological
enterprise called the "Community of Democracies". India
became
part of the convening group of the Community of Democracies. The then Clinton
administration
promoted this forum with the ideological plank that free markets and
democracy
go together. The founding ministerial conference was held in Warsaw, Poland
in June 2000. The COD is backed by the US
government's National Endowment for Democracy (NED) which has funded a
number
of "democracy movements" and "colour revolutions" in Serbia, Ukraine,
Georgia, Nicaragua
and a
host of other places. In a little noticed event, the 5th ministerial
conference
of the COD in Lisbon
on July 11 and 12 was attended by Shashi Tharoor, minister of state for
External Affairs. The Congress-led government has climbed on to the US
sponsored
free markets and democracy bandwagon.
The
visit of Commerce minister,
Anand Sharma to Washington in June
resulted in
the Indian commitment to get the Doha
round of negotiations of the WTO revived. It is widely feared that India
will resile
from its firm stand on issues like agriculture and Nama (non
agricultural
market access).
The
India-Pakistan joint
statement during the NAM
summit at Sharm-el-Sheikh has caused a lot of controversy. The issue is
not the
need for dialogue with Pakistan,
but the suspicion that the UPA government takes positions which are a
result of
"advice" from Washington.
What is required is an independent approach both to Pakistan
and Afghanistan.
The
Indo-US strategic
alliance is influencing not only our foreign policy but all other
spheres in
our domestic policy making. The joint statement of the Clinton visit
promises more such
interventions in the economic and political spheres.
The
prime minister and
the UPA government seem to have drawn the wrong lessons from the Lok
Sabha
verdict. It does not give them the licence to compromise national
sovereignty
and to convert India
into America's
ally.