U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India:
Issues for Congress

Paul K. Kerr
Analyst in Nonproliferation
April 8, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL33016
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress

Summary
India, which has not signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) and does not have
International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards on all nuclear material in peaceful nuclear
activities, exploded a “peaceful” nuclear device in 1974, convincing the world of the need for
greater restrictions on nuclear trade. The United States created the Nuclear Suppliers Group
(NSG) as a direct response to India’s test, halted nuclear exports to India a few years later, and
worked to convince other states to do the same. India tested nuclear weapons again in 1998.
However, President Bush announced July 18, 2005, he would “work to achieve full civil nuclear
energy cooperation with India” and would “also seek agreement from Congress to adjust U.S.
laws and policies,” in the context of a broader partnership with India.
U.S. nuclear cooperation is governed by the Atomic Energy Act (AEA). P.L. 109-401, which
President Bush signed into law on December 18, 2006, provides waivers of several provisions of
the AEA (Sections 123 a. (2), 128, and 129). It requires that several steps occur before nuclear
cooperation can proceed. On September 10, 2008, President Bush submitted to Congress a written
determination that these requirements had been met. That same day, the President submitted the
text of the proposed agreement, which had not yet been signed. The President also submitted a
written determination (also required by the AEA) “that the performance of the proposed
agreement will promote and will not constitute an unreasonable risk to, the common defense and
security.” In addition, President Bush submitted several documents, including classified and
unclassified versions of a Nuclear Proliferation Assessment Statement, which is required by
section 123 of the AEA. The Department of State also submitted a report required by P.L. 109-
401 on various aspects of the agreement.
On September 27, 2008, the House passed H.R. 7081, which approved the agreement. The Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations approved identical legislation, S. 3548, September 23. The
Senate passed H.R. 7081 October 1. President Bush signed P.L. 110-369 into law October 8.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and India’s External Affairs Minister Shri Pranab Mukherjee
signed the agreement October 10, and it entered into force December 6, 2008.
U.S. companies have not yet started nuclear trade with India. New Delhi had reportedly insisted
that India and the United States conclude an agreement on a reprocessing facility in India before
New Delhi would sign contracts with U.S. nuclear firms. However, the countries announced
March 29 that they had concluded the agreement. The Administration must submit the subsequent
arrangement to Congress, but has not yet done so. The proposed arrangement shall not take effect
if Congress adopts a joint resolution of disapproval.
It is worth noting that U.S. firms will likely be very reluctant to engage in nuclear trade with India
if the government does not become party to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for
Nuclear Damage, which has not yet entered into force.

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U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress

Contents
Recent Developments.................................................................................................................. 1
India’s Nuclear Cooperation with the United States ............................................................... 2
Subsequent Reprocessing Arrangement ........................................................................... 3
India’s Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries................................................................. 4
Background ................................................................................................................................ 5
Global Partnership ...................................................................................................................... 6
Issues for Consideration .............................................................................................................. 7
Strategy vs. Tactics................................................................................................................ 8
Impact on U.S. Nonproliferation Policies .............................................................................. 9
Iran................................................................................................................................. 9
Restricting Enrichment and Reprocessing...................................................................... 11
Other Priorities ............................................................................................................. 12
Impact on the Nonproliferation Regime............................................................................... 12
NSG Cohesion .............................................................................................................. 13
Effect on NPT Member States ....................................................................................... 13
Missed Opportunities .................................................................................................... 15
U.S. NPT Article I Obligations/Aiding India’s Nuclear Arsenal ..................................... 17
Steps Required by P.L. 109-401................................................................................................. 21
Separation Plan and Safeguards........................................................................................... 21
India-IAEA Discussions/Domestic Opposition ............................................................. 23
India’s Safeguards Agreement ...................................................................................... 24
NSG Support ...................................................................................................................... 26
Other Required Steps .......................................................................................................... 28
Additional Protocol ....................................................................................................... 28
Declaration of Nuclear Facilities ................................................................................... 29
Harmonization with NSG/MTCR Guidelines and Adherence to NSG Guidelines........... 29
The Atomic Energy Act and Consultations with Congress ................................................... 29
Agreements for Cooperation ......................................................................................... 30
Export Licensing........................................................................................................... 32
Termination of Cooperation........................................................................................... 33
P.L. 109-401 ................................................................................................................. 33
President’s Signing Statement ............................................................................................. 35
Issues for Congress ................................................................................................................... 35
The Nuclear Cooperation Agreement................................................................................... 35
Sensitive Nuclear Technology Transfers ........................................................................ 36
Nuclear Testing/Right of Return .................................................................................... 36
Fuel Supply................................................................................................................... 37
P.L. 110-369—Key Provisions .................................................................................................. 39
Declarations of Policy ......................................................................................................... 39
Certification Requirements.................................................................................................. 40
Reporting Requirements...................................................................................................... 40
Procedures for Subsequent Arrangements............................................................................ 41

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U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress

Appendixes
Appendix. India’s September 5, 2008, Statement on Disarmament and Nonproliferation............ 42

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 43

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U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress

Recent Developments
India and the United States announced July 27, 2007, that they had reached agreement on the text
of a nuclear cooperation agreement.1 P.L. 109-401, the Henry J. Hyde United States-India
Peaceful Atomic Energy Cooperation Act of 2006, which President Bush signed into law
December 18, 2006, allows the President to waive such an agreement with India from several
requirements of the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954, as amended.
President Bush submitted the text of the proposed agreement to Congress September 10, 2008.
Additionally, the President submitted a written determination (also required by the AEA) “that the
performance of the proposed agreement will promote and will not constitute an unreasonable risk
to, the common defense and security.” In addition, President Bush submitted several documents,
including classified and unclassified versions of a Nuclear Proliferation Assessment Statement
(NPAS), which is required by section 123 of the AEA. The Department of State also submitted a
report, which is required by section 104 of P.L. 109-401, on various aspects of the agreement.2
President Bush also determined that P.L. 109-401’s requirements for the President to exercise his
waiver authority have been met. These requirements are (1) provision of a credible separation
plan for India’s nuclear facilities; (2) approval by the IAEA Board of Governors of India’s new
nuclear safeguards agreement; (3) substantial progress toward concluding an Additional Protocol;
(4) India’s active support for the conclusion of a treaty to ban fissile material production for
nuclear weapons; (5) India’s support for U.S. and international efforts to halt the spread of
sensitive nuclear fuel cycle technologies (enrichment and reprocessing); (6) India taking
necessary steps to secure nuclear and other sensitive materials and technologies through
adherence to multilateral control regimes (like the NSG and the Missile Technology Control
Regime [MTCR]); and (7) a consensus decision by the NSG to make an exception for India.
President Bush submitted the agreement after the IAEA Board of Governors approved India’s
safeguards agreement August 1, 2008. The NSG decided at the end of a September 4-6
Extraordinary Plenary meeting to exempt India from the Group’s export guidelines.
Procedures for congressional approval of the nuclear cooperation agreement are described in both
P.L. 109-401 and the AEA. According to P.L. 109-401, the agreement cannot enter into force
without a joint resolution of approval from Congress. According to Section 123 b. of the AEA,
the President is to submit the text of the agreement to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
and the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The President is then to consult with the
committees “for a period of not less than thirty days of continuous session.” According to Section
123 d., the two committees shall, after that time, “each hold hearings on the proposed agreement
for cooperation and submit a report to their respective bodies recommending whether it should be
approved or disapproved.” Therefore, the minimum amount of time that must elapse before
Congress can vote on a joint resolution of approval is 30 days of continuous session, in addition
to the amount of time Congress would take to hold hearings.

1 The full text of the agreement, which was released August 3, 2007, can be found at http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/
2007/aug/90050.htm.
2 The relevant documents are available at http://foreignaffairs.house.gov/press_display.asp?id=555.
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U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress

On September 27, 2008, however, by a vote of 298-117 (1 Present), the House passed H.R. 7081,
which approved the agreement and waived “the provisions for congressional consideration and
approval of a proposed agreement” contained in Sections 123 b. and 123 d. of the AEA. The
Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved identical legislation, S. 3548, September 23. The
Senate passed H.R. 7081 by a vote of 86-13 October 1. On October 8, President Bush signed P.L.
110-369, the United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Nonproliferation
Enhancement Act, into law. The President’s signing statement did not indicate any differences
with the legislation.
According to its text, the July 2007 agreement “shall enter into force on the date on which the
Parties exchange diplomatic notes informing each other that they have completed all applicable
requirements for its entry into force.” Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and India’s External
Affairs Minister Shri Pranab Mukherjee signed the agreement October 10. On October 20,
President Bush transmitted two certifications required by P.L. 110-369 in order for the two
governments to exchange diplomatic notes. Washington and New Delhi exchanged diplomatic
notes and the agreement entered into force December 6, 2008.
India’s Nuclear Cooperation with the United States
India has stated its intention to engage in nuclear cooperation with U.S. companies. A September
10, 2008, letter from Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon states that
it is the intention of the Government of India and its entities to commence discussions with
U.S. nuclear energy firms and conclude agreements after entry into force of the [U.S.-India]
Agreement for cooperation in the construction of nuclear power units at least at two sites
approved by the Government of India, which would be capable of generating a minimum of
10,000 MW.3
However, Menon appeared to qualify this claim, adding that such deals would be concluded
on the basis of mutually acceptable technical and commercial terms and conditions that
enable a viable tariff regime for electricity generated. It is the expectation of the Government
of India that this partnership will contribute towards providing energy to India’s population
in a manner that takes into account affordability, sustainability of nuclear fuel resources and
credibility of nuclear waste management.”
New Delhi announced October 16, 2009, the specific sites that it has designated for U.S.-supplied
reactors.
P.L. 110-369 requires that, before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission can issue licenses for U.S.
nuclear exports to India, the President must determine and certify to Congress that New Delhi’s
IAEA safeguards agreement has entered into force and that India’s declaration of its nuclear
facilities to the agency “is not materially inconsistent with the facilities and schedule” described
in a separation plan that New Delhi has provided to Washington. India’s safeguards agreement
entered into force May 11, 2009, and New Delhi has filed the declaration with the IAEA.
President Obama submitted the required certification to Congress February 3, 2010, determining
that India has satisfied the legal requirement described above.

3 Text Available at http://svaradarajan.blogspot.com/2008/10/dear-bill-foreign-secretarys-letter.html.
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Nevertheless, U.S. firms will likely be very reluctant to engage in nuclear trade with India if the
government does not become party to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for
Nuclear Damage (CSC), which has not yet entered into force. According to Menon’s September
2008 letter, “it is the intention of the Indian Government to take all steps necessary to adhere to
the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage prior to the
commencement of international civil nuclear cooperation under” the U.S.-India agreement.
However, New Delhi has not indicated when it plans to become party to the CSC. India’s decision
to become a party to the convention is, according to the State Department, “an important step in
ensuring that U.S. nuclear firms can compete on a level playing field with other international
competitors” because many other countries’ nuclear firms “have other liability protections
afforded to them by their governments.”4 Washington and New Delhi are also discussing
necessary monitoring arrangements for U.S. nuclear exports.
Subsequent Reprocessing Arrangement
The nuclear cooperation agreement grants New Delhi consent to reprocess nuclear material
transferred pursuant to the agreement, as well as “nuclear material and by-product material used
in or produced through the use of nuclear material, non-nuclear material, or equipment so
transferred.” However, India must first “establish a new national reprocessing facility dedicated
to reprocessing safeguarded nuclear material under IAEA safeguards.” In addition, the United
States and India must “agree on arrangements and procedures under which such reprocessing or
other alteration in form or content will take place in this new facility.”
The agreement also says that the two governments must begin “consultations,” to be “concluded
within one year,” on the relevant arrangements and procedures within six months of a request
from India. New Delhi made such a request February 3, 2009, and the two governments held
meetings in July and October of that year.5 The two governments signed the agreement March 29,
2010.6 India had reportedly insisted that New Delhi and Washington conclude an agreement on a
reprocessing facility in India before New Delhi would sign contracts with U.S. nuclear firms.7
The agreement describes the “arrangements and procedures under which such reprocessing or
other alteration in form or content may take place in India at two new national reprocessing
facilities,” which will reprocess safeguarded spent nuclear fuel from both U.S.-supplied and other
reactors. The agreement also describes the procedures for U.S. officials to inspect and receive
information about physical protection measures at the new facilities.
The Administration must submit the subsequent arrangement to Congress, but has not yet done
so. The proposed arrangement shall not take effect if Congress adopts a joint resolution of
disapproval (see page 41). The agreement signed March 29 indicates that India may construct
additional facilities to reprocess fuel from U.S.-supplied reactors. However, any such facilities
would require a new subsequent arrangement, which would also be submitted to Congress.

4 “Questions for the Record Submitted to Under Secretary William Burns and Acting Under Secretary John Rood by
Senator Robert P. Casey, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, September 18, 2008.”
5 Analyst interview with U.S. officials, November 3, 2009.
6 The text is available at http://www.state.gov/p/sca/rls/139194.htm.
7 Rama Lakshmi, “Despite Historic Pact, U.S. Firms Are Hampered in Setting Up Reactors in India,” The Washington
Post
, January 21, 2009. T.S. Subramanian, “India Atomic Body Chief: 123 Agreement Gives Spent Fuel, Reprocessing
Rights,” The Hindu, August 3, 2009.
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India’s Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries8
Since a September 2008 NSG decision to exempt India from some of its export requirements,
New Delhi has negotiated nuclear cooperation agreements with NSG countries other than the
United States. On September 30, 2008, India and France signed a civil nuclear cooperation
agreement that includes the possible provision of nuclear reactors and nuclear fuel. It does not,
however, include the transfer of enrichment or reprocessing technology, according to French
Ambassador to India Jerome Bonnafont.9 France would like India to reprocess spent nuclear fuel
in an IAEA-safeguarded facility, Bonnafont said in late January 2009, but added that France
would consider reprocessing the spent fuel for India.10 According to a December 17, 2008,
agreement between the French company AREVA and India’s Department of Atomic Energy,
AREVA agreed to supply the Nuclear Power Corporation of India with 300 metric tons of
uranium. Those two companies also signed a memorandum of understanding February 4, 2009,
expressing their “willingness to build up to six” nuclear reactors. Both parties “intend to discuss
the elements of a commercial contract to supply” two reactors “as a first step,” according to the
memorandum.
Russia and India signed a nuclear cooperation agreement December 5, 2008. According to a joint
declaration issued that day, “the two countries have agreed to collaborate on constructing
additional nuclear power plants and “to expand and pursue further areas for bilateral cooperation
in the field of peaceful uses of nuclear energy.” Notably, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
reportedly amended in February a 1992 presidential decree on nuclear export controls in order to
permit Russian nuclear exports to a country without comprehensive IAEA safeguards. However,
the decree now states that
nuclear materials, as well as technologies, equipment and special non-nuclear materials
intended for their processing, utilization or production may be exported from the Russian
Federation to India only if they are used in nuclear installations placed under IAEA
guarantees.11
The Russian TVEL Corporation also reportedly signed a nuclear fuel supply contract in February
2009 with India’s Department of Atomic Energy.12
The two countries initialed another agreement December 7, 2009, which expands on the 2008
agreement. According to a statement from India’s Ministry of External Affairs, the agreement
includes cooperation on research and development, the construction of additional nuclear power
plants, and fuel-supply arrangements. The agreement also grants “up-front consent” for India’s to
reprocess spent reactor fuel and says that Russia would continue to supply fuel even if the
agreement is terminated in the future.

