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August 19, 1999

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US sharpens attack against India

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C K Arora in Washington

The Bill Clinton administration has sharpened its attack against the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government's proposed nuclear doctrine, insisting that the document ''describes the Indian desire to develop a nuclear arsenal'' which, in the United States' view, militates against the security interests of India itself, the subcontinent, the US and the world.

The US also dismisses the view that India needs such a deterrent to avert a ''possible nuclear blackmail by China''.

In reply to a question, state department spokesman James Rubin yesterday said, ''The US had received the draft of India's national nuclear arms doctrine which was made public in New Delhi on Tuesday. We are studying it,'' he added.

''In general, we don't find it an encouraging document, we find it a document that describes the Indian desire to develop a nuclear arsenal, and that is something that we think is not in the security interests of India, the subcontinent, or the United States or the world.''

Asked to comment on Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's National Security Adviser Brijesh Mishra's reported remark that India's nuclear tests and its nuclear programme were intended ''to counter possible threats of nuclear blackmail from China,'' Rubin said, ''Well, at the time when India first detonated its nuclear device, some Indian officials made that claim. And I think you're quite familiar with what we thought of that claim.

''We didn't agree with it,'' he said. ''So, we still don't agree with it. Nothing has changed in our view.''

Detailing the US non-proliferation efforts, Rubin said the Bill Clinton administration would continue to urge India to sign and ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, not to weaponise missiles and stop the production of fissile material.

He said the US would also urge India to develop an export-control system. The combination of these efforts was ''certainly not consistent with the broad outlines of this (Indian) doctrine as we know it,'' he added.

''There's nothing new about China having nuclear weapons, they've had them for a long, long time since about the time that I was born. And that did not generate the need for India to develop and test nuclear weapons.''

He said, ''They (India), obviously, made the decision based on other factors, in our opinion, and that (China) wasn't the key factor.''

UNI

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