Whether or not the Indian tests are as significant as the collapse of the Berlin wall,they undoubtedly changed the nature of the international non-proliferation game as well asthe structure of international security, especially Asian security. It undermined thesmugness of the 'international community'-- more than 170 states and the P-5 nuclearpowers -- which felt secure in the belief that the NPT with its indefinite extension hadput the nuclear proliferation issue to rest in the world. India's testing was a rude shockto those who felt that further proliferation could be contained by aggressivenon-proliferation measures. India's tests brought out the reality that the Westernattitude of marginalizing India in world affairs was wrong, as well as patronizing andarrogant, and nuclear testing as well as nuclear weaponry was still a currency ofinternational power and prestige. The fault line all along in the NPT system was that thetreaty was publicized as a bargain between t renunciation of nuclear arms by thenon-nuclear states and the eventual disarmament of the nuclear powers. Given a choicebetween nuclear disarmament and nuclear deterrence, the P-5 powers were inevitably likelyto choose the latter, and use the fig leaf of nuclear arms reduction as a sign of a moveto 'eventual disarmament'. India's tests exposed the fraud inherent in the publicrelations of the P-5. So even though India's test did not alter the distribution ofmilitary power between, say, India and the USA, it exposed the carefully orchestratedarchitecture of deceptive Western diplomacy which had accompanied the projection ofnon-proliferation as a shared value and interest of the 'world community'. By creating anew situation, India's tests enlarged the number of nuclear weapon states. The new groundreality became a source of permanent friction with the provisions of the NPT. By openlychallenging the NPT norm against further proliferation, India also showed that the nucleartaboo against further proliferation --which had lasted from 1964 to 1998 -- could bebroken by a poor, marginal, post-colonial state. The outrage in international reactionsreflected an understanding of the psychological impact of the Indian challenge to theauthority of the P-5 nations. At issue in the condemnatory international reactions was theability of India to revisit the international non-proliferation agendas by widening thecracks in the existing fault lines. Furthermore, India was rewriting the strategic agendathrough bilateral negotiations with the US, China, Pakistan, and others. Here the emphasiswas on a 'security dialogue' rather than the 'global non-proliferation norm'. India wasnot rejecting non-proliferation. It was insisting that Indian nuclear restraint could notbe taken for granted, and it could not be achieved unless Indian strategic interests wereaccommodated by the P-5 states, especially China and the US. This way, India wasreaffirming nuclear non-proliferation but it was also making it difficult for the P-5states and their associates (for example Canada and Japan) from fencing off securityinterests of others from the global non-proliferation norm. Thus, the outrage ininternational reactions reflected the discomfort the practitioners felt about being boxedinto a set of two dilemmas: (1) the deterrence-disarmament dilemma; and (2) the globalnon-proliferation-national security dilemma. The international reactions showed thestruggle in dealing with these dilemmas.