8 This report discusses only nuclear cooperation agreements that India has signed or otherwise concluded with other
countries. India has discussed other nuclear cooperation agreements that are not discussed in this section.
9 “Indo-French Pact Not to Cover Nuclear Enrichment Technology Sale - Envoy,” Press Trust of India, September 19,
2008.
10 “France Willing to Reprocess Uranium for India,” The Hindu Business Line, January 31, 2009.
11 “Russian president amends 1992 decree so as to ease nuclear exports to India,” Interfax, February 24, 2009.
12 “Russia Delivers First Batch of Nuclear Fuel to India,” Press Trust of India, April 10, 2009.
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New Delhi has also concluded other fuel-supply agreements. The Nuclear Power Corporation of
India and KazAtomProm, a Kazakh national company, signed a memorandum of understanding
January 24, 2009, that reportedly includes a provision for Kazakhstan to supply uranium to India
under terms that remain to be determined.13 Additionally, India and Namibia signed an
“Agreement on Cooperation in Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy” in late August 2009. The scope
and terms of the agreement are unclear, but the statement “resolved to encourage Indian
investments” in the Namibian uranium sector. Similarly, India and Mongolia signed a
“Memorandum of Understanding on Development of Cooperation in the Field of Peaceful Use of
Radioactive Minerals and Nuclear Energy” in mid-September 2009. The agreement would
reportedly enable India to explore for uranium in Mongolia.14
More recently, India and Argentina, according to an October 14, 2009, joint statement, agreed to
“encourage and support scientific, technical and commercial cooperation for mutual benefit” in
the “peaceful uses of nuclear energy.” Furthermore, India and the United Kingdom signed a
“Civil Nuclear Cooperation Declaration” February 11, 2010, which will allow for the transfer of
nuclear-related technology and equipment to India. A British official explained February 13 that
the agreement “opens the door to a discussion that can begin between some of the best UK-based
engineering companies and the nuclear authorities in India.”15
Background
The United States actively promoted nuclear energy cooperation with India from the mid-1950s,
building nuclear power reactors (Tarapur), providing heavy water for the CIRUS research reactor,
and allowing Indian scientists to study at U.S. nuclear laboratories. Although India was active in
negotiations of the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), India refused to join the treaty,
arguing that it was discriminatory. India conducted a “peaceful” nuclear test in 1974, which
reinforced the notion that nuclear technology transferred for peaceful purposes could be used to
produce nuclear weapons.16 Congress responded to that test by passing the Nuclear Non-
Proliferation Act of 1978 (NNPA, P.L. 95-242), which imposed tough new requirements for U.S.
nuclear exports to non-nuclear-weapon states—full-scope safeguards and termination of exports
if such a state detonates a nuclear explosive device or engages in activities related to acquiring or
manufacturing nuclear weapons, among other things.17 The United States created the NSG, a
voluntary nuclear export regime, in 1975. The NSG published guidelines in 1978 “to apply to

13 “Kazakhstan signs agreement to supply uranium,” The Hindu, January 25, 2009; Kazakhstan might start uranium
exports to India in 2009,” Panorama, February 6, 2009. “Chennai Daily Report: India, Kazakhstan Set To Sign Nuclear
Reactor Export Deal,” Chennai Business Line Online, July 10, 2009.
14 “India Signs Civil Nuclear Pact with Mongolia,” Press Trust of India, September 14, 2009.
15 “UK, India Sign Civil Nuclear Accord, Paves Way for Conference,” Reuters, February 13, 2010.
16 For an analysis of the proliferation implications of U.S. nuclear exports to India, see Gary Milhollin, “Stopping the
Indian Bomb,” The American Journal of International Law, July 1987, 81 A.J.I.L. 593. See
http://www.wisconsinproject.org/pubs/articles/1987/stoppingindianbomb.htm.
17 The NNPA, in part, amended the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. See 42 U.S.C. 2151 et seq. Prior to the 1970 NPT,
safeguards (inspections, material protection, control and accounting) were applied to specific facilities or materials
(known as INFCIRC/66-type agreements). The NPT required safeguards on all nuclear material in all peaceful nuclear
activities for non-nuclear-weapon-state parties (those states not having detonated a nuclear explosive device prior to
January 1, 1967).
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nuclear transfers for peaceful purposes to help ensure that such transfers would not be diverted to
unsafeguarded nuclear fuel cycle or nuclear explosive activities.”18
The condition that non-nuclear-weapon states wishing to obtain U.S. nuclear exports must have
full-scope safeguards created a problem for U.S. fuel supplies to India’s reactors at Tarapur,
which were built by U.S. firms and fueled by U.S. low-enriched uranium, pursuant to a 1963
nuclear cooperation agreement. After passage of the NNPA, the Carter Administration exported
two more uranium shipments under executive order after the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
(NRC) refused to approve an export license on nonproliferation conditions. Although the House
voted to disapprove the President’s determination, the Senate voted 46-48 on a resolution of
disapproval. After 1980, all nuclear exports from the United States to India were cut off under the
terms of the NNPA. France supplied fuel under the terms of the U.S. agreement with India until
France also adopted a full-scope safeguards requirement in 1995. After the NSG adopted the full-
scope safeguards condition in 1992, China supplied the reactor. Russia supplied fuel from 2001 to
2004.19
Although the NPT requires safeguards on items going to non-nuclear-weapon states, it does not
explicitly prohibit nuclear commerce with states outside the NPT. In 1995, at the NPT Extension
Conference, states supported the principle that non-NPT parties should not be eligible for the
same kinds of assistance as NPT parties in good standing. India tested several nuclear weapons in
1998.
Global Partnership20
The Bush Administration had been considering a strategic partnership with India as early as 2001.
Indian officials identified their growing energy needs as an area for cooperation, particularly in
nuclear energy. The U.S.-India 2004 Next Steps in Strategic Partnership (NSSP) initiative
included expanded cooperation in civil nuclear technology as one of three goals. Phase I of the
NSSP, completed in September 2004, required addressing proliferation concerns and ensuring
compliance with U.S. export controls.21
On July 18, 2005, President Bush announced the creation of a global partnership with India in a
joint statement with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.22 Noting the “significance of civilian

18 IAEA Document INFCIRC/254, Guidelines for Transfers of Nuclear-related Dual-use Equipment, Materials,
Software, and Related Technology
. Part 1 covers “trigger list” items: those especially designed or prepared for nuclear
use: (i) nuclear material; (ii) nuclear reactors and equipment; (iii) non-nuclear material for reactors; (iv) plant and
equipment for reprocessing, enrichment and conversion of nuclear material and for fuel fabrication and heavy water
production; and (v) associated technology. Part 2 covers dual-use items. Additional NSG criteria for dual-use exports
include NPT membership and/or full-scope safeguards agreement; appropriate end-use; whether the technology would
be used in a reprocessing or enrichment facility; the state’s support for nonproliferation; and the risk of potential
nuclear terrorism.
19 China was not a member of the NSG until 2004. Russia, an NSG member, exported fuel, citing a safety exception,
but NSG members objected so strongly that Moscow suspended supply in 2004. Russia agreed to resupply Tarapur in
late February and informed the NSG on February 27, 2006, reportedly citing the NSG safety exception.
20 See also CRS Report RL33072, U.S.-India Bilateral Agreements and "Global Partnership", by K. Alan Kronstadt,
and CRS Report RL33529, India-U.S. Relations, by K. Alan Kronstadt.
21 See fact sheet on the NSSP at http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2004/36290.htm.
22 Joint Statement Between President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, White House Press
Release, July 18, 2005, Washington, DC (hereafter cited as “July 18 Joint Statement”) http://www.whitehouse.gov/
(continued...)
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nuclear energy for meeting growing global energy demands in a cleaner and more efficient
manner,” President Bush said he would “work to achieve full civil nuclear energy cooperation
with India” and would “also seek agreement from Congress to adjust U.S. laws and policies.”
The Joint Statement noted that the United States
will work with friends and allies to adjust international regimes to enable full civil nuclear
energy cooperation and trade with India, including but not limited to expeditious
consideration of fuel supplies for safeguarded nuclear reactors at Tarapur.
The United States committed to encouraging its partners to consider this request—a reversal in
the U.S. position, which has been to ban fuel to Tarapur—and to consulting with its partners on
Indian participation in ITER (collaboration on fusion research) and in the Generation IV
International Forum for future reactor design.
Prime Minister Singh conveyed that India “would take on the same responsibilities and practices
and acquire the same benefits and advantages as other leading countries with advanced nuclear
technology, such as the United States.”23 India agreed to:
• identify and separate its civilian and military nuclear facilities and programs;
• declare its civilian facilities to the IAEA;
• voluntarily place civilian facilities under IAEA safeguards;
• sign an Additional Protocol for civilian facilities;
• continue its unilateral nuclear test moratorium;
• work with the United States to conclude a Fissile Material Cut Off Treaty
(FMCT);24
• refrain from transferring enrichment and reprocessing technologies to states that
do not have them, as well as support international efforts to limit their spread;
• secure its nuclear materials and technology through comprehensive export
control legislation and through harmonization and adherence to MTCR and NSG
guidelines.
Issues for Consideration
The AEA requires Congressional approval and oversight of peaceful nuclear cooperation
agreements (details described below). As Senator Lugar has noted, “Ultimately the entire
Congress ... must determine what effect the Joint Statement will have on U.S. efforts to halt the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.”25 Congress held eight hearings in 2005 and 2006

(...continued)
news/releases/2005/07/20050718-6.html.
23 July 18 Joint Statement.
24 See CRS Report RS22474, Banning Fissile Material Production for Nuclear Weapons: Prospects for a Treaty
(FMCT)
, by Sharon Squassoni, for more detailed information about the issue and negotiations.
25 Opening Statement, Chairman Richard G. Lugar, Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on “Implications of
(continued...)
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on the global partnership and has consulted with the Administration on various aspects of the
U.S.-India nuclear agreement.26 The discussion of potential issues for consideration is drawn in
part from the hearings and from the emerging debate.
Strategy vs. Tactics
The Bush Administration has described its “desire to transform relations with India” as “founded
upon a strategic vision that transcends even today’s most pressing security concerns.”27 There is
clearly broad support for cultivating a close relationship with India, yet some Members of
Congress have suggested that civil nuclear cooperation may not be the most appropriate vehicle
for advancing our relationship. In a House International Relations Committee hearing on
September 8, 2005, Congressman Jim Leach stated,
I don’t know any member of Congress that doesn’t want to have a warming of relations with
the government of India.... I also don’t know many members of Congress who are pushing
for the precise commitment that the administration has made.28
Congressman Leach suggested instead that U.S. support for a permanent seat for India on the
United Nations Security Council might have been a more appropriate gesture.
Other observers outside of Congress have questioned whether U.S. energy assistance should
focus on expanding nuclear power, in contrast to other energy alternatives. Henry Sokolski of the
Nonproliferation Policy Education Center has argued that Indian energy needs might be better
met through free market allocation, including improved efficiency. He asserts that nuclear power
is the least leveraged of India’s options to meet India’s energy needs, given that it currently
provides only 2.7% of installed electrical capacity.29 India’s projections of its nuclear energy
needs are predicated on an estimated annual growth rate of 8%, which some observers believe
may be unrealistic.30 One well-known Indian commentator, Brahma Chellaney, argued in the
International Herald Tribune that the premise that India should meet its rapidly expanding energy

(...continued)
U.S.-India Nuclear Energy Cooperation,” November 2, 2005 (hereafter referred to as November 2, 2005 SFRC India
hearing).
26 The House International Relations Committee held the following hearings: “The U.S. and India: An Emerging
Entente?” (September 8, 2005); “The U.S.-India Global Partnership: The Impact on Nonproliferation” (October 26,
2005); and “U.S.-India Global Partnership: How Significant for American Interests?” (November 16, 2005); “The U.S.-
India Global Partnership” (April 5, 2006); “U.S.-India Global Partnership: Legislative Options” (May 11, 2006). See
http://www.internationalrelations.house.gov/ for testimonies of witnesses. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee
held the following hearings: “Implications of U.S.-India Nuclear Energy Cooperation” (November 2, 2005); “U.S.-
India Atomic Energy Cooperation: The Indian Separation Plan and the Administration’s Legislative Proposal” (April 5,
2006); and “U.S.-India Atomic Energy Cooperation: Strategic and Nonproliferation Implications” (April 26, 2006). See
http://foreign.senate.gov/hearing.html for testimonies.
27 Statement of Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, R. Nicholas Burns, September 8, 2005, House Committee
on International Relations, Hearing on “The U.S. and India: An Emerging Entente?” (hereafter cited as “September 8,
2005, HIRC US-India hearing”) p. 1.
28 Remarks by Congressman Jim Leach, September 8, 2005, House International Relations Committee U.S.-India
Hearing.
29 Henry Sokolski, “Implementing the Indian Nuclear Deal: What’s at Risk, What Congress Should Require,” Briefing
to Congress, September 2005.
30 See “India’s Growth Target Unrealistic,” Financial Times, January 23, 2003, which quotes the Asia Development
Bank.
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needs through importing nuclear power reactors was flawed. Chellaney argued that a better
approach for India would be to secure clean-coal and renewable energy technologies.31
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s November 2, 2005, hearing sought, among other
things, to answer the question of why civil nuclear cooperation was so important to the U.S.-
Indian strategic relationship. Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns told Committee members
that “India had made this the central issue in the new partnership developing between our
countries.”32
Impact on U.S. Nonproliferation Policies
The Administration has characterized civil nuclear cooperation with India as a “win” for
nonproliferation because it would bring India into the “nonproliferation mainstream.” In short, the
Administration is proposing that India should be courted as an ally in U.S. nonproliferation
policy, rather than continue as a target of U.S. nonproliferation policy. According to this
reasoning, India should become an ally for three reasons: past policies have not worked; India has
a relatively good nonproliferation record; and India could be a useful ally in the nonproliferation
regime.
Some observers, however, are concerned that India may not support U.S. nonproliferation
policies sufficiently to warrant nuclear cooperation, particularly where the United States faces its
greatest nuclear proliferation threat: Iran. For example, at the September 8 House International
Relations Committee hearing, several Members of Congress questioned whether the United States
had obtained assurances from India of its support on Iran before it issued the July 18 joint
statement.
Iran
Two factors may present challenges to Indian support for U.S. policies toward Iran. First, India
has a growing strategic relationship with Iran, not limited to its interest in a proposed $7.4 billion,
2800-km-long gas pipeline between Iran, Pakistan, and India. Second, India has a strong tradition
of foreign policy independence, as a long-time leader of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM)
states and as a vigorous opponent of the discriminatory nature of the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty.33 One witness before the House International Relations Committee hearing on November
16, 2005, suggested that opposition from the United States on the gas pipeline project is
considered to be “interference with India’s autonomy in foreign relations, as well as disregard for
its security and energy needs.”34
On Iran’s nuclear program, Indian officials have stated they do not support a nuclear weapons
option for Tehran. However, they did not agree with the United States on the urgency of reporting

