Press Statement of the BJP on the Indo-US nuclear deal issued on 10th December,2006.
The senior leaders of the BJP met today at the residence of Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee to discuss the implications of the Act passed by the US Congress to give effect to the nuclear deal with India. Alongwith Shri Vajpayee, Shri L.K. Advani, Shri Rajnath Singh, Shri Jaswant Singh, Shri Yashwant Sinha and Shri Arun Shourie attended the meeting. There was a detailed discussion on the subject and the party’s position is set out below:
Immediately after the Prime Minister concluded the nuclear deal with US on 18 July, 2005, the BJP had unambiguously stated that as far as the US was concerned, the sole objective of the deal was to cap India’s nuclear weapons programme. As the months passed by and the US position became clearer by the day, our worst fears stood confirmed. The Act passed by the US legislature leaves us in no doubt that the purpose of the deal is to impose on India, bilaterally, conditionalities which are worse than those incorporated in the NPT and the CTBT, in perpetuity and without an exit clause. This is why a three and a half page Bill which was suggested by the US Administration to the US Congress became a 23 page Bill in the US Senate and the final Act is now a41-page document.
The final Act has become lengthier because it includes the stringent provisions of both the House as well as the Senate Bills. The small changes made during the Conference stage are cosmetic and not substantive. So, if "determination" has been replaced by "reporting" and "certification" by "assessment", it hardly reduces the rigour of the deal for India. The fact of the matter is that ever since July 2005, the US has been shifting the goalposts and thegovernment of India has not only been acquiescing in it, but adopting them as the latest benchmark. We shall not be surprised, therefore, if thegovernment tries to adopt a brazen attitude even on this latest assault on the sovereignty of our nuclear programme, as some of the apologists of the deal have started doing already.
The Act, as passed by the US legislature, is not acceptable to the BJP. Its provisions fly in the face of the assurances given by the Prime Minister to Parliament from time to time. Obviously, the US Congress and the Bush Administration attach no importance to these assurances.
The "final product", for which the Prime Minister asked us to wait, is before us. The US Administration is bound to ensure that the bilateral 123 agreement, the IAEA safeguard agreement, the Additional Protocol and the NSG "consensus" on the deal will have to be in line with the Act of the US Congress. The Prime Minister, therefore, cannot tell us to wait for yet another "final product".
The Act :