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BEIJING, March. 7 -- The motivation of US President
George W. Bush's whirlwind visit to Afghanistan, India and Pakistan between
March 1-5 boils down to three elements: Promoting regional balance, countering
terrorism and preventing nuclear proliferation.
Regional balance has double connotations. First, US-led strategic interest in Asia;
second, balance in the South Asian subcontinent itself.
The United States attaches special importance to
India's role in "maintaining regional strategic balance," which is a component
vital to "Asian strategic stability" in the eyes of the Bush administration.
India enjoys a unique geo-political position, which
is favoured by the United States in its strategic calculations and in its
construction of the Asian power-balance framework.
Ashley Tellis, architect of Washington's India
policy, once observed that a powerful and independent India should be regarded
as one of the United States' strategic assets, even though India merely
maintains strategic partnership relations with the United States, short of being
an ally.
Indeed, India has gained a lot from the Bush visit. A
package of documents of strategic partnership significance, for example, was
signed by the two countries during the presidential visit.
The documents involving nuclear co-operation stand
out from the rest as the most eye-catching.
The United States, making major concessions at the
last moment on matters of civilian-purpose nuclear energy co-operation, agreed
that India's fast breeder reactors not be subject to checks by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Things, however, did not stop here. The United
States also gave its approval that India be brought into the global co-operation
of such programmes as the ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental
Reactor) and FutureGen, which involves development of clean energy.
The generous gift from the Bush government enables
New Delhi, without signing the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, to enjoy the
same rights enjoyed by the members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group, and the
rights enjoyed by the five nuclear powers in particular. India is thus granted
the status of de facto nuclear power.
All this serves to substantiate the strategic
co-operation between the United States and India.
However, India pursues a strongly independent
diplomacy. The country wants to have good ties with all countries, developing
strategic co-operative relations with Russia, China, the United States and EU in
particular.
Stability in relations between South Asian nations
and in their domestic situations also feature predominantly in the US
calculations on strategic balance in Asia.
Most important of all, the peace process between
India and Pakistan should be advanced, defusing the crisis arising from Kashmir
disputes, which was called the "powder keg of South Asia" by former US president
Bill Clinton.
Bush, during his visit, acclaimed the progress made
in the peace process and encouraged India and Pakistan to make continuous
efforts to settle the Kashmir issue peacefully. But he stopped short of
committing the United States directly to the matter, saying: "The best way for
Kashmir to be resolved is for the leaders of both countries to step up and
lead."
In the face of the fact that Afghanistan-Pakistan
relations are riddled with disputes, Bush urged the two parties to settle their
discords, instead of stepping up finger-pointing.
The Afghan Government, for example, time and again
charged that Islamabad had been lukewarm about striking remnant Taliban forces
and Al-Qaida elements remaining at large within Pakistani borders. Bush,
therefore, pushed Pakistani President Musharraf to take tough measures against
terrorist penetration.
The bombing of the US consulate in Karachi only
served to lengthen Bush's stay in Pakistan from five hours to 24 hours. This
shows that the Bush government deliberately demonstrated its support for the
governments of Karzai and Musharraf in their efforts to stabilize domestic
situations.
India is the United States' partner in worldwide
anti-terror war. Besides urging New Delhi to share information and anti-terror
tactics with the United States, the US Government hopes that India can take an
active part in Afghanistan's political and economic reconstruction, in
peace-keeping missions in Iraq and its reconstruction as well.
As a matter of fact, the United States has long
regarded India as the only major democracy along the Middle East-Northeast Asia
tumult curve. So India, in the eyes of the United States, is a potential helping
force, which could contribute greatly to Washington's democratic transformation
plan in the region.
To Washington, Pakistan constitutes the forward
position of the anti-terror war and also an ally in countering terrorism.
Afghanistan is a reminder of the anti-terror war accomplishments and also a
laboratory of democratic transformation, which, Washington believes, will help
destroy the fertile breeding ground of terrorism. That is why Bush paid his
visit to the two countries, in spite of strong anti-US sentiment there.
Preventing nuclear proliferation was the third major
factor motivating Bush's visit.
Non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) has long been a goal pursued by the United States' South Asia policy, all
the more so after India and Pakistan conducted nuclear tests in tandem in 1998.
The United States, during Bush's visit, was eager to strike a deal with New
Delhi on separating the latter's civilian nuclear facilities from military ones.
Washington believes that this would facilitate the US efforts to more
effectively curb WMD proliferation, in addition to courting India's favour,
which, it believes, does good to its global strategic arrangement.
The Bush government believes that 1998 nuclear tests
carried out by India and Pakistan have disrupted the current non-proliferation
infrastructure. Presented with the stark facts, Washington thinks it is better
to incorporate India into the revised non-proliferation system than leave New
Delhi out of the set-up as a potential proliferation source.
According to the US-Indian deal, New Delhi agrees to
subject 65 per cent of its nuclear facilities to the IAEA supervision. The
country has also promised to sign the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty and pledged to suspend nuke tests unilaterally and
ultimately join the Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty. New Delhi has also
committed itself to strictly complying with obligations stipulated by the
Missile Technology Control Regime and the Nuclear Suppliers Group.
The United States' making an exception to accommodate
India, driven by geo-political considerations, has, however, sent repercussions
through the international non-proliferation infrastructure.
The double standards will very likely complicate the
nuclear issues of Iran and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea all the
more.
Moreover, US-Indian nuclear co-operation might
encourage other nuclear powers to have nuclear co-operation with their partners,
which might trigger a chain reaction of nuclear-technology proliferation.
Now the international community is presented with a
big question: How can the effectiveness and binding power of the
non-proliferation system be guaranteed?
(Source: China Daily) |