NSG draft rule may allow India in, leave Pakistan out

Arms control body official says Pakistan will have to win separate NSG exemption


News Desk December 28, 2016
Pakistani army soldiers travel on a vehicle carrying cruise missile Ra'ad during the Pakistan Day military parade in Islamabad on March 23, 2016. PHOTO: AFP

A draft proposal for accepting new members into the Nuclear Suppliers Group paves the way for India’s entry but leaves Pakistan out, reported India’s IANS news agency, citing a US-based arms control organisation.

The Arms Control Association (ACA) in Washington also warns that relaxing membership rules will undermine non-proliferation.

Last week, the US media reported that Rafael Mariano Grossi, a former chairman of the NSG, had prepared a two-page document, explaining how a non-NPT state, like India and Pakistan, could join the group. Rafael Mariano Grossi was acting on behalf of the current chairman, Song Young-wan of South Korea, and his document enjoys a semi-official status.

NSG membership: ‘Pakistan wants unbiased, fair consideration’

To prevent India from blocking Pakistan from joining the NPT, Rafael Mariano Grossi’s draft note proposes that “one non-NPT member state should reach an understanding not to block consensus on membership for another non-NPT member state”.

But ACA’s Executive Director Daryl Kimball warns that “Pakistan still has grounds to object to the formula outlined by Grossi.”

He explains that the document will require Pakistan to meet the same criteria for membership as India “but, to engage in civil nuclear trade with NSG states, it would have to win a separate NSG exemption from the full-scope safeguards requirement.”

India fails to get NSG membership

India is seeking membership of the NSG on the strength of the fact that it is already doing business with NSG members.

The 48-nation NSG is a nuclear technology control organisation formed in 1975 in response to India’s first nuclear weapons test, which used plutonium produced with nuclear technology from Canada and the US. The NSG seeks to prevent similar future misuses.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 29th, 2016.

COMMENTS (8)

Bitter truth | 7 years ago | Reply If we don't get our way then we'll change the rule of the game. Our way or highway - because might is right. New norms of cheating in 21 century being implemented.
Oommen | 7 years ago | Reply @Libra....You don't understand comedy/Joke? what religious ground...that is another fairy tale.
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