Gandhi, Bush, and the Bomb
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
On February 24, at a press briefing, White House National Security
Advisor Stephen Hadley announced that, when U.S. President George
W. Bush travels to India, he will lay a wreath in honor of Mohandas
Gandhi.
For those familiar with the cynical gestures of government officials,
it might come as no surprise that an American President would attempt
to derive whatever public relations benefits he can by linking himself
to one of the most revered figures in Indian and world history.
But the level of hypocrisy is heightened when one recalls that
Bush is currently one of the worlds leading warmakers and
that Gandhi was one of the worlds leading advocates of nonviolence.
Furthermore, the American Presidents major purpose for traveling
to India is to clinch a deal that will provide that nation with
additional nuclear technology, thus enabling it to accelerate its
development of nuclear weapons.
Gandhi, it should be noted, was not only a keen supporter of substituting
nonviolent resistance for war, but a sharp critic of the Bomb. In
1946, he remarked: I regard the employment of the atom bomb
for the wholesale destruction of men, women, and children as the
most diabolical use of science. When he first learned of the
atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Gandhi recalled, he said to himself:
Unless now the world adopts non-violence, it will spell certain
suicide. In 1947, Gandhi argued that he who invented
the atom bomb has committed the gravest sin in the world of science,
concluding once more: The only weapon that can save the world
is non-violence. The Bomb, he said, will not be destroyed
by counter-bombs. Indeed, hatred can be overcome only
by love.
That is certainly an interesting backdrop against which to place
President Bushs plan to provide India with nuclear technology.
India is one of only four countries that have refused to sign the
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) a treaty endorsed by
188 nations. Thumbing its nose at the world, India has conducted
nuclear tests and has developed what experts believe to be 50 to
100 nuclear weapons. Under the terms of the NPT, the export of nuclear
technology is banned to nations that dont accept international
inspections of their nuclear programs. In addition, U.S. law prohibits
the transfer of nuclear technology to a country that rejects full
international safeguards. U.S. law also bans such technology transfer
to a non-NPT country that has conducted nuclear test explosions.
Thus, if the President were to give any weight to Gandhis
ideas, international treaty obligations, or U.S. law, he would not
be working to provide India with the same nuclear-capable technology
that he so vigorously condemns in Iran a country, by the way,
that has signed the NPT, has undergone inspections by the International
Atomic Energy Agency, and has not conducted any nuclear weapons
tests.
There are other reasons to oppose this deal, as well. Although
Indias relations with Pakistan are relatively stable at the
moment, they might well be very adversely affected by any perception
that the Indian government was racing ahead with a buildup of its
nuclear arsenal. Furthermore, Pakistan might demand the same nuclear
assistance as India. Indeed, if India can simply ignore the NPT
and, then, receive nuclear technology from the United States, why
should other countries observe its provisions? The Iranians, certainly,
will make this point.
At home, the Bush administrations double standard has not
gone unnoticed. In Congress, Representatives Ed Markey (D-MA) and
Fred Upton (R-MI) have introduced a bipartisan resolution H.Con.Res.
318 expressing strong concern about the proposed U.S.-India nuclear
deal. Although this resolution affirms humanitarian and scientific
support for India, it contends that full civil nuclear cooperation
between the two nations poses serious dangers. For example, it points
to the possibility that the supply of nuclear fuel to India could
free up Indias existing fissile material production, thereby
enabling it to be used to expand Indias nuclear weapons arsenal.
The resolution also opposes transfer of nuclear technology to any
country that is not a party to the NPT and has not accepted full
safeguards.
Whatever
happens to this resolution, if the Bush administration were to implement
its nuclear agreement with the Indian government, it would have
to convince Congress to amend U.S. law. And arms control and disarmament
groups are determined to prevent that from happening.
Thus, the Bush administration might genuflect to Gandhi in its
efforts to arrange a nuclear pact with India, but it is going to
have to convince a lot of very skeptical observers before it implements
this agreement.
February
28, 2006
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2006 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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S. Wittner Archives
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