Diverse
Coalition Launches Campaign to Stop U.S. Nuclear Deal
with India
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 15, 2008
Contact:
Leonor Tomero, Council for a Livable World, (202)
546-0795 ext 119, ltomero@clw.org | www.responsiblenucleartrade.com
Arms
Control Experts, Environmental Activists, Consumer
Advocates, Religious Groups and Doctors Find Proposed
Agreement Would Dangerously Undermine National Security,
Global Stability
WASHINGTON,
DC –Twenty-three organizations today launched
a coalition to stop the Bush Administration’s
proposed nuclear trade agreement with India. The proposed
agreement would exempt that nuclear-armed nation from
longstanding U.S. and international restrictions on
states that do not meet global standards to prevent
the spread of nuclear weapons.
The
Campaign for Responsibility in Nuclear Trade believes
the agreement would: dangerously weaken nonproliferation
efforts and embolden countries like Iran and North
Korea to pursue the development of nuclear weapons;
further destabilize South Asia and Pakistan in particular;
and violate or weaken international and U.S. laws,
including the Hyde Act, which Congress passed in 2006
to provide a framework for the bilateral U.S.-Indian
nuclear cooperation agreement.
“When
Congress takes a close look at the Bush Administration’s
proposed agreement, it will find a dangerous, unprecedented
deal,” said John Isaacs of the Council for a
Livable World. “The proposal undermines over
30 years of nonproliferation policy, will increase
India’s capability to produce nuclear weapons
and its stockpile of nuclear weapons-material, and
sends the wrong message to Pakistan during a time
of crisis in that country. We feel confident that,
under the Congressional microscope, the many flaws
of this deal will be exposed, and it will ultimately
be rejected for the sake of preserving national security
and global stability.”
The
U.S.-Indian bilateral nuclear cooperation agreement
would allow the transfer of U.S. nuclear technology
and material to India. However, it fails to hold India
to the same responsible nonproliferation and disarmament
rules that are required of advanced nuclear states.
The deal will increase India’s nuclear weapons
production capability, exacerbate a nuclear arms race
in the region, undermine international non-proliferation
norms, and encourage the creation of large nuclear
material stockpiles. Its contribution to meeting India’s
growing energy needs has been greatly exaggerated
and it would create economic opportunities for foreign
nuclear industries without any guarantees for U.S.
businesses.
The
pact must win approval from the U.S. Congress, which
changed U.S. law in December 2006 to allow negotiation
of the agreement, under several conditions that have
not been met in the final language of the agreement.
Those conditions include a new agreement with the
International Atomic Energy Agency for safeguarding
Indian power reactors and changes to the international
guidelines of the 45-member Nuclear Suppliers Group,
which currently restrict trade with India.
Members
of the Campaign are working to educate the U.S. Congress
and public about the dangers of the deal, and are
working with experts and organizations in two-dozen
countries to inform deliberation over the deal within
Nuclear Suppliers Group and its member state governments.
The
new coalition’s partners include: Council
for a Livable World, Arms Control Association, Federation
of American Scientists, Physicians for Social Responsibility,
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Washington office, United
Methodist Church - General Board of Church and Society,
Friends Committee on National Legislation, Institute
for Religion and Public Policy, Union of Concerned
Scientists, Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation,
All Souls Nuclear Disarmament Task Force, British
American Security Information Council, Women’s
Action for New Directions, Americans for Democratic
Action, Peace Action, Peace Action West, Arms Control
Advocacy Collaborative, Beyond Nuclear, Bipartisan
Security Group, Citizens for Global Solutions, Maryknoll
Office for Global Concerns, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
and Nuclear Information Resource Information Service.
Advisors
to the coalition include Ambassador Robert Grey (Ret.),
former U.S. Representative to the Conference on Disarmament
and Director of the Bipartisan Security Group; Dr.
Leonard Weiss, former staff director of the U.S. Senate
Subcommittee on Energy and Nuclear Proliferation and
the Committee on Governmental Affairs; Dr. Robert
G. Gard, Jr., Lt. Gen., U.S. Army (Ret.), Senior Military
Fellow, Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation;
Subrata Ghoshroy, Director, Promoting Nuclear Stability
in South Asia Project, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; and Dr. Christopher Paine, Nuclear Program
Director, Natural Resources Defense Council.
About
the Campaign for Responsibility in Nuclear Trade
The
Campaign for Responsibility in Nuclear Trade, a partnership
project of 23 nuclear arms control, non-proliferation,
environmental and consumer protection organizations,
opposes the July 2005 proposal for civil nuclear cooperation
with India and the additional U.S. concessions made
to India as a result of subsequent negotiations because
they pose far-reaching and adverse implications for
U.S. and international security, global nuclear non-proliferation
efforts, human life and health, and the environment.
More information about the campaign can be found at
www.responsiblenucleartrade.com.
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