A Dangerous Deal With India
By Jimmy Carter
03/29/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- During the past five years the
United States has abandoned many of the nuclear arms control
agreements negotiated since the administration of Dwight
Eisenhower. This change in policies has sent uncertain signals
to other countries, including North Korea and Iran, and may
encourage technologically capable nations to choose the nuclear
option. The proposed nuclear deal with India is just one more
step in opening a Pandora's box of nuclear proliferation.
The only substantive commitment among nuclear-weapon states and
others is the 1970 Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), accepted by
the five original nuclear powers and 182 other nations. Its key
objective is "to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and
weapons technology . . . and to further the goal of achieving
nuclear disarmament." At the five-year U.N. review conference in
2005, only Israel, North Korea, India and Pakistan were not
participating -- three with proven arsenals.
Our government has abandoned the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
and spent more than $80 billion on a doubtful effort to
intercept and destroy incoming intercontinental missiles, with
annual costs of about $9 billion. We have also forgone
compliance with the previously binding limitation on testing
nuclear weapons and developing new ones, with announced plans
for earth-penetrating "bunker busters," some secret new "small"
bombs, and a move toward deployment of destructive weapons in
space. Another long-standing policy has been publicly reversed
by our threatening first use of nuclear weapons against
non-nuclear states. These decisions have aroused negative
responses from NPT signatories, including China, Russia and even
our nuclear allies, whose competitive alternative is to upgrade
their own capabilities without regard to arms control
agreements.
Last year former defense secretary Robert McNamara summed up his
concerns in Foreign Policy magazine: "I would characterize
current U.S. nuclear weapons policy as immoral, illegal,
militarily unnecessary, and dreadfully dangerous."
It must be remembered that there are no detectable efforts being
made to seek confirmed reductions of almost 30,000 nuclear
weapons worldwide, of which the United States possesses about
12,000, Russia 16,000, China 400, France 350, Israel 200,
Britain 185, India and Pakistan 40 each -- and North Korea has
sufficient enriched nuclear fuel for a half-dozen. A global
holocaust is just as possible now, through mistakes or
misjudgments, as it was during the depths of the Cold War.
Knowing for more than three decades of Indian leaders' nuclear
ambitions, I and all other presidents included them in a
consistent policy: no sales of civilian nuclear technology or
uncontrolled fuel to any country that refused to sign the NPT.
There was some fanfare in announcing that India plans to import
eight nuclear reactors by 2012, and that U.S. companies might
win two of those reactor contracts, but this is a minuscule
benefit compared with the potential costs. India may be a
special case, but reasonable restraints are necessary. The five
original nuclear powers have all stopped producing fissile
material for weapons, and India should make the same pledge to
cap its stockpile of nuclear bomb ingredients. Instead, the
proposal for India would allow enough fissile material for as
many as 50 weapons a year, far exceeding what is believed to be
its current capacity.
So far India has only rudimentary technology for uranium
enrichment or plutonium reprocessing, and Congress should
preclude the sale of such technology to India. Former senator
Sam Nunn said that the current agreement "certainly does not
curb in any way the proliferation of weapons-grade nuclear
material." India should also join other nuclear powers in
signing the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
There is no doubt that condoning avoidance of the NPT encourages
the spread of nuclear weaponry. Japan, Brazil, Indonesia, South
Africa, Argentina and many other technologically advanced
nations have chosen to abide by the NPT to gain access to
foreign nuclear technology. Why should they adhere to
self-restraint if India rejects the same terms? At the same
time, Israel's uncontrolled and unmonitored weapons status
entices neighboring leaders in Iran, Syria, Turkey, Saudi
Arabia, Egypt and other states to seek such armaments, for
status or potential use. The world has observed that among the
"axis of evil," nonnuclear Iraq was invaded and a perhaps more
threatening North Korea has not been attacked.
The global threat of proliferation is real, and the destructive
capability of irresponsible nations -- and perhaps even some
terrorist groups -- will be enhanced by a lack of leadership
among nuclear powers that are not willing to restrain themselves
or certain chosen partners. Like it or not, the United States is
at the forefront in making these crucial strategic decisions. A
world armed with nuclear weapons could be a terrible legacy of
the wrong choices.
Former president Carter, a Democrat, is founder of the Carter
Center.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company