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October 02, 2008

From headlines on Democracy Now! today:

Senate Approves US-India Nuke Deal
Back in Washington, the Senate has approved a measure to lift a three-decade ban on nuclear trade with India. The deal will allow India to expand its nuclear power industry without requiring it to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty as other nations must. Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan of North Dakota said the agreement would encourage nuclear production worldwide, because it effectively rewards India for developing nukes outside the treaty.

Sen. Byron Dorgan: "The bill before us will almost certainly expand the production of nuclear weapons by India. And here is what is says to India: even as we take apart the basic architecture of nonproliferation efforts, the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which India is one of three countries that has never signed—even as we take that nonproliferation architecture apart with this bill, we have said to India with this agreement, 'You can misuse American nuclear technology and secretly develop nuclear weapons.' That’s what they did."

The House passed its version of the measure earlier this week. The vote marks a victory for the Bush administration, which has lobbied heavily for the deal.
I've been concerned about the contradictions this represents for a long time. Commercial nuclear interests trump high-minded concerns about nuclear war.

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