31 Brahma Chellaney, “US Deal is a Bad Choice for Power Generation,” International Herald Tribune, December 27,
2005.
32 Statement of Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, R. Nicholas Burns, November 2, 2005, Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Hearing on Implications of U.S.-India Nuclear Energy Cooperation.
33 See Miriam Rajkumar, “Indian Independence,” Carnegie Analysis, September 20, 2005, at
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/npp/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=17486.
34 Dr. Francine Frankel, Statement before the House International Relations Committee, November 16, 2005, “India’s
Potential Importance for Vital U.S. Geopolitical Objectives in Asia: A Hedge Against a Rising China?”
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Iran’s nuclear program to the U.N. Security Council, which the United States has proposed since
2003, nor on the need to limit Iran’s nuclear fuel cycle development. When the IAEA Board of
Governors passed a resolution (GOV/2005/77) on September 24, 2005, finding Iran in
noncompliance with its safeguards agreement, India voted with the United States, provoking
significant domestic dissent. According to Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran, India voted for
the resolution and against the majority of NAM states which abstained, because it felt obligated
after having pressured the EU-3 to omit reference to immediate referral to the U.N. Security
Council.35 Moreover, India explained its vote this way:
In our Explanation of Vote, we have clearly expressed our opposition to Iran being declared
as noncompliant with its safeguards agreements. Nor do we agree that the current situation
could constitute a threat to international peace and security. Nevertheless, the resolution does
not refer the matter to the Security Council and has agreed that outstanding issues be dealt
with under the aegis of the IAEA itself. This is in line with our position and therefore, we
have extended our support.36
On February 4, 2006, following Iran’s resumption of some uranium enrichment research and
development, the IAEA Board of Governors met in an emergency session and voted to report
Iran’s noncompliance to the U.N. Security Council.37 India voted with the United States to report
Iran, although this followed a controversial remark to the press the previous week by Ambassador
David Mulford that India would have to support the United States on Iran in Vienna or the U.S.
Congress would not support the peaceful nuclear cooperation agreement.38 Several years later,
New Delhi voted in support of a November 27, 2009, IAEA Board resolution that criticized Iran’s
failure to comply with its IAEA and UN Security Council obligations.
Iran may also test India’s support for curtailing peaceful nuclear programs. India has always been
an advocate of states’ rights to develop the peaceful uses of nuclear energy and for 30 years has
derided the NPT and nonproliferation policies as discriminatory. The official Iranian press agency
reported Prime Minister Singh as telling President Ahmadinejad on September 22, 2005, that
solutions to Iran’s nuclear problem should be based on the principle that Iran as an NPT member
should retain its lawful rights.39 On September 26, 2005, Foreign Secretary Saran told the press
that “With respect to Iran’s right to peaceful uses of nuclear energy, that is something which we
have ourselves no reservations about.”40 In September 2006, India joined in the 118-nation
Nonaligned Movement (NAM) summit statement that expressed support for Iran’s “choices and
decisions in the field of peaceful uses of nuclear technology and its fuel cycle policies.”41

35 “Press Briefing by Foreign Secretary on the events in UN and IAEA,” New Delhi, September 26, 2005, available at
http://www.indianembassy.org/press_release/2005/Sept/29.htm.
36 Briefing by MEA Official Spokesperson on Draft Resolution on Iran in IAEA, New Delhi, September 24, 2005,
available at http://www.indianembassy.org/press_release/2005/Sept/16.htm.
37 See CRS Report RL34544, Iran’s Nuclear Program: Status, by Paul K. Kerr.
38 “U.S.-India Nuclear Deal Could Die, Envoy Warns,” Washington Post, January 26, 2006.
39 “Ahmadinejad Thanks India for Positive Stands on Iran in IAEA,” IRNA, September 23, 2005.
40 September 26, 2005 press briefing, op. cit.
41 Iran Republic News Agency, “118 countries back Iran’s nuclear program” Iran Times, September 18, 2006.
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Reported Indian Transfers of WMD-related items to Iran42
Concerns about India’s relationship with Iran extend, for some, to the transfer of Weapons of
Mass Destruction (WMD)-related items. Entities in India and Iran appear to have engaged in very
limited nuclear, chemical and missile-related transfers over the years. There are no publicly
available indications of activities related to biological weapons. In the early 1990s, when Iran
actively sought nuclear-related assistance and technology from many foreign sources, India
appears to have played only a minor role in contrast to other states. India signed an agreement in
November 1991 to provide a 10 megawatt research reactor to Tehran, but cancelled under
pressure from the United States. Nonetheless, India reportedly trained Iranian nuclear scientists in
the 1990s.43 More recently, India’s Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh stated in December 2003 that
India “has and would continue to help Iran in its controversial bid to generate nuclear energy.”44
In September 2004, the United States imposed sanctions on two Indian nuclear scientists, Dr.
Y.S.R. Prasad and Dr. C. Surendar, under the Iran Nonproliferation Act. Indian officials protested,
stating that cooperation had taken place under the auspices of the IAEA Technical Cooperation
program. Other reports suggest that the scientists, who had served as Chairman and Managing
Director of the Nuclear Power Corporation of India, Ltd. (NPCIL), which runs India’s power
reactors, passed information to Iran on tritium extraction from heavy water reactors.45 Sanctions
were lifted on Dr. Surendar in 2005.
In the chemical area, there is one confirmed transfer of 60 tons of thionyl chloride, a chemical
that can be used in the production of mustard gas, from India to Iran in March 1989.46 Other
shipments in that time frame reportedly were halted under U.S. pressure. India does not appear in
the CIA’s unclassified nonproliferation report to Congress as a supplier of chemical-weapons-
related exports to Iran since the report began publication in 1997. India signed the Chemical
Weapons Convention in 1993 and deposited its instrument of ratification until 1996. However, in
December 2005, the United States imposed sanctions on Sabero Organic Chemicals Gujarat Ltd
and Sandhya Organic Chemicals Pvt. Ltd, pursuant to the Iran Nonproliferation Act of 2000. In
July 2006, the United States imposed sanctions on Balaji Amines and Prachi Poly Products,
chemical manufacturers, pursuant to the Iran and Syrian Nonproliferation Act.47
Restricting Enrichment and Reprocessing
One of India’s commitments in the July 18 statement was to refrain from transferring enrichment
and reprocessing technologies to states that do not already have those technologies and to support
international efforts to limit their spread. As discussed in greater detail below, the NSG is
considering adopting criteria for exporting enrichment and reprocessing technology.

42 See CRS Report RS22530, India and Iran: WMD Proliferation Activities, by Sharon Squassoni, for more
information related to sanctions imposed for Indian transfers to Iran.
43 See http://www.nti.org/e_research/profiles/Iran/2867.html.
44 “India Denies Nuclear Cooperation with Iran,” Agence France Presse, December 13, 2003.
45 John Larkin and Jay Solomon, “As Ties Between India and Iran Rise, U.S. Grows Edgy,” Wall Street Journal, March
24, 2005.
46 Thionyl chloride is a Schedule 3 chemical under the Chemical Weapons Convention. It has military and civilian uses,
and is widely used in the laboratory and in industry.
47 See list of sanctions at http://www.state.gov/t/isn/c15234.htm.
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India’s External Affairs Minister Shri Pranab Mukherjee stated September 5, 2008, that:
India will not be the source of proliferation of sensitive technologies, including enrichment
and reprocessing transfers. We stand for the strengthening of the non-proliferation regime.
We support international efforts to limit the spread of ENR equipment or technologies to
states that do not have them.48
David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), published
a report on March 10, 2006, that asserted that India had potentially exported centrifuge
enrichment-related technology by virtue of tendering public offers and providing blueprints for
technology to interested parties.49 ISIS followed up with a September 18, 2008, report that
described Indian sales of documents related to centrifuges, as well as illicit Indian procurement of
a chemical used in reprocessing.50 It is not clear whether Indian procurement practices facilitate
transfer of technology, but the U.S. nuclear cooperation agreement will have no impact on those
procurement practices. Although the State Department asserted in responses to questions for the
record from Senator Lugar that the United States will not engage in reprocessing or enrichment
technology cooperation with India,51 other NSG members may transfer such technology.
The NPAS notes that India, by concluding an Additional Protocol to its IAEA safeguards
agreement, “will commit to reporting to the IAEA on exports of all NSG Trigger List items.”
Other Priorities
In his February 11, 2004, speech, President Bush outlined several counterproliferation priorities,
including expanding the Proliferation Security Initiative; strengthening laws and international
controls against WMD and missile proliferation (ultimately resulting in adoption of UNSCR
1540); expanding the G8 Global Partnership; and strengthening IAEA safeguards through
universal adoption of the Additional Protocol. Ambassador Joseph has noted that India’s
adherence to NSG and MTCR guidelines would help ensure that WMD and missile-related
technologies would not be transferred. Although India’s adoption of the Additional Protocol
would contribute to its universalization, there are few proliferation benefits to be realized from
the adoption of such a protocol in a de facto nuclear weapons state. Finally, although the United
States reportedly has asked India to endorse PSI, that endorsement has not been forthcoming.
Impact on the Nonproliferation Regime
India’s status outside the nonproliferation regime raises possible concerns that the nuclear
agreement could negatively affect nuclear nonproliferation efforts. Some considerations include
cohesion within the NSG, effect on non-nuclear-weapon member states of the NPT, potential
missed opportunities to strengthen the nuclear nonproliferation regime, and whether U.S. nuclear

48The full text of Mukherjee’s statement is in the Appendix.
49 David Albright and Susan Basu, “India’s Gas Centrifuge Program: Stopping Illicit Procurement and the Leakage of
Technical Centrifuge Know-How.” Available at http://www.isis-online.org/publications/southasia/
indianprocurement.pdf.
50 David Albright and Paul Brannan, “Indian Nuclear Export Controls and Information Security: Important Questions
Remain.” Available at http://www.isis-online.org/publications/southasia/India_18September2008.pdf.
51 “Questions for the Record Submitted to Under Secretaries Nicholas Burns and Robert Joseph by Chairman Richard
G. Lugar (#6), Senate Foreign Relations Committee, November 2, 2005.”
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cooperation might in any way assist, encourage, or induce India to manufacture nuclear weapons,
in possible violation of our Article I obligation under the NPT.
NSG Cohesion
Cohesion within the NSG is critical to effective implementation of export controls. As noted
earlier, the NSG has followed the U.S. lead on requiring full-scope safeguards as a condition of
nuclear supply. During the September 8, 2005, hearing, House International Relations Committee
Chairman Henry Hyde noted that “Many of us are strong supporters of the NSG and would not
want to see it weakened or destroyed.” Chairman Hyde asked whether the Administration could
assure the Committee that
no matter what else happens, that the administration will continue to abide by NSG
guidelines, and if you are unable to gain consensus within the NSG for the amendments you
need, you will not implement the new India policy in violation of NSG guidelines.
Ambassador Joseph told the Committee that “we intend to take no action that would undercut the
effectiveness of the NSG,” and further, that the Administration did not intend to change the
consensus procedure or even change the NSG full-scope safeguards condition of nuclear supply.52
P.L. 109-401 states that the NSG should decide “by consensus to permit supply to India of nuclear
items covered by” the NSG guidelines.
Dissent within the NSG could be counterproductive to achieving other objectives the United
States is pursuing in nuclear nonproliferation, such as restricting the fuel cycle, disarming North
Korea, and restraining Iran, all of which rely on the considerable support of friends and allies.
Moreover, harmonizing export controls has played a key role in Bush counter- and non-
proliferation policies in the last few years and is particularly important for interdiction efforts.
U.S.-India cooperation could prompt other suppliers, like China, to justify supplying other non-
nuclear-weapon states, like Pakistan. China, which joined the NSG in 2004, has reportedly
favored an NSG decision based on criteria, not just an exception for India.53 Indeed, Pakistani
Foreign Secretary Shah Mahmood Qureshi said that Islamabad is interested in similar nuclear
cooperation with nuclear supplier states, the Press Trust of India reported July 24, 2008. A July
18, 2008, letter from Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to the IAEA similarly reflected such an
interest.54
Russia, which only halted fuel supplies to the Indian Tarapur reactors in December 2004 at the
insistence of the NSG, resumed fuel supplies to Tarapur under the guise of the safety exception,
reportedly to the dismay of many NSG members.55
Effect on NPT Member States
India has complained for years that it has been excluded from regular nuclear commerce because
of its status outside the NPT. Some observers believe this is a good thing and shows that the

52 September 8, 2005, HIRC US-India hearing.
53 See, for example, “Nuclear Nonproliferation System is Challenged,” People’s Daily, March 16, 2006.
54 Available at http://verificationthoughts.blogspot.com/2008/07/indian-separation-plan.html.
55 “Concern over Russian Plan to Sell Nuclear Reactor Fuel,” Financial Times, March 15, 2006.
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policy works. Others believe that a new paradigm is needed for India because it will not join the
NPT as a non-nuclear-weapon state. One observer argued in a 2005 law review journal that India
could join the NPT as a non-nuclear-weapon state and not give up its nuclear weapons, primarily
because the NPT defines “nuclear weapon states” but does not define non-nuclear-weapon states
and because the treaty does not expressly prohibit non-nuclear-weapon states from possessing
nuclear weapons, just from acquiring, manufacturing, receiving transfers of or control of nuclear
weapons and not to seek or receive any assistance in manufacturing nuclear weapons.56 However,
that approach would require India to stop producing fissile material for nuclear weapons and
place all nuclear material (except that which is in its nuclear weapons) under IAEA safeguards.
The NPT is basically a two-way bargain. Non-nuclear-weapon states under the NPT give up the
option of developing nuclear weapons in exchange for the promise of peaceful nuclear
cooperation. Nuclear weapon states under the treaty commit to eventual disarmament. India, as a
state outside the NPT, is bound by neither of these commitments. Some observers may see the
offer of nuclear cooperation previously reserved for states under the NPT with full-scope
safeguards not only as undermining the agreements made by non-nuclear-weapon states, but also
the commitments made by nuclear weapon states to eventually disarm. In this view, India’s
continued unilateral testing moratorium is insufficient, compared with signing the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) and its support for FMCT negotiations is insufficient compared with
capping its nuclear weapons fissile material production now, as four of the five nuclear weapon
states formally have done. Some have suggested that the absence of an Indian cap on fissile
material production for weapons may make it difficult for China to declare it has halted fissile
material production for weapons. Others have suggested that, absent a cap on fissile material
production, it would be difficult to ensure that peaceful nuclear cooperation was not indirectly
assisting or encouraging India’s nuclear weapons program.
The proliferation shocks of the 1990s, when the Iraqi and North Korean clandestine nuclear
weapons programs surfaced, led to the strengthening of the NPT and export control regimes. At
the 1995 NPT Review and Extension Conference, NPT parties affirmed the NSG’s decision to
require full-scope safeguards for nuclear exports, supporting the principle that non-NPT parties
should not be eligible for the same kinds of assistance as NPT parties in good standing. At the
2000 conference, NPT parties again supported that principle. According to the U.S. ambassador
to the conference at that time, “Reinforcement of this guideline is important given some who have
questioned whether this principle should be relaxed for India and Pakistan, which have not
accepted full-scope IAEA safeguards. The answer from NPT parties is clearly no.”57
In the past 10 years, virtually all states agreed to strengthen the nonproliferation regime,
sacrificing some sovereignty by allowing additional, intrusive inspections under the Additional
Protocol. In the wake of revelations in 2004 about Pakistani scientist A.Q. Khan’s nuclear black
market sales, non-nuclear-weapon states under the NPT are also being asked to consider further
restrictions on their sovereignty by voluntarily restricting their access to sensitive nuclear
technologies like uranium enrichment and reprocessing. If some states view the U.S.-Indian

