US has backed India's NSG membership. The Indo-US nuclear deal was signed nearly 10 years ago.
Highlights
- India has been seeking entry into the 48-member Nuclear Suppliers Group
- US, most other nations in elite group back India's entry. China blocks
- Will continue to actively advocate India's membership in NSG, says US
Washington: India has not been able to secure membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group because of China's veto, a senior Trump Administration official said today, asserting that the United States will continue to advocate for New Delhi's membership in the elite grouping as it meets all the criteria.
India has been seeking entry into the 48-member elite nuclear club, which controls nuclear trade, but China has repeatedly stonewalled its bid.
While India, which is backed by the US and a number of western countries has garnered the support of a majority of the group's members, China has stuck to its stand that new members should sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), making India's entry difficult as the group is guided by the consensus principle. India is not a signatory to the NPT.
"Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) is a consensus-based organisation. India has not been able to secure membership as a result of opposition from China," Alice Wells, the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, told a Washington audience.
"We have deemed that we're not going to limit our own cooperation with India based on a Chinese veto. Of course, we moved ahead with a STA One authorisation and we certainly believe that India meets all of the qualifications of the nuclear supplier's group and will continue to actively advocate on behalf of India's membership," Ms Wells said in response to a question.
She said that by granting Strategic Trade Authorisation (STA-1) status, the US has placed India in the inner circle of America's closest allies. "It reflects just the intimacy of the strategic partnership," she said in response to a question at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a top American think-tank.
The senior State Department Official hoped that the nuclear deal with India would finally see light of the day with the approaching of its 10th anniversary.
"With Westinghouse coming out of bankruptcy, we now have an opportunity to cross the finish line to really culminate in what was this historic process that began a decade ago to be able to have one of our premier companies provide in some of the safest and cleanest fuel that will benefit, tens of millions of Indian citizens," she said.
"It's a really another exciting chapter that hopefully we can close. Certainly, we will be supporting Westinghouse as it continues its conversations with India," she said.
Former US President George W Bush, had during his tenure, signed the legislation on the Indo-US nuclear deal. It was then approved by the US Congress, and made into law on October 8, 2008.