|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 30, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
International
| Previous
| Next
'Sanctions against India have outlived their usefulness'
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, AUG. 29. The sanctions against India have ``outlived
their usefulness and may paradoxically be impeding non-
proliferation efforts rather than aiding them,'' says Mr. Joseph
Biden, Democrat Senator from Delaware, in a letter to the U.S.
President, Mr. George W. Bush, urging the latter to lift the
punitive measures.
Mr. Biden, however, said the use of the Congressionally
authorised waiver by the President should not imply a weakening
of the U.S. commitment to non-proliferation. He also said the
existing export control measures on technology for the spread of
weapons of mass destruction should remain in place, and perhaps
be even more strengthened where necessary.
The task of lifting the sanctions against India through waivers
mandated by Congress rests with the Bush administration. Although
an approval is not required in each case, it calls for
consultation with Congress.
In this instance, with Mr. Biden's open support for easing the
punitive measures, it makes it all the more easy for the
administration. Senior Congressional aides say the move will come
shortly before or during the time of Mr. Bush's expected meeting
with the Prime Minister, Mr. A. B. Vajpayee, in the fourth week
of September in New York. The present Chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee and a powerful voice among the
Democrats on Capitol Hill, in a letter to the White House on
August 24, said the Glenn Amendment sanctions were always
intended more to deter than to punish and that the application of
a ``one-size-fits-all'' non- proliferation policy was not
appropriate for the special circumstances in South Asia.
Mr. Biden, a possible candidate for the Presidential election of
2004, has been emphasising the need for positive inducements
other than measures that are both punitive and ineffective.
``Today, the economic sanctions on India serve to stigmatise
rather than stabilise.''
The Democrat leader said he came to the present conclusions based
on the discussions he had with Mr. Vajpayee, the Minister for
External Affairs and Defence and the National Security Adviser.
He also said the lifting of the sanctions may result in a more
cooperative relationship with India.
``I hope that if we show our goodwill by removing this irritant,
India will respond with reciprocal acts of goodwill in non-
proliferation and other areas. As India responds with further
positive, concrete steps of its own, Congress will be more likely
to look with favour on the repeal (rather than merely the waiver)
of the 1998 sanctions,'' Mr. Biden said.
Clarifying that his call for lifting sanctions against India was
limited to the post-1998 Glenn amendment stipulations, he called
for a reduction in the Entities List without jeopardising U.S.
non-proliferation efforts. India's political commitment on the
moratorium on further testing, its forbearance ``so far'' from
making its nuclear weapons operational and a positive track
record on export controls ``provide a positive foundation for our
talks on security and non-proliferation''.
With regard to Pakistan's plea for the simultaneous lifting of
the sanctions, Mr. Biden said the measures against Islamabad,
including those under the Glenn, Pressler and Symington
amendments, were linked to a discussion on the issue of Chinese
supply of missile parts to Pakistan.
New legislation?
In another letter to the President, Mr. Tom Lantos, ranking
Democrat on the House International Relations Committee, said he
planned to introduce a legislation soon aimed at lifting the
punitive measures permanently.
``It is my hope that your administration will support this
legislation,'' he wrote adding that as the legislative process
was slow, he (Mr. Bush) could use the authority granted to waive
sanctions against India and other restrictions in the realm of
science, technology and high-tech cooperation between the two
countries.
Mr. Lantos said that while he was a staunch proponent of arms
control and non-proliferation, ``I do not believe that our
nation's interests, nor the interests of non-proliferation are
served by attempting to isolate India.
..
The U.S. is more likely to get further commitments and compliance
from India on international non-proliferation and test ban
agreements by lifting sanctions and engaging in greater
scientific and defence cooperation.''
On the lifting of sanctions against Pakistan, Mr. Lantos
expressed reservations. He pointed to the history of
proliferation of missile and nuclear technology from China to
Pakistan; and in the implications of doing away with the Glenn,
Symington and Pressler amendments. The lawmaker also pointed to
the relationship between Islamabad and the Taliban in Afghanistan
and, of course, touched on the issue of restoration of democracy
in Pakistan.''
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : International Previous : Interim Govt. provokes criticism with poll move Next : Flights to resume | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|