56 David S. Jonas, “Variations on Non-nuclear: May the ‘Final Four’ Join the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty as Non-
nuclear Weapon States While Retaining Their Nuclear Weapons?” Michigan State Law Review, Summer 2005, p. 417
ff. Mr. Jonas is General Counsel of the National Nuclear Security Agency.
57 Ambassador Norman Wulf, “Observations from the 2000 NPT Review Conference,” Arms Control Today,
November 2000.
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nuclear cooperation agreement as a breach of faith in the basic bargain of the NPT, they might be
less inclined to accept additional sacrifices, to the detriment of the nonproliferation regime.
Missed Opportunities
Ambassador Joseph described the nuclear initiative as representing “a substantial net gain for
nonproliferation. It is a win for our strategic relationship, a win for energy security, and a win for
nonproliferation.” Ambassador Joseph said he was “convinced that the nonproliferation regime
will emerge stronger as a result.”58
However, some observers have suggested the United States asked for too little. For example, Fred
McGoldrick, Harold Bengelsdorf, and Lawrence Scheinman argued in the October 2005 issue of
Arms Control Today that
It is open to serious doubt whether the proposed Indian concessions were significant enough
to justify the accommodations promised by the United States and whether the steps the
United States and India agreed to take in the civil nuclear area will, on balance, be supportive
of global nonproliferation efforts.... If the Bush Administration is able to implement the joint
declaration without significant modification, it will have given the Indians a great deal—
acknowledgment as a de facto nuclear weapon state and access to the international nuclear
energy market—in return for largely symbolic concessions in the nonproliferation area.59
Robert Einhorn of the Center for Strategic and International Studies told Members of the House
International Relations Committee on October 26, 2005, that several of the steps pledged by India
are “simply reaffirmations of existing positions.”60 The Indian embassy itself has downplayed the
depth and breadth of its nonproliferation commitments, describing all but its safeguards
commitments under the July 2005 statement in the following way:
A number of existing policies were also reiterated by India, among them a unilateral
moratorium on nuclear testing, working towards conclusion of a multilateral Fissile Material
Cut-off Treaty, non-transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technologies, securing nuclear
materials and technology through export control, and harmonisation with MTCR and NSG
guidelines.61
India has had a self-imposed nuclear test moratorium for years, although supporters of this
agreement note that this agreement would bind India bilaterally to honoring that pledge. If the
NSG used a similar criterion in approving exports, it could further strengthen that pledge. India
has supported FMCT negotiations for years, despite continuing to produce fissile material for use
in nuclear weapons. Since the pace of FMCT negotiations has been glacial, support for
negotiations could allow India to continue producing fissile material indefinitely. Moreover, the
draft treaty on FMCT tabled by the United States in Geneva on May 18, 2006, would not require
India’s accession for the treaty to enter into force, thus lessening the pressure on India to join.

58 September 8, 2005, HIRC US-India hearing.
59 Fred McGoldrick, Harold Bengelsdorf, Lawrence Scheinman, “The U.S.-India Nuclear Deal: Taking Stock,” Arms
Control Today
, October 2005, pp. 6-12. See http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2005_10/OCT-Cover.asp.
60 Statement by Robert J. Einhorn, Center for Strategic and International Studies, “The U.S.-India Global Partnership:
The Impact on Nonproliferation” October 26, 2005.
61 “Backgrounder on India-U.S. Civilian Nuclear Energy Cooperation,” Indian Embassy, July 29, 2005. See
http://www.indianembassy.org/press_release/2005/July/29.htm.
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Prime Minister Singh told his Parliament on August 17, 2006, that “India is willing to join only a
non discriminatory, multilaterally negotiated and internationally verifiable FMCT.”62
Unfortunately, this conflicts with the U.S. draft proposal, which contains no verification
measures.
The most far-reaching of the commitments is to separate civilian and military facilities, declare
civilian facilities, and place them under safeguards. Administration officials have pointed to this
aspect of the agreement as a nonproliferation “plus.” Yet, allowing India broad latitude in
determining which of its facilities to put under international safeguards is a privilege accorded
currently only to nuclear weapon states under the NPT. Although the United States “in no way
recognizes India as an NPT nuclear weapons state,” excluding military facilities from inspections
is a tacit recognition of their legitimacy.
IAEA Director General Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei said that he has “always advocated concrete and
practical steps towards the universal application of IAEA safeguards.”63 In remarks to the
Carnegie Endowment’s Nonproliferation Conference in November 2005, Dr. ElBaradei cited
additional safety benefits of putting more Indian facilities under safeguards. However, it should
be noted that the NSG already has an exception to its full-scope safeguards requirement for
safety-related items.
The Administration has asserted that India has an “exceptional” record of nonproliferation and,
despite a few isolated sanctions, most of the evidence supports the view that India has exercised
restraint in export controls.64 As such, however, New Delhi’s promise to refrain from transferring
enrichment and reprocessing technologies to states that do not have them, as well as its promise
to adhere to NSG guidelines, may be little more than a formality.
Many observers have noted that there are no measures in this global partnership to restrain India’s
nuclear weapons program. Many have suggested that the United States should have asked New
Delhi to halt fissile material production for weapons. Ambassador Joseph stated that the United
States remains “committed to achieving Indian curtailment of fissile material production, and we
have strongly encouraged a move in this direction. We stand willing to explore options that might
serve this objective, but we will not insist on it for purposes of this civil nuclear initiative.”65
Indian officials, on the other hand, have taken pains to point out that “There is no commitment at
all to cease production of fissile material ahead of the conclusion of such a multilateral [FMCT]
treaty.”66 Prime Minister Singh told the parliament in August 2006 that “Our position on this

62 Prime Minister Singh, “Excerpts from Prime Minister’s Reply to Discussion in Raja Sabha on Civil Nuclear Energy
Cooperation with the United States.” Remarks are available at the Indian Ministry of External Affairs website,
http://mea.gov.in.
63 “IAEA Director General Reacts to U.S.-India Cooperation Agreement,” See http://www.iaea.org/NewsCenter/
PressReleases/2005/prn200504.html. Critics of the IAEA point out that it is an organization that measures its success in
part by how much nuclear material and how many facilities are under inspection.
64 On September 29, 2004, the State Department published Public Notice 4845 in the Federal Register imposing
sanctions pursuant to the Iran Nonproliferation Act of 2000. Two Indian scientists were named—Dr. Prasad and C.
Surendar. The State Department has not revealed what technology or equipment was transferred, but both scientists
have worked for the Nuclear Power Corporation of India, Ltd., a government-owned entity that runs India’s nuclear
power plants. The Indian embassy reported in December 2005 that sanctions on Dr. Surendar had been removed. See
http://www.indianembassy.org/press_release/5.asp. In the December 30, 2005 Federal Register, Public Notice 5257
stated simply that sanctions on an Indian entity issued in Public Notice 4845 had been rescinded.
65 September 8, 2005, HIRC US-India hearing.
66 “Backgrounder on India-U.S. Nuclear Energy Cooperation,” July 29, 2005.
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U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress

matter is unambiguous. We are not willing to accept a moratorium on the production of fissile
material.”67 Other observers have noted that although India committed to a test ban, it did not
commit to signing the CTBT. Still other observers have suggested that if India insists on being
treated as a nuclear weapon state, it should undertake responsibilities similar to those of the other
nuclear weapon states, for example, placing fissile material excess to defense needs under
safeguards. Many believe that real limits on India’s nuclear weapons program would constitute a
“win” for nonproliferation.
U.S. NPT Article I Obligations/Aiding India’s Nuclear Arsenal
Article I of the NPT states that
each nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty undertakes not to transfer to any recipient
whatsoever nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices or control over such
weapons or explosive devices directly, or indirectly; and not in any way to assist, encourage,
or induce any non-nuclear-weapon State to manufacture or otherwise acquire nuclear
weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, or control over such weapons or explosive
devices.
Given that India will continue to make nuclear weapons, but is considered under the NPT to be a
non-nuclear-weapon state, the question arises as to whether U.S. assistance might in any way
violate Article I.68 In testimony before the House International Relations Committee, David
Albright of ISIS stated that “Without India halting production of fissile material for its nuclear
weapons programs, nuclear assistance, particularly any in the areas involving the fuel cycle,
would likely spill over to India’s nuclear weapons program.”69
Three areas raise potential concerns: whether the separation plan is adequate to ensure that
cooperation does not in any way assist in the development or production of nuclear weapons;
whether cooperation confers nuclear weapons state status on India, with an unintended
consequence of encouraging the Indian nuclear weapons program; and whether opening up the
international uranium market frees up India’s domestic uranium for use in its weapons program.
Separation Plan Credibility
Administration officials have defended the separation plan as credible and defensible because it
covers more than just a token number of Indian facilities, provides for safeguards in perpetuity,
and includes upstream and downstream facilities.70 However, although IAEA safeguards ensure
that nuclear material is not diverted, there are no procedures or measures in place to ensure that
information, technology and know-how are not transferred from the civil sector to the military
sector. This issue, which the September 2008 NPAS does not appear to address, could become a

67 “Excerpts from Prime Minister’s Reply,” August 17, 2006, op. cit.
68 See Zia Mian and M.V. Ramana, “Wrong Ends, Means, and Needs: Behind the U.S. Nuclear Deal with India,” Arms
Control Today
, January/February 2006. See also Robert Einhorn, “Limiting the Damage,” The National Interest,
Winter 2005/2006.
69 Statement of David Albright before the House International Relations Committee on October 26, 2005 (hereafter
cited as “HIRC October 26, 2005 hearing”).
70 Questions for the Record Submitted to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice by Senator Richard Lugar (#2) Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, April 5, 2006.
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key loophole. For example, U.S. assistance to one of the eight indigenous power reactors,
whether focused on nuclear safety, improving operational efficiency, or extending its lifetime,
could easily be applied by Indian personnel to one of the similar, but unsafeguarded indigenous
power reactors. Some Indian commentators have suggested that the United States has little
technology to offer India, and others have doubted whether U.S. assistance would be provided to
those indigenous power reactors.
Conferring Nuclear Weapon-State Status
A second area that raises concerns is whether nuclear cooperation confers nuclear weapon state
status on India, which could encourage its weapons program. Senator Lugar noted in a hearing on
November 2, 2005, that “Prior to the July 18 joint statement India had repeatedly sought
unsuccessfully to be recognized as an official nuclear weapons state, a status the NPT reserves
only for the United States, China, France, Russia and the United Kingdom. Opponents argue that
granting India such status will undermine the essential bargain that is at the core of NPT, namely,
that only by foregoing nuclear weapons can a country gain civilian nuclear assistance.” Dr.
Ashton Carter, testifying at that SFRC hearing, stated that:
India obtained de-facto recognition of its nuclear weapons status. The United States will
behave, and urge others to behave, as if India were a nuclear weapons state under the NPT.
We won’t deny it most civil nuclear technology or commerce. We won’t require it to put all
of its nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards—only those it declares to be civil. Beyond
these technicalities, nuclear recognition confers an enormous political benefit on India.
Secretary Rice, in response to a question for the record in April 2006 on India’s nuclear weapon
state status, stated that “While India has nuclear weapons and we must deal with this fact in a
realistic, pragmatic manner, we do not recognize India as a nuclear weapon state or seek to
legitimize India’s nuclear weapons program.” However, other officials’ statements appear to lend
more support to India. Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns told reporters on March 2, 2006,
that “India is a nuclear weapons power, and India will preserve part of its nuclear industry to
service its nuclear weapons program.”71
IAEA Director-General ElBaradei argues that the U.S.-India deal is “neutral” because “it does not
confer any ‘status,’ legal or otherwise, on India as a possessor of nuclear weapons.”72
Nonetheless, the successful U.S. effort to create an exemption in its nuclear cooperation law for
New Delhi has placed India in the company of only four other nations—the United Kingdom,
France, China, and Russia—all de jure nuclear weapon states. Many observers believe that this
legitimizes India’s nuclear weapons program by providing de facto recognition. Indian official
statements repeatedly have used the term “advanced nuclear states” as synonymous with nuclear
weapon states; Prime Minister Singh told the Parliament in August 2006 that
The July Statement did not refer to India as a Nuclear Weapons State because that has a
particular connotation in the NPT, but it explicitly acknowledged the existence of India’s
military nuclear facilities. It also meant that India would not attract full-scope safeguards
such as those applied to non-nuclear weapon states that are signatories to the NPT and there
would be no curbs on continuation of India’s nuclear weapon related activities. In these

71 White House, Office of the Press Secretary, “Press Briefing by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nick
Burns,” Maurya Sheraton Hotel and Towers, New Delhi, India, March 2, 2006.
72 Mohamed ElBaradei, “Rethinking Nuclear Safeguards,” Washington Post, June 14, 2006.
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important respects, India would be very much on par with the five Nuclear Weapon States
who are signatories to the NPT. Similarly, the Separation Plan provided for an India specific
safeguards agreement with the IAEA with assurances of uninterrupted supply of fuel to
reactors together with India’s right to take corrective measures in the event fuel supplies are
interrupted. We have made clear to the US that India’s strategic programme is totally outside
the purview of the July Statement, and we oppose any legislative provisions that mandate
scrutiny of our nuclear weapons programme or our unsafeguarded nuclear facilities.
Offsetting India’s Uranium Shortage
Finally, critics of U.S.-Indian civil nuclear cooperation have argued that giving India access to the
international uranium market would free up New Delhi’s domestic uranium resources for use in
its weapons program.73 India has limited indigenous uranium reserves and apparently has
difficulty producing reactor fuel from these reserves. New Delhi has reportedly reduced its power
reactors’ electricity output because of fuel shortages.74 Since the NSG’s 1992 adoption of the full-
scope safeguards condition for exports, New Delhi has not had access to the international
uranium market.75 Foreign Secretary Saran pointed out on February 18, 2008, that “a major
expansion in nuclear power in the medium term” would require India to import “higher capacity
reactors and uranium fuel.”76 Similarly, the NPAS states that “India must import fuel, reactors,
and other technologies ... to meet its nuclear electricity-generating targets.”
India’s current fuel situation means that New Delhi cannot produce sufficient fuel for both its
nuclear weapons program and its projected civil nuclear program. A panel of nuclear experts
concluded in 2006 that
India’s production of weapon grade plutonium is currently constrained by the competing
demands of India’s nuclear-power reactors for its limited domestic supply of natural
uranium. If India could import fuel for its civilian nuclear reactors, it could use more
domestic uranium for the production of weapon materials.77
Acknowledging the country’s uranium limitations, a leading Indian nuclear strategist K.
Subrahmanyam suggested December 12, 2005, in The Times of India, that New Delhi should use
imported nuclear fuel to preserve its domestic uranium reserves for nuclear weapons:
Given India’s uranium ore crunch and the need to build up our minimum credible nuclear
deterrent arsenal as fast as possible, it is to India’s advantage to categorize as many power
reactors as possible as civilian ones to be refueled by imported uranium and conserve our
native uranium fuel for weapon-grade plutonium production.”78

