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This is an archive article published on December 25, 1998

No harm in signing CTBT now: Jaswant

NEW DELHI, DEC 24: Declaring that there was far better understanding'' in the nation on India's position on the Comprehensive Test Ban ...

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NEW DELHI, DEC 24: Declaring that there was 8220;far better understanding8221; in the nation on India8217;s position on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty CTBT, External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh today moved India one step closer to a signature on the Treaty.

Laying out New Delhi8217;s strategy on this issue, which is remarkably similar to what the US wants New Delhi to do, Singh said it would involve the separate acts of signing, ratification and the deposition of the instrument of ratification.

US officials have privately said that if India 8220;signs the Treaty,8221; as distinct from ratifying it and depositing the instrument of ratification, such a step would be a 8220;strong signal8221; towards moving the Indo-US dialogue forward.

In fact, in his opening remarks at the first press conference since he took over as minister, Singh outlined foreign policy vision in the new year, acknowledging that 8220;just and valid8221; Western concerns would also be taken care of.

8220;This year was a year of stocktaking8230; a year in whichIndia and Indian statecraft was tested in its efforts of reconciling its security interests with the just and valid concerns the international community has about weapons of mass destruction.8221;

He was nevertheless unusually forthright on the US bombing of Iraq, criticising the bypassing of the Security Council and specifically, the 8220;human suffering8221; of Iraq. 8220;Innocents must not suffer. India is mindful of its responsibility in the region,8221; Singh said.

Singh also refused to be drawn into how relations between India and China would progress in the new year, telling a journalist from China that he had 8220;not drawn up any travel plans yet8221; and therefore could not say if he would be visiting Beijing. He admitted that the bilateral joint working group meeting had not been fixed yet.

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Singh reiterated that the government8217;s nuclear programme was a continuation of what had gone before, that it had actually begun as far back as 1948, one year after Independence and under the stewardship of India8217;s first primeminister Jawaharlal Nehru.

Criticising the BJP government about the nuclear programme8217;s ungainly costs, therefore, was 8220;not only a complete misreading of the situation8230; but also fanciful.8221; He also rejected the linkage with Islamabad, saying India8217;s programme was not 8220;driven by or Pakistan-centric.8221; Singh insisted, however, that the government8217;s attempt at building consensus on foreign policy was bearing fruit, that today there was much greater 8220;parliamentary acceptance of altered ground reality.8221;

MPs understood much better the difference between 1996, when India refused to sign the CTBT, and post-Pokharan India, when the credibility of the nuclear deterrent had been assured. Two years ago if India had signed the CTBT 8220;it would have rendered the nuclear option unviable,8221; he added, implying that New Delhi could now move on from that position.

Singh also buried half-a-century of ideology in the pursuit of foreign policy, saying that economic relations would form the 8220;bulwark8221; of India8217;s8220;forward-looking8221; diplomacy and the endeavour to cooperate with the nations8217;s neighbours would be on top of the agenda.

 

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