73 See Henry Sokolski, “Fissile isn’t Facile,” Wall Street Journal, February 21, 2006.
74 See Charles Ferguson, “Reshaping the U.S.-Indian Nuclear Deal to Lessen the Nonproliferation Losses,” Arms
Control Today
, April 2008. Ferguson cites information from the Nuclear Power Corporation of India. See also
“Uranium Shortage Hits Nuclear Power,” The Hindu Business Line, May 21, 2008.
75 Several countries have supplied low-enriched uranium to the U.S.-origin Tarapur reactors, including France, China
and Russia.
76 “India and the Nuclear Domain.” Available at http://mea.gov.in/.
77 Zia Mian, A.H. Nayyar, R. Rajaraman and M.V. Ramana, Fissile Materials in South Asia: The Implications of the
U.S.-India Nuclear Deal
, September 2006. Available at http://www.fissilematerials.org/ipfm/site_down/rr01.pdf.
78 K. Subrahmanyam, former head of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analysis, was appointed Head of the
National Security Council Advisory Board (NSCAB) established by the first Vajpayee government to draft the Indian
nuclear doctrine. He currently chairs PM Singh’s Global Strategic Developments Task Force. See also Dr. A.
(continued...)
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Proponents of U.S.-Indian nuclear cooperation have made several arguments regarding the Article
I issue. None of these claims, however, refute the fact that India’s access to the international
uranium market will result in more indigenous Indian uranium available for weapons because it
will not be consumed by New Delhi’s newly safeguarded reactors.79 For example, proponents of
the deal argue that India already has sufficient uranium to increase its nuclear arsenal and that
New Delhi does not plan to increase that arsenal. The NPAS states that “India is capable of
maintaining and expanding its existing nuclear arsenal within the limit of its indigenous resources
and capabilities.” Secretary Rice made a similar argument during an April 5, 2006, House
International Relations Committee hearing. But these arguments do not address the constraints
India faces in pursuing its civilian and military nuclear programs using only indigenous uranium.
The NPAS also addresses New Delhi’s intentions regarding its future nuclear arsenal. First, the
statement says that Washington has “no evidence indicating that India plans to use additional
domestic uranium reserves in its nuclear weapons programs as a consequence of implementing”
the nuclear cooperation agreement. Second, the NPAS argues that New Delhi has “a posture of
nuclear restraint,” citing India’s stated no-first-use nuclear weapon policy and need for only a
“credible minimum deterrent.” India, however, has never defined what it means by such a
deterrent; Saran stated during an April 2006 television interview that “there is no responsibility on
part of India to declare what its minimum deterrent is.”80 Moreover, New Delhi’s intentions are
irrelevant to determining U.S. compliance with its Article I obligations.
Furthermore, the NPAS appears to argue that the agreement may reduce India’s potential to
produce additional fissile material for weapons, because the additional indigenous Indian reactors
placed under safeguards “will no longer be available for this purpose.” However, the statement
characterizes the reactors’ potential to produce fissile material for weapons as “theoretical.” And,
as noted above, India is not obligated to place future reactors under safeguards.
The State Department report submitted with the agreement notes that IAEA safeguards will
prevent India from using its civil nuclear facilities for its nuclear weapons program. It also
describes the ways in which U.S. export control policies prevent exported U.S. dual-use nuclear
technologies from being used for military purposes.81
In the view of many nonproliferation analysts, the key to ensuring that civilian nuclear
cooperation does not assist India’s weapons program is to insist on New Delhi halting its fissile
material production for weapons. That would narrow the area of concern to technology transfer to
the weapons and delivery systems themselves, rather than fissile material production in reactors,

(...continued)
Gopalakrishnan, “Civilian and Strategic Nuclear Facilities of India,” January 5, 2006.
79 It is worth noting that even before the NPT entered into force, negotiators recognized that a state outside the treaty
could preserve its domestic uranium sources for a possible weapons program as long as it agreed to accept IAEA
safeguards on the items it imported. In the late 1960s, however, Congress was more concerned about ensuring that the
United States could supply its allies outside the treaty, such as Japan and Germany, with nuclear fuel. According to
Mason Willrich’s history of the NPT, As long as India does not become a party to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, it can
continue to import from the parties nuclear materials and equipment subject to safeguards for use in its civil nuclear
power program. This would free its indigenous resources, particularly its limited uranium supply, for possible
concentration on a nuclear weapons program. (Mason Willrich, Non-proliferation Treaty: Framework for Nuclear
Arms Control
, The Michie Company, Charlottesville, VA, 1969, p. 125.)
80 “India Won’t Define Minimum N-Deterrent: Saran,” Press Trust of India, April 8, 2006.
81 Report Pursuant to Section 104 (c) of the Hyde Act Regarding Civil Nuclear Cooperation with India. Submitted to
Congress September 10, 2008. (Hereafter cited as, “2008 State Department Report.”)
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enrichment facilities, and reprocessing plants. Among others, Henry Sokolski suggested in the
Wall Street Journal that “If we want to keep this aid from freeing up India’s domestic nuclear
resources to make more bombs ... we have to get serious about India capping its nuclear weapons
program.”
Steps Required by P.L. 109-401
As noted above, P.L. 109-401 allows the President to exempt a U.S. nuclear cooperation
agreement with India from several AEA requirements. Before such an agreement can enter into
force, however, the President must first certify that several steps have been completed. President
Bush did so September 10. After the President signs H.R. 7081, which both the House and Senate
have passed, Washington and New Delhi must, according to the agreement’s text, “exchange
diplomatic notes informing each other that they have completed all applicable requirements” in
order for the agreement to enter into force.
Separation Plan and Safeguards82
U.S. and Indian officials agreed on India’s separation plan in March 2006. The key elements of
that plan are:83
• Eight indigenous Indian power reactors will be placed under an India-specific
safeguards agreement, bringing the total number of power reactors under
safeguards to 14 of 22 (six are already under safeguards)84
• Future power reactors may also be placed under safeguards, if India declares
them as civilian
• Some facilities in the Nuclear Fuel Complex (e.g., fuel fabrication) will be
specified as civilian in 2008
• Nine research facilities and three heavy water plants would be declared as
civilian, but are “safeguards-irrelevant.”
The following facilities and activities were not on the separation list:
• Eight indigenous Indian power reactors
• Fast Breeder test Reactor (FTBR) and Prototype Fast Breeder Reactors (PFBR)
under construction
• Enrichment facilities

82 See CRS Report RL33292, India's Nuclear Separation Plan: Issues and Views, by Sharon Squassoni, for details on
the separation plan. See the previous section for additional issues concerning the separation plan.
83 Prime Minister Singh presented “Implementation of the India-United States Joint Statement of July 18, 2005: India’s
Separation Plan,” to Parliament on March 7, 2006. This is available at http://indianembassy.org/newsite/press_release/
2006/Mar/sepplan.pdf. The plan was updated on May 11, 2006 to include names of reactors and upstream facilities, as
well as dates they would be submitted to safeguards.
84According to the May 11 update, the eight indigenous reactors to be safeguarded are four at Rajasthan (RAPS 3, 4, 5
& 6); two at Uttar Pradesh (NAPS 1, 2); and two at Gujrat (KAPS 1, 2).

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• Spent fuel reprocessing facilities (except for the existing safeguards on the Power
Reactor Fuel Reprocessing (PREFRE) plant)
• Research reactors: CIRUS (which will be shut down in 2010), Dhruva, Advanced
Heavy Water Reactor
• Three heavy water plants
• Various military-related plants (e.g., prototype naval reactor).
The separation plan stated that India would begin placing facilities under safeguards in 2006 and
complete the process in 2014. However, since the IAEA did not approve New Delhi’s safeguards
agreement until 2008, India will need to update that timeline. Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State for International Security And Nonproliferation Richard Stratford told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee September 18, that New Delhi stands by its initial plan to bring its facilities
under safeguards by 2014.
India’s Implementation Document noted that facilities were excluded from the civilian list if they
were located in a larger hub of strategic significance, even if the facilities themselves were not
normally engaged in activities of strategic significance, calling into question whether the plan
really will result in a “separation” of civilian and military facilities. Moreover, the plan stated that
electricity grid connectivity is not relevant to the separation exercise and that grid connectivity
would be necessary “irrespective of whether the reactor concerned is civilian or not civilian.”
This means that “military” reactors will continue to provide civilian electricity.
Another question that arises is whether India, in the absence of full-scope safeguards, can provide
sufficient confidence that U.S. peaceful nuclear technology will not be diverted to nuclear
weapons purposes, as many believe it was in 1974.85 In response to a question for the record
submitted by Senator Lugar on April 5, 2006, on whether exports of nuclear material or reactors
from the United States would in any way assist India’s nuclear weapons program, the
Administration noted that “Any items sent to India would be subject to safeguards, and
implementation of the Additional Protocol would provide further assurances of the non-diversion
of such items or material.”86 However, the Additional Protocol provides assurances of absence of
undeclared activities, rather than of the non-diversion of safeguarded items, contrary to Secretary
Rice’s assertions.
Administration officials repeatedly have stressed that India’s separation plan must be credible,
transparent, and defensible from a nonproliferation standpoint,87 and that “the resultant safeguards
must contribute to our nonproliferation goals.”88 To those observers who interpreted that

85 Although India maintained a certain ambiguity by calling its 1974 test a “peaceful nuclear explosion,” the 1998 tests
leave little doubt that the experience gained was put to use in a nuclear weapons program. Plutonium produced in the
CIRUS reactor, which the United States supplied with heavy water, was used in the 1974 test. See Victor Gilinsky and
Paul Leventhal, “India Cheated,” Washington Post, June 15, 1998. U.S. documents from the early 1970s indicate that
the United States interpreted its nuclear cooperation agreement with India to prohibit peaceful nuclear explosions.
Washington communicated this position to New Delhi. The documents are available at http://www.armscontrol.org/
country/india/Historic_Documents_India_Nuclear_Test.asp.
86 The Additional Protocol is a measure to strengthen safeguards by providing for additional information, access and
inspection tools. INFCIRC/540, concluded in 1997, is the model upon which states’ protocols to their safeguards
agreements are based.
87 Statement of Dr. Joseph, November 2, 2005, SFRC India hearing.
88 Ibid.
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statement to mean that a separation plan would need to take into account India’s past
commitments (e.g., use of purportedly “peaceful” nuclear reactors like CIRUS to produce
plutonium for nuclear weapons) and the impact on its nuclear weapons program (e.g., capping
India’s fissile material production), the separation plan may not appear credible. To those
observers who interpreted “credible” to mean that all power reactors that supplied electricity
would be declared civilian because they have a civilian use, the separation plan also may not
appear credible. Secretary Rice has stressed, however, that more reactors under safeguards means
more transparency, more physical security, better nuclear safety, and therefore increased safety for
the United States.89 Even so, some observers may argue that types of facilities safeguarded are
critical in assessing whether the plan is defensible from a nonproliferation standpoint. For
example, in terms of preventing terrorist access to fissile material, safeguarding facilities like
reprocessing and enrichment plants and breeder reactors could be viewed as providing a
significant nonproliferation benefit because the materials produced by these plants are a few steps
closer to potential use in a bomb. In addition, safeguards on enrichment, reprocessing plants, and
breeder reactors would support the 2002 U.S. National Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass
Destruction, in which the United States pledged to “continue to discourage the worldwide
accumulation of separated plutonium and to minimize the use of highly-enriched uranium.”90
India-IAEA Discussions/Domestic Opposition 91
After the United States and India concluded the nuclear agreement last July, New Delhi delayed
beginning talks with the IAEA about a safeguards agreement because of domestic opposition
from Communist and other leftist parties, known as the Left Front.92 Until recently, the United
Progressive Alliance government, led by Prime Minister Singh, depended on those parties’
support in order to stay in power. In India, the executive can enter into international agreements
without parliamentary approval, but the Left Front threatened to withdraw its support if the
government went ahead with the safeguards discussion. Indian officials had indicated multiple
times that the government would not risk prompting early elections in order to push the deal
through. In November 2007, the Left Front agreed to allow the government to engage in
discussions with the IAEA. The talks were announced November 21, and the two parties
subsequently met five times.
New Delhi had indicated that, once a safeguards text has been agreed upon with the IAEA
Secretariat, the government would seek approval from an ad hoc political committee (which
includes the Communists) before proceeding further with the agreement. Speaking before a
Calcutta audience February 3, 2008, External Affairs Minister Mukherjee said that when “the
draft agreement [with the IAEA] is ready it will be brought back to the United Progressive
Alliance (UPA)-Left Coalition committee for its approval and suggestion.”93 Similarly,
Communist Party of India (Marxist) General Secretary Prakash Karat stated the previous
November that “we have come to an understanding that the government can go to the IAEA

89 Condoleezza Rice, “Our Opportunity With India,” Washington Post, March 13, 2006.
90 National Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction, December 2002. Available at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/12/WMDStrategy.pdf.
91 See also CRS Report RL33529, India-U.S. Relations, by K. Alan Kronstadt.
92 Those parties argued that the agreement would compromise India’s sovereignty by drawing New Delhi into a
“strategic alliance” with Washington. See, for example, http://www.cpim.org/ for a detailed account of objections from
the Communist Party of India (Marxist).
93 “N-deal strategic to India’s progress: Pranab Mukherjee,” Indo Asian News Service, February 3, 2008.
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secretariat. But the outcome of the talks should be brought to the committee before moving to the
IAEA board of governors.”94 The committee last met June 25, 2008. The government, however,
never presented the text of the safeguards agreement to the committee, and at New Delhi’s
request, the IAEA Secretariat circulated the draft text (GOV/2008/30)95 July 9, 2008, to the
agency’s board.
Pakistan, along with several unidentified board members, had “voiced strong reservations” about
the safeguards agreement, according to a July 24, 2008, Nucleonics Week article,96 but the Board
of Governors approved the agreement by consensus August 1, 2008.
Four Left Front parties withdrew their support for the coalition government July 9, 2008, shortly
after Singh announced that India would approach the IAEA board. However, the coalition
government narrowly won a July 22, 2008, vote of confidence, staving off the threat of early
elections. Karat stated September 7, 2008, that the Left Front would only support a government
that would terminate the nuclear agreement with the United States.97 However, despite the loss of
the Left Front’s support, the coalition government considerably bolstered its standing in April-
May 2009 parliamentary elections, thereby obtaining a more stable coalition. The opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party has expressed its opposition to the deal and has stated that it would attempt
to renegotiate it if the party regains power.98
India’s Safeguards Agreement 99
IAEA Director-General ElBaradei described India’s safeguards agreement as an “umbrella
agreement” that allows for any facility identified by New Delhi in the future to become subject to
safeguards. Since New Delhi has committed to place additional reactors under safeguards,
Elbaradei added, concluding an umbrella agreement was more efficient than negotiating different
agreements for each facility. India signed the agreement February 2, 2009, and it entered into
force May 11, 2009.
The safeguards agreement requires India to provide the IAEA with a declaration of its nuclear
facilities. India is to implement this provision in a two-step process. First, according to paragraph
13 of the agreement, New Delhi will provide a declaration of nuclear facilities that it intends to
place under safeguards in the future. Second, according to paragraph 14 of the agreement, India is
to notify the IAEA when specific facilities are to be safeguarded. Those facilities will be placed
on an Annex to the agreement. India will also have to notify the agency of imported items that are
required to be safeguarded, but these will not be listed in the Annex.

94 “After Left Nod, Govt Decides To Go Ahead With IAEA Talks On N-Deal,” Financial Express, November 16,
2007.
95 Available at http://pmindia.nic.in/IaeaIndiaSGADrft.pdf.
96 Mark Hibbs and Daniel Horner, “Pakistan, Other States Not Satisfied After Indian Briefing on IAEA Pact,”
Nucleonics Week, July 24, 2008.
97 “Will Support Govt That Scraps 123,” The Economic Times, September 8, 2008.
98 Interview with Leader of the Opposition (Lok Sabha) L.K. Advani, The Hindu, July 11, 2008; “BJP Will Renegotiate
N-Deal If Comes To Power: Sushma Swaraj,” The Economic Times, September 7, 2008.
99 Unless otherwise noted, this section is based on ElBaradei’s August 1, 2008 comments to the IAEA Board of
Governors, as well as personal communications with IAEA officials, and current and former State Department officials.
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On July 25, 2008, India provided to the IAEA a document—a copy of New Delhi’s 2006
separation plan—containing a list of its nuclear facilities.100 A State Department official said that
India’s submission of this document did not constitute submission of the declaration required by
paragraph 13 of the safeguards agreement, but did satisfy P.L. 109-401’s requirement regarding
New Delhi’s declaration.101 India subsequently provided the declaration pursuant to paragraph 13
of the agreement, but exactly when it did so is unclear. In October 2009, New Delhi provided the
IAEA, “in accordance with” paragraph 14 of the agreement, with a list of 14 nuclear facilities that
are to be placed on the safeguards agreement’s Annex.102 Six nuclear reactors listed in the
separation plan were not included in this submission, but India intends, in accordance with the
separation plan, to place them under safeguards by 2014.103
An Indian official previously indicated that New Delhi’s placement of nuclear facilities under
safeguards was contingent on India’s conclusion of nuclear supply agreements with other
countries. Anil Kakodkar, Chairman of India’s Atomic Energy Commission, said in a July 20,
2008, interview that India’s identification of “any facility as civilian is conditional on that facility
benefitting from full civil nuclear cooperation” with other countries.104
Some observers have expressed concerns about the agreement’s preamble, which contains
language suggesting that India could withdraw nuclear facilities or fuel from safeguards if New
Delhi so chooses. For example, the preamble states that India “may take corrective measures to
ensure uninterrupted operation of its civilian nuclear reactors in the event of disruption of foreign
fuel supplies.” New Delhi has not defined “corrective measures,” although Kakodkar described
them in July 2008 as “unspecified sovereign actions.”105
The preamble also states that
[a]n essential basis of India’s concurrence to accept Agency safeguards is ... support for an
Indian effort to develop a strategic reserve of nuclear fuel to guard against any disruption of
supply over the lifetime of India’s reactors.
New Delhi may want such a stockpile to hedge against a cut-off of fuel supplies in the event that,
for example, India tests a nuclear weapon.
However, ElBaradei stated August 1, 2008, that the agreement’s specific termination clauses
“override any general clauses in the agreement.” Additionally, the State Department stated in
January 2008 responses to Questions for the Record submitted by the House Committee on
Foreign Affairs that New Delhi “has expressed its view that for purposes of implementing the
U.S.-India Agreement,” IAEA safeguards “can and should be regarded as being ‘in
perpetuity.’”106

100 Available at http://www.iaea.org/Publications/Documents/Infcircs/2008/infcirc731.pdf.
101 Author interview, September 23, 2008.
102 http://www.iaea.org/Publications/Documents/Infcircs/2009/infcirc754a1.pdf.
103 Author interview with Indian official, January 11, 2010.
104 “Indian Daily Interviews Atomic Body Chairman on Nuclear Deal,” The Hindu, July 20, 2008.
105 Ibid.
106 Questions for the Record Submitted to Jeffrey Bergner, Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs by Rep. Tom
Lantos, House Committee on Foreign Affairs (#12), October 5, 2007. Available at http://www.hcfa.house.gov/110/
press090208.pdf. (Hereafter, “Questions for the Record, 2007.”)
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It is also worth noting that, if India were to terminate IAEA safeguards on U.S. nuclear exports
(or special nuclear material produced from or with such exports), section 123 a. (1) of the AEA
requires that fall-back safeguards be maintained on those exports. The nuclear cooperation
agreement states that
safeguards will be maintained with respect to all nuclear materials and equipment transferred
pursuant to this Agreement, and with respect to all special fissionable material used in or
produced through the use of such nuclear materials and equipment, so long as the material or
equipment remains under the jurisdiction or control of the cooperating Party.
The State Department noted that if IAEA safeguards “fail to be applied,” the two countries “must
enter into arrangements for alternative measures to fulfill” the above requirement.107 Furthermore,
also stated that “it would not be consistent with the proposed agreement text for ... corrective
measures to detract from the applicability” of safeguards to the relevant nuclear items “including
after termination or expiration of the agreement,”108 according to the Department’s January 2008
responses.
NSG Support
Following formal and informal U.S. consultations with NSG members, the United States
presented during a March 2006 Consultative Group meeting a draft decision for potential
discussion during the NSG plenary in May 2006.109 That draft sought an exception for India to the
NSG requirements of full-scope safeguards, notwithstanding the exceptions for safety assistance
and for those agreements signed before the full-scope safeguards requirement came into effect in
1992. It did not contain any restrictions on enrichment or reprocessing cooperation, nor on heavy
water or HEU or plutonium sales.110
The United States subsequently developed a second draft decision, which incorporated the
suggestions of supporting NSG members.111 After revising that draft following consultations with
New Delhi, Washington submitted it to the NSG chair in early August 2008.112 The second
version did not contain any additional restrictions on India. Indeed, it weakened one section of the
2006 draft which stated that NSG members could engage in nuclear trade with New Delhi if “the
participating Government intending to make the transfer is satisfied that India continues to fully
meet all” of its nonproliferation and safeguards commitments. The new draft stated only that
Participating Governments shall maintain contact and consult through regular channels on
matters connected with the implementation of the Guidelines, taking into account relevant
international commitments and bilateral agreements with India.
The NSG considered the new draft decision during an August 21-22 Extraordinary Plenary
meeting and decided during a similar meeting held September 4-6, 2008, to exempt India from

107 Ibid. (#11).
108 Ibid. (#42).
109 The Consultative Group is the NSG’s “standing intersessional working body.” See
http://www.nuclearsuppliersgroup.org/activities.htm.
110 A copy of the proposal is available at http://www.armscontrol.org/projects/india/20060327_DraftNSGProposal.asp.
111 Author interviews with State Department official, February 4, 2008; August 14, 2008.
112 The August 2008 draft is available at http://www.armscontrol.org/node/3274.
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some of its export guidelines. This decision means that members’ decisions to export previously
restricted nuclear items to India are now governed by individual governments’ policies.113
Although several countries advocated that certain conditions (such as an explicit ban on the
transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology, as well as a provision that nuclear supplies to
India would end if New Delhi were to test a nuclear weapon) be included in an exemption for
India, the final language contains no such explicit conditions.114 Instead, it states that the
exemption is “based on” Indian commitments and actions, which are essentially the same as the
requirements in P.L. 109-401. The NSG statement also notes that the India has agreed to continue
its “unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing.”
The NSG agreed to exempt India from the portions of its guidelines that require India to have
full-scope IAEA safeguards “provided that transfers of sensitive exports [enrichment and
reprocessing technology] remain subject to paragraphs 6 and 7 of the Guidelines.”
The relevant portions of those paragraphs state that
suppliers should exercise restraint in the transfer of sensitive facilities, technology and
material usable for nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices. If enrichment or
reprocessing facilities, equipment or technology are to be transferred, suppliers should
encourage recipients to accept, as an alternative to national plants, supplier involvement
and/or other appropriate multinational participation in resulting facilities.... [and]
For a transfer of an enrichment facility, or technology therefor, the recipient nation should
agree that neither the transferred facility, nor any facility based on such technology, will be
designed or operated for the production of greater than 20% enriched uranium without the
consent of the supplier nation, of which the IAEA should be advised.
Ireland reportedly stated after the NSG decision that, “on the basis of consultations during the
meeting, it ‘understands that no [NSG member] currently intends to transfer to India any
facilities, equipment, materials, or technology related to the enrichment of uranium, or the
reprocessing of spent fuel.’”115 Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International
Security John Rood made a similar assertion during a September 18, 2008, Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing.
Berman explained September 26 that he chose to support H.R. 7081, the bill approving the
agreement, partly because Secretary Rice “made a personal commitment” to him that “the United
States will make its ‘highest priority’ at the November meeting of the Nuclear Suppliers Group
the achievement of a decision by all of the nuclear suppliers to prohibit the export of enrichment
and reprocessing equipment and technology” to non-NPT states. Asked the same day about
Berman’s statement, Rice told Reuters that the United States would advocate for “strict limits” on
the export of such technology.

113 The text of the NSG statement is available at http://www.nuclearsuppliersgroup.org/PRESS/2008-09-Press-
Vienna.pdf.
114 Austria, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, and Switzerland issued a joint statement at the August
meeting explaining that they had proposed amendments to the U.S. proposal in order to meet their “non-proliferation
objectives.” New Zealand’s Disarmament and Arms Control Minister Phil Goff stated August 26 that approximately 50
amendments had been proposed to the U.S.-proposed text.
115 Mark Hibbs and Daniel Horner, “Scope of NSG Exemption For India Yet to Be Defined by Member States,”
Nucleonics Week, September 11, 2008.
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The NSG is considering adopting criteria for exporting enrichment and reprocessing technology.
President Bush stated in February 2004 that NSG members should refuse to sell “enrichment and
reprocessing equipment and technologies to any state that does not already possess full-scale,
functioning enrichment and reprocessing plants.” The Administration has since shifted its position
and proposed export criteria of its own. France first introduced such criteria in 2004.116
According to the September 2008 NSG statement, participating governments will meet “and act
in accordance with paragraph 16 of the [group’s] Guidelines” if one or more members “consider
that circumstances have arisen which require consultations.” Paragraph 16 provides a list of
potential steps for NSG members to take if
one or more suppliers believe that there has been a violation of supplier/recipient
understanding resulting from these Guidelines, particularly in the case of an explosion of a
nuclear device, or illegal termination or violation of IAEA safeguards by a recipient.
Under such circumstances, NSG members could agree to cut off nuclear supplies; indeed, New
Zealand stated September 6 that “in the event of a nuclear test by India, this exemption will
become null and void.” However, the NSG would have to agree by consensus to cut off nuclear
exports.
Several NSG governments indicated in statements after the vote that a September 5, 2008,
statement from Mukherjee describing India’s “stand on disarmament and nonproliferation” played
a decisive role in persuading them to agree to the exemption.117 However, Mukherjee simply
reiterated previous Indian policies and articulated no new commitments. For example, he stated
that India “remain[s] committed to a voluntary, unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing,” but
New Delhi is already committed to such a moratorium. Furthermore, Congress party
spokesperson Manis Tiwari stated September 4 that “[i]f the need arises and if it is in our national
interest, we are ready to test not once, not twice but a hundred times.”118
Other Required Steps
Additional Protocol
Section 104 (b) (3) of P.L. 109-401 requires a presidential determination that “India and the IAEA
are making substantial progress toward concluding an Additional Protocol consistent with IAEA
principles, practices, and policies that would apply to India’s civil nuclear program.” According to
the State Department, ElBaradei concluded September 10 that India has made substantial
progress toward concluding such a protocol. The IAEA Board of Governors approved the
protocol March 3, 2009, and India signed it May 15, 2009.
As previously noted, Additional Protocols, which are based on a Model Additional Protocol, are
designed to augment the IAEA’s ability to detect undeclared nuclear activities in a member-state.
Since New Delhi has nuclear weapons and is keeping some of its nuclear facilities outside of

116 Wade Boese, “Nuclear Export Criteria Lacks Consensus,” Arms Control Today, June 2008.
117 See the Appendix.
118 Rama Lakshmi, “U.S. Letter Puts India’s Premier On Defensive Over Nuclear Deal,” Washington Post, September
5, 2008.
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safeguards, “there are bound to be important differences between” India’s Additional Protocol
and the Model Protocol, according to the NPAS. Indeed, India’s Additional Protocol does not
contain most of the Model Protocol’s provisions, requiring only that India provide the IAEA with
information about its nuclear exports.
Declaration of Nuclear Facilities
Section 104 (b) (1) requires that India file “a declaration regarding its civil facilities and materials
with the IAEA.” As noted above, a State Department official said that the India’s submission of
this plan does not constitute submission of the declaration required by the safeguards agreement,
but does satisfy P.L. 109-401’s requirement.119 India has, as noted, submitted its declaration to the
IAEA. New Delhi is neither required to place any new facilities under safeguards, nor to adhere
to the separation plan. However, an Indian facility must be placed under safeguards in order for it
to receive foreign assistance.
Harmonization with NSG/MTCR Guidelines and Adherence to NSG
Guidelines

Section 104 (b) (6) (B) requires a presidential determination that India has harmonized “its export
control laws, regulations, policies, and practices with the guidelines and practices” of the MTCR
and the NSG. Section 104 (b) (6) (B) requires a determination that New Delhi adhere to the NSG
guidelines.
The State Department report assesses that India has harmonized its export control laws with the
NSG and MTCR guidelines “up through the 2005 revisions, and has the means in place to make
future updates to its guidelines and control lists.”120 New Delhi stated its adherence to the NSG
guidelines in a September 8, 2008, letter to the IAEA and its adherence to the MTCR guidelines
in a September 9, 2008, letter to the MTCR point of contact.121
According to the September NSG statement, the group’s chair (which rotates each year) “is
requested to consult with India regarding changes to and implementation of” the group’s
guidelines. This provision gives New Delhi what is essentially a non-binding consultative role in
formulating changes to the guidelines. India had been reluctant to adhere to the guidelines
because they sometimes change and New Delhi, as a non-member, will not be able to participate
in the Group’s decisions regarding such changes.122
The Atomic Energy Act and Consultations with Congress
Under existing law (Atomic Energy Act [AEA] of 1954; P.L. 95-242; 42 U.S.C. § 2153 et seq.)
all significant nuclear cooperation requires an agreement for cooperation.123 The Nuclear Non-

119 Author interview, September 23, 2008.
120 State Department Report 2008.
121 Ibid.
122 Author interviews with State Department official August 11, 2008; August 14, 2008.
123 Nuclear cooperation includes the distribution of special nuclear material, source material, and byproduct material, to
licensing for commercial, medical, and industrial purposes. These terms, “special nuclear material,” “source material,”
and “byproduct material,” as well as other terms used in the statute, are defined in 42 U.S.C. § 2014.
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Proliferation Act of 1978 (NNPA) amended the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 to include, among
other things, a requirement for full-scope safeguards for significant nuclear exports to non-
nuclear-weapon states.124
At issue are the requirements for full-scope nuclear safeguards contained in Section 123 a. (2) for
approval of an agreement for cooperation and in Section 128 for licensing nuclear exports. India,
a non-party to the NPT, does not have full-scope safeguards, nor is it ever expected to adopt full-
scope safeguards, since it has a nuclear weapons program that would preclude them. Also at issue
is the requirement in Section 129 to stop exports if a non-nuclear-weapon state has detonated a
nuclear device after 1978, among other things. India detonated several nuclear devices in 1998.
These three sections of the AEA provide mechanisms for the President to waive those
requirements and sanctions (in Section 129), which are spelled out in more detail below. The
sections also provide legislative vetoes, in the form of concurrent resolutions, of the presidential
determinations. In 1983, however, the Supreme Court decided in INS v. Chadha that legislative
veto provisions that do not satisfy the bicameralism and presentment requirements of Article I of
the Constitution were unconstitutional. In 1985, some parts of the AEA were amended to provide
for joint resolutions of approval or disapproval (e.g., Section 123 d.). The Chadha decision affects
how Congress would disapprove of such presidential determinations under existing law and
therefore affects the impact of the Administration’s proposed legislation.
Agreements for Cooperation
Section 123 of the AEA (42 U.S.C. 2153) specifies what must happen before nuclear cooperation
can take place.
Section 123 a. states that the proposed agreement shall include the terms,
conditions, duration, nature, and scope of cooperation and lists nine criteria that
the agreement must meet. It also contains provisions for the President to exempt
an agreement from any of the nine criteria, and includes details on the kinds of
information the executive branch must provide to Congress;
Section 123 b. specifies the process for submitting the text of the agreement to
Congress;
Section 123 c. specifies how Congress approves cooperation agreements that are
limited in scope (e.g., do not transfer nuclear material or cover reactors larger
than 5 MWe.).125
Section 123 d. specifies how Congress approves agreements that do cover
significant nuclear cooperation (transfer of nuclear material or reactors larger
than 5 MWe), including exempted agreements.
The United States has more than 20 agreements for cooperation in place now, and had an
agreement with India from 1963 to 1993. Such agreements for cooperation are “framework”
agreements—they do not guarantee that cooperation will take place or that nuclear material will

124 P.L. 83-703, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2153 et seq.
125 In the 1954 Act, the provisions in Section 123 c. covered all agreements for cooperation. Section 123 d. was added
in 1958 (P.L. 85-479) to cover military-related agreements. In 1974, P.L. 93-485 amended Section 123 d. to include
agreements that covered reactors producing more than 5 MW thermal or special nuclear material connected therewith.
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be transferred, but rather set the terms of reference and provide authorization for cooperation. The
1963 U.S.-India cooperation agreement is anomalous in that it did guarantee fuel for the Tarapur
reactors, even though other U.S. nuclear cooperation agreements reportedly have not included
any such guarantees.126
Section 123 a. lists nine criteria that an agreement must meet unless the President determines an
exemption is necessary. These are listed in Section 123 a., paragraphs (1) through (9), 42 U.S.C.
2153. They are guarantees that (1) safeguards on nuclear material and equipment transferred
continue in perpetuity; (2) full-scope safeguards are applied in non-nuclear-weapon states; (3)
nothing transferred is used for any nuclear explosive device or for any other military purpose; (4)
the United States has the right of return if the cooperating state detonates a nuclear explosive
device or terminates or abrogates an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards
agreement; (5) there is no transfer of material or classified data without U.S. consent; (6) physical
security is maintained; (7) there is no enrichment or reprocessing by the recipient state without
prior approval; (8) storage is approved by United States for plutonium and highly enriched
uranium; and (9) anything produced through cooperation is subject to all of the above
requirements.
In the case of India, the most difficult of these requirements to meet is the full-scope safeguards
requirement for non-nuclear-weapon states (Sec. 123 a. (2)). India is considered to be a non-
nuclear-weapon state because it did not, as defined by the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty,
explode a nuclear device before January 1, 1967.127 The President may exempt an agreement for
cooperation from any of the requirements in Section 123 a. if he determines that meeting the
requirement would be “seriously prejudicial to the achievement of U.S. non-proliferation
objectives or otherwise jeopardize the common defense and security.” An exempted agreement
would not become effective “unless the Congress adopts, and there is enacted, a joint resolution
stating that the Congress does favor such agreement.”128 In other words, both chambers of
Congress must approve the agreement if it does not contain all of the Section 123 a. requirements.
If Congress votes to approve an agreement for cooperation that was exempted because the
recipient state did not have full-scope safeguards (Section 123 a. (2)), such approval would
essentially waive the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s (NRC) obligation to consider full-scope
safeguards as an export license authorization criterion under Section 128. However, Congress
would still have the authority to review one export license authorization approximately every 12
months after the agreement for cooperation has entered into force (see discussion below).
Section 123 d., in part, states the following:
if Congress fails to disapprove a proposed agreement for cooperation which exempts the
recipient nation from the requirement set forth in subsection 123 a. (2), such failure to act

126 United States General Accounting Office, “Nuclear Agreement: Cooperation Between the United States and the
People’s Republic of China,” GAO/NSIAD-86-21BR, November 1985, Appendix I-1.
127 42 U.S.C. 2153 a.(2). Section 4 (b) of the NNPA specifies that all other terms used in the NNPA not defined in
Section 4 “shall have the meanings ascribed to them by the 1954 Act, the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 and the
Treaty [NPT].” S.Rept. 95-467 further clarified that under the NPT, the five nuclear weapon states are the U.S., U.K.,
China, the Soviet Union, and France. U.S. Code Congressional and Administration News, 95th Cong., 2nd sess., 1978,
vol. 3, p. 329.
128 This new requirement was added by the Export Administration Amendments Act of 1985, P.L. 99-64, Section 301
(b) (2), 99 Stat. 120.
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shall constitute a failure to adopt a resolution of disapproval pursuant to subsection 128 b. (3)
for purposes of the Commission’s consideration of applications and requests under section
126 a. (2) and there shall be no congressional review pursuant to section 128 of any
subsequent license or authorization with respect to that state until the first such license or
authorization which is issued after twelve months from the elapse of the sixty-day period in
which the agreement for cooperation in question is reviewed by the Congress.129
Export Licensing
In addition to specifying criteria for framework agreements, the AEA sets out procedures for
licensing exports (Sections 126, 127, and 128 codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. 2155, 2156,
2157). The NRC is required to meet criteria in Sections 127 and 128 for authorizing export
licenses; Section 128 contains the requirement for full-scope safeguards for non-nuclear-weapon
states. Section 126 b. (2) contains a provision for the President to authorize an export in the event
that the NRC deems that the export would not meet Section 127 and 128 criteria. The President
must determine “that failure to approve an export would be seriously prejudicial to the
achievement of U.S. nonproliferation objectives or otherwise jeopardize the common defense and
security.” In that case, the President would submit his executive order, along with a detailed
assessment and other documentation, to Congress for 60 days of continuous session. After 60
days of continuous session, the export would go through unless Congress were to pass a
concurrent resolution of disapproval.130
In the case of exports pursuant to an exempted agreement for cooperation as described above, the
NRC does not have to meet the full-scope safeguards requirement in assessing whether it can
issue export licenses (Section 128 b. (3)). If the NRC were to issue such a license, Congress
would review one license every 12 months. If Congress were to pass a resolution of disapproval,
no further exports could be made during that Congress.131
In both cases, Section 128 contains a provision for the President to waive termination of exports
by notifying the Congress that the state has adopted full-scope safeguards or that the state has
made significant progress toward full-scope safeguards, or that U.S. foreign policy interests
dictate reconsideration. Such a determination would become effective unless Congress were to
disagree with the President’s determination.132

129 The language “fails to disapprove” is an artifact of the 1978 Nuclear Nonproliferation Act, which used legislative
vetoes in the form of concurrent resolutions of disapproval. In 1985, following the Supreme Court’s Chadha decision
invalidating the use of legislative vetoes, the Export Administration Amendments Act created a separate approval
process for exempted agreements, which this part of Section 123 d. is referring to, that called for a joint resolution of
approval. Thus, “fails to disapprove” could be interpreted as “approves” in the form of a joint resolution of approval.
130 In light of the Chadha decision, passing a concurrent resolution could invite a legal challenge. Although this is not
provided for in the AEA, Congress could choose to pass a joint resolution of disapproval or a bill stating in substance it
did not approve.
131 Section 128 b. (3) refers to a “resolution of disapproval,” and this would likely be a joint resolution of disapproval,
in light of the Chadha decision.
132 Section 128 b. (2) refers to a “concurrent resolution.” In light of the Chadha decision, Congress could pass a joint
resolution disagreeing with the President’s determination, or pass a bill barring nuclear exports for a certain period of
time to that country.
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Termination of Cooperation
Section 129 of the AEA (42 U.S.C. 2158) requires ending exports of nuclear materials and
equipment or sensitive nuclear technology to any non-nuclear-weapon state that, after March 10,
1978, the President determines to have
• detonated a nuclear explosive device;
• terminated or abrogated IAEA safeguards;
• materially violated an IAEA safeguards agreement; or
• engaged in activities involving source or special nuclear material and having
“direct significance” for the manufacture or acquisition of nuclear explosive
devices, and “has failed to take steps which, in the President’s judgment,
represent sufficient progress toward terminating such activities.”
In addition, Section 129 would also halt exports to any nation the President determines to have
• materially violated the terms of an agreement for cooperation with the United
States, or
• assisted, encouraged, or induced any other non-nuclear-weapon state to obtain
nuclear explosives or the materials and technologies needed to manufacture
them; or re-transferred or entered into an agreement for exporting reprocessing
equipment, materials or technology to another non-nuclear-weapons state.
The President can waive termination if he determines that “cessation of such exports would be
seriously prejudicial to the achievement of United States nonproliferation objectives or otherwise
jeopardize the common defense and security.” The President must submit his determination to
Congress, which is then referred to the House International Relations Committee and the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee for 60 days of continuous session. The determination becomes
effective unless Congress opposes it.133
P.L. 109-401134
On March 9, 2006, the Administration submitted its proposed legislation to Representative Hyde
and Senator Lugar, and on March 16, 2006, Representatives Hyde and Lantos introduced H.R.
4974, and Senator Lugar introduced S. 2429. Following public hearings and committee mark-ups,
the House passed H.R. 5682 on July 26, 2006, by a vote of 359 to 68 and the Senate passed its
version of H.R. 5682, substituting the text of the amended S. 3709, on November 16, 2006, by a
vote of 85 to 12. One issue that held up the Senate bill was the inclusion, in Title II, of the
implementing legislation for the U.S. Additional Protocol—an agreement between the United
States and the IAEA to provide for enhanced information, access, and inspection tools for IAEA

133 Section 129 specified that the President’s determination “shall not become effective if during such sixty-day period
the Congress adopts a concurrent resolution stating in substance that it does not favor the determination.” However,
P.L. 110-369 amended that section to change the “concurrent resolution” provision to a “joint resolution,” presumably
to overcome potential issues raised by the Chadha decision..
134 See CRS Report RL33561, U.S.-India Nuclear Cooperation: A Side-By-Side Comparison of Current Legislation, by
Sharon Squassoni and Jill Marie Parillo for more detail on the bills.
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inspectors as they inspect U.S. nuclear and other facilities under the U.S. voluntary safeguards
agreement.
The House and Senate version of the H.R. 5682 were remarkably similar, with four differences.135
The Senate version contained an additional requirement for the President to execute his waiver
authority, an amendment introduced by Senator Harkin and adopted by unanimous consent that
the President determine that India is “fully and actively participating in U.S. and international
efforts to dissuade, sanction and contain Iran for its nuclear program.” This provision was
changed to a reporting requirement in the conference report. The Senate version also had two
unique sections related to the cooperation agreement, Sections 106 and 107, both of which appear
in the conference report. Section 106 (now Section 104 (d) (4)) prohibits exports of equipment,
material or technology related for uranium enrichment, spent fuel reprocessing or heavy water
production unless conducted in a multinational facility participating in a project approved by the
IAEA or in a facility participating in a bilateral or multilateral project to develop a proliferation-
resistant fuel cycle. Section 107 (now Section 104 (d) (5)) would establish a program to monitor
that U.S. technology is being used appropriately by Indian recipients. Finally, the Senate version
also contained the implementing legislation for the U.S. Additional Protocol in Title II, which was
retained in the conference report.
P.L. 109-401 allows the President to
• exempt a proposed agreement for cooperation with India from the full-scope
safeguards requirement of Section 123 a. (2) of the Atomic Energy Act;
• exempt an agreement from any export review by the Congress under Section 128
of the AEA;
• exempt the agreement from restrictions resulting from India’s nuclear weapons
activities under Section 129 a. (1) (D) of the AEA, and exempt the agreement
from a cutoff in exports because of India’s 1998 nuclear test.
It does not exempt the agreement from a future cutoff in exports if India tests a nuclear explosive
device again. For the President to exercise his waiver authority, seven requirements, as outlined
earlier, must be met. P.L. 109-401 contains numerous statements of policy and reporting
requirements, as well as restrictions on certain kinds of transfers. There are specific prohibitions
on (as outlined in Section 104 (d)): (1) transfers that would violate U.S. obligations under Article
1 of the NPT not to in any way assist any country to manufacture or otherwise acquire nuclear
weapons; (2) transfers that would violate NSG guidelines in force at the time; (3) enrichment and
reprocessing cooperation, except to “a multinational facility participating in an IAEA-approved
program to provide alternatives to national fuel cycle capabilities; or ... a facility participating in,
and the export, reexport, transfer, or retransfer is associated with, a bilateral or multinational
program to develop a proliferation-resistant fuel cycle.” Additionally, the law requires a cutoff in
exports if India is found to have violated NSG or MTCR guidelines. P.L. 109-401 also provides
for a nuclear export accountability program (formerly Section 107 of the Senate version of H.R.
5682).

135 See H.Rept. 109-590 and for S.Rept. 109-288, dated July 20, 2006, background on the bill.
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President’s Signing Statement
In President Bush’s signing statement, he noted that the act “will strengthen the strategic
relationship between the United States and India.”136 With respect to particular provisions,
President Bush stated that the executive branch would construe two sections of the bill as
“advisory” only: policy statements in Section 103 and the restriction contained in Section 104 (d)
(2) on transferring items to India that would not meet NSG guidelines. On the first, the President
cited the Constitution’s “commitment to the presidency of the authority to conduct the Nation’s
foreign affairs”; on the second, the President raised the question of whether the provision
“unconstitutionally delegated legislative power to an international body.” In other words, the
President was questioning whether Congress were ceding authority to approve U.S. exports to the
NSG. However, U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Rice, have formally told Congress
multiple times that the United States government would abide by NSG guidelines. The
President’s signing statement also noted that the executive branch would construe “provisions of
the Act that mandate, regulate, or prohibit submission of information to the Congress, an
international organization, or the public, such as sections 104, 109, 261, 271, 272, 273, 274, and
275, in a manner consistent with the President’s constitutional authority to protect and control
information that could impair foreign relations, national security, the deliberative processes of the
Executive, or the performance of the Executive’s constitutional duties.” This seems to suggest
that the executive branch might limit the scope of reporting required by Congress in those
sections, not just on national security grounds, but to protect executive branch processes or
performance. The implications of the approach outlined in this signing statement will not be clear
until the executive branch produces (or does not produce, as the case may be) required reports.
Issues for Congress
The Nuclear Cooperation Agreement
The agreement announced in July 2007 by the United States and India lists a variety of civilian
nuclear projects on which the two countries “may pursue cooperation.” Although the Bush
Administration argued that the agreement “is consistent with applicable U.S. law,”137 some
Members of Congress expressed concern that it may be inconsistent with parts of P.L. 109-401.
For example, H.Res. 711, which was referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs October
4, 2007, stated that “it is the sense of the House of Representatives” that the Bush Administration
should not propose changes to NSG guidelines until it has resolved “all differences of
interpretation” of the agreement with New Delhi and “answered all outstanding questions raised
by Congress regarding apparent inconsistencies between the nuclear cooperation agreement” and
P.L. 109-401. Non-governmental experts also raised questions about several aspects of the
agreement, arguing that they may be inconsistent with P.L. 109-401.138

136 See http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/12/20061218-12.html.
137 Department of State Fact Sheet July 27, 2007, at http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2007/89552.htm.
138 See, for example, Sharon Squassoni, “Issues in U.S.-India Nuclear Cooperation,” November 7, 2007
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=19697&prog=zgp&proj=znpp,zsa, and Daryl
G. Kimball and Fred McGoldrick “U.S.-Indian Nuclear Agreement: A Bad Deal Gets Worse,” August 3, 2007, at
http://www.armscontrol.org/pressroom/2007/20070803_IndiaUS.asp?print.
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Sensitive Nuclear Technology Transfers
Despite restrictions in P.L. 109-401 regarding U.S. exports of equipment, material or technology
related to uranium enrichment, spent fuel reprocessing or heavy water production, the agreement
states that
Sensitive nuclear technology, heavy water production technology, sensitive nuclear facilities,
heavy water production facilities and major critical components of such facilities may be
transferred under this Agreement pursuant to an amendment to this Agreement.
However, the agreement also states that “transfers of dual-use items that could be used in
enrichment, reprocessing or heavy water production facilities will be subject to the Parties’
respective applicable laws, regulations and license policies.” Such transfers would, therefore, be
subject to the same restrictions described in P.L. 109-401. Any other transfers of such technology
would require changes to existing U.S. law. The State Department has said that Washington does
not intend to negotiate an amendment to the agreement.139 Furthermore, “as a matter of policy, the
United States does not transfer dual-use items for use in sensitive nuclear facilities” and “will not
assist India in the design, construction, or operation of sensitive nuclear technologies through the
transfer of dual-use items, whether under the [123] Agreement or outside the Agreement,”
according to the State Department.140
Nuclear Testing/Right of Return
P.L. 109-401 does not exempt the agreement from a future cutoff in exports if India tests a
nuclear explosive device again.141 However, the agreement does not explicitly mention U.S.
responses to such a test of such a device. Instead, the agreement states that “either Party shall
have the right to terminate this Agreement prior to its expiration on one year’s written notice to
the other Party”—that is, the agreement does not limit the grounds upon which the agreement
may be terminated.
Similarly, the agreement provides that the party seeking termination
has the right to cease further cooperation under this Agreement if it determines that a
mutually acceptable resolution of outstanding issues has not been possible or cannot be
achieved through consultations.
This provision means that nuclear cooperation under the agreement may be terminated by a party
during the one-year notice period for termination of the agreement.
The agreement also specifies that the two governments are to “hold consultations” prior to
ceasing cooperation or terminating the agreement. The United States and India are to
take into account whether the circumstances that may lead to termination or cessation
resulted from a Party’s serious concern about a changed security environment or as a
response to similar actions by other States which could impact national security.

139
Questions for the Record, 2007 (#8).
140 Ibid. (#s 4 and 5).
141 As noted above, the President retains the right to waive the termination of nuclear exports.
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This provision suggests that, in the event that India conducts a nuclear explosive test, New Delhi
may argue that the agreement should not be terminated (and nuclear cooperation should not
cease) because geopolitical circumstances justified the test. However, in such cases, the U.S. right
to terminate and cease cooperation under this provision would not be constrained by the results of
the consultations.
With regard to the U.S. right of return, Section 123 a. (4) of the AEA requires that nuclear
cooperation agreements include
a stipulation that the United States shall have the right to require the return of any nuclear
materials and equipment transferred pursuant thereto and any special nuclear material
produced through the use thereof if the cooperating party detonates a nuclear explosive
device or terminates or abrogates an agreement providing for IAEA safeguards.
The July agreement states that, following the cessation of cooperation under this agreement,
either party has the right to require the return of “any nuclear material, equipment, non-nuclear
material or components transferred under this Agreement and any special fissionable material
produced through their use.” However, the agreement does not say explicitly that a future Indian
test of a nuclear explosive device would allow the United States to exercise its right of return.
Rather, it provides for a right of return whenever a party has given notice of termination of the
agreement and has ceased nuclear cooperation, which would include but not be limited to the
circumstances specified in section 123.a(4) of the AEA. The agreement also provides that a
“notice by a Party that is invoking the right of return shall be delivered to the other Party on or
before the date of termination of this Agreement.” This means that the right of return cannot be
exercised after the one-year interval prior to the agreement’s termination.
Fuel Supply
A closely related issue is the agreement’s four assurances regarding India’s future nuclear fuel
supply:
• The United States is willing to incorporate assurances regarding fuel supply in
the bilateral U.S.-India agreement on peaceful uses of nuclear energy under
Section 123 of the U.S. AEA, which would be submitted to the U.S. Congress.
• The United States will join India in seeking to negotiate with the IAEA an India-
specific fuel supply agreement.
• The United States will support an Indian effort to develop a strategic reserve of
nuclear fuel to guard against any disruption of supply over the lifetime of India’s
reactors.
• If, despite these [above] arrangements, a disruption of fuel supplies to India
occurs, the two governments would jointly convene a group of friendly supplier
countries (including countries such as Russia, France, and the United Kingdom)
to pursue such measures as would restore fuel supply to India.
The last two provisions are particularly controversial because they could potentially provide India
a way to mitigate the effects of a U.S. cessation of nuclear exports (in the event that, for example,
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India were to test a nuclear weapon).142 Indeed, Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran asserted in
a February 18, 2008, statement that, under the 123 agreement, India is entitled to build a strategic
fuel reserve “to last the lifetime of such reactors.” And a spokesperson for India’s ruling Congress
Party indicated in September 2008 that reserve supplies of fuel would enable New Delhi to
continue operating its reactors even if other countries were to halt cooperation in response to an
Indian nuclear test.143
P.L. 109-401 contains several provisions that could be in tension with the July agreement. For
example, Section 103 (b) (10) addresses the issue of a fuel reserve:
Any nuclear power reactor fuel reserve provided to the Government of India for use in
safeguarded civilian nuclear facilities should be commensurate with reasonable reactor
operating requirements.
With regard to supplying India with nuclear fuel after a nuclear test, Section 103 a. (6)144 says that
the United States should
Seek to prevent the transfer to a country of nuclear equipment, materials, or technology from
other participating governments in the NSG or from any other source if nuclear transfers to
that country are suspended or terminated.
Similarly, Section 102 (13) expresses the sense of Congress that the United States “should not
seek to facilitate or encourage the continuation of nuclear exports to India by any other party if
such exports are terminated under United States law.”
However, President Bush’s September 10 message transmitting the agreement to Congress
characterizes the agreement’s fuel-supply assurances as “political commitments” that are not
“legally binding” because the agreement is only a “framework agreement” that does not compel
specific nuclear cooperation. Furthermore, according to the State Department, the “disruption of
fuel supplies” referred to in the agreement refers only to disruptions “that may result through no
fault” of India’s.145
Regarding the question of non-U.S. suppliers, Washington has not sought commitments from any
other country to supply fuel to India. The “United States would be compelled to encourage
transfers of nuclear fuel to India by other” NSG members if supply disruptions “occur through no
fault of India’s own,” according to the State Department.146 However, these assurances “are not ...
meant to insulate India against the consequences of a nuclear explosive test or a violation of
nonproliferation commitments.” Indeed, such U.S. commitments “would no longer apply” if the
United States were to terminate the agreement in response to an Indian nuclear test.
With respect to fuel reserves, the agreement does not define what it means to “support an Indian
effort to develop a strategic reserve.” Furthermore, the State Department suggests that the United
States may not supply India with a fuel reserve sufficient for the lifetime of India’s reactors,

142 In a February 18, 2008 statement, Saran asserted that, under the 123 agreement, India is entitled to build a strategic
fuel reserve “to last the lifetime of such reactors.”
143 “BJP, Left On ‘Unholy Alliance’ To Oppose N-Deal: Congress,” Press Trust of India, September 5, 2008.
144 As noted above, the President’s signing statement says that he “shall construe” Section 103 as “advisory.”
145 Questions for the Record, 2007 (#16).
146 Ibid. (#18).
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though the department’s 2008 responses to Questions for the Record do not specify the size of
any such reserve.147
P.L. 110-369—Key Provisions
As noted above, the House passed H.R. 7081, which approved the nuclear cooperation agreement,
September 27, 2008.148 The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations had, following a September
18 hearing and subsequent markup, approved identical legislation, S. 3548 (introduced by Senator
Christopher Dodd), September 23. The Senate passed H.R. 7081 October 1. President Bush
signed P.L. 110-369 into law October 8, 2008.
P.L. 110-369, the United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Nonproliferation
Enhancement Act, obviated the 30-day consultative period, as well as other procedures cited in
sections 123 b. and d. of the AEA. Section 101 states that “notwithstanding the provisions for
congressional consideration and approval of a proposed agreement for cooperation” in those two
sections, “Congress hereby approves the United States-India Agreement for Cooperation on
Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy.” It also states that the agreement “shall be subject to”
applicable U.S. law as if it had been approved according to section 123’s provisions.
Declarations of Policy
P.L. 110-369 contains several declarations of U.S. policy. Section 102 (a) states that “it is the
understanding of the United States” that the agreement’s provisions
have the meanings conveyed in the authoritative representations provided by the President
and his representatives to the Congress and its committees prior to September 20, 2008,
regarding the meaning and legal effect of the Agreement.
As noted above, some lawmakers had previously expressed concern about ambiguities in the
agreement and whether it met the requirements of P.L. 109-401. During the debate over the bill,
Berman stated September 26 that “I continue to have concerns about ambiguities in the
agreement” and inserted the State Department’s January 2008 responses to the committee’s
questions into the record in order to “clarify the meaning of these and other important issues.”
The documents “constitute key and dispositive parts of the ‘authoritative representations’
described in section 102,” he added.
The law contains two other provisions apparently designed to clarify that the agreement’s fuel
reserve and fuel supply provisions are not intended to provide New Delhi a way to test nuclear
weapons without fear of consequence. The first, section 102 (b) (1), states that “in the event that
nuclear transfers to India are suspended or terminated” pursuant to U.S. law, “it is the policy of
the United States to seek to prevent the transfer to India of nuclear equipment, materials, or
technology” from other NSG participants “or from any other source.” This provision is also
contained in section 103 (a)(6) of P.L. 109-401.

147 Ibid. (#19-20).
148 H.R. 7039, a bill identical to H.R. 7081, was introduced by Representative Alana Ros-Lehtinen September 24. The
next day, Representative Howard Berman introduced H.R. 7061, a bill very similar to H.R. 7081.
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The second, section 102 (b)(2), restates a provision contained in section 103 (b) (10) of P.L. 109-
401 regarding the fuel reserve:
Any nuclear power reactor fuel reserve provided to the Government of India for use in
safeguarded civilian nuclear facilities should be commensurate with reasonable reactor
operating requirements.
Certification Requirements
P.L. 110-369 contains two certification requirements that had to be met before the United States
could exchange diplomatic notes with India—a step which, as noted above, was necessary for the
agreement to enter into force. Section 102 (c) requires the President to certify to Congress that the
agreement is “consistent with” U.S. obligations under Article I of the NPT. Section 204 (a)
requires the President to certify to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House
Foreign Affairs Committee that it is U.S. policy to work with NSG members “to agree to further
restrict the transfers of equipment and technology related to the enrichment of uranium and
reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel.” President Bush transmitted the certifications, along with a
Memorandum of Justification, October 20, 2008. The memorandum did not explain the reasoning
underlying the determinations.
In addition, Section 204 (b) states that
the President shall seek to achieve, by the earliest possible date, either within the NSG or
with relevant NSG Participating Governments, the adoption of principles, reporting, and
exchanges of information as may be appropriate to assure peaceful use and accounting of by-
product material in a manner that is substantially equivalent to the relevant provisions [of the
nuclear cooperation agreement].
There is no certification requirement for this provision, although section 204(c) requires the
President to submit a report every six months on U.S. efforts to achieve these changes.
Section 104 of P.L. 110-369 requires that, before the NRC can issue export licenses, the President
must determine and certify to Congress that India’s IAEA safeguards agreement has entered into
force and that New Delhi’s declaration of its nuclear facilities to the IAEA “is not materially
inconsistent with the facilities and schedule” described in India’s separation plan. As noted, India
signed its safeguards agreement February 2, 2009, and it entered into force May 11, 2009. New
Delhi has also, as noted, submitted its declarations of nuclear facilities pursuant to paragraphs 13
and 14 of its safeguards agreement. President Obama submitted the required certification to
Congress February 3, 2010, determining that India has satisfied the legal requirement described
above. The certification did not describe the reasoning underlying the determination.
Reporting Requirements
P.L. 110-369 adds several reporting requirements to P.L. 109-401. It amends section 104 (g)(1) to
require that the President inform the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign
Affairs Committee of “any material inconsistencies” with respect to content or timing between
India’s separation plan and the notifications New Delhi is to provide to the IAEA pursuant to
paragraph 14 of India’s safeguards agreement. P.L. 110-369 also amends section 104(g)(2) to
require the President to report on a variety of activities that could be undertaken pursuant to the
nuclear cooperation agreement.
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Section 202 of P.L. 110-369 amends section 123 of the AEA to require the President to keep the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee “fully and
currently informed of any initiative or negotiations relating to a new or amended agreement for
peaceful nuclear cooperation.”149
Procedures for Subsequent Arrangements
As noted, the United States and India signed an agreement March 29, 2010, concerning the
arrangements and procedures for India to reprocess spent nuclear fuel in a new reprocessing
facility. Section 201 of P.L. 110-369 specifies procedures for Congress to consider such a
subsequent arrangement. First, the President must transmit to the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee a report describing the reasons for the
proposed arrangement, a description (including the text) of the arrangement, and a certification
that the United States
will pursue efforts to ensure that any other nation that permits India to reprocess or otherwise
alter in form or content nuclear material that the nation has transferred to India or nuclear
material and by-product material used in or produced through the use of nuclear material,
non-nuclear material, or equipment that it has transferred to India requires India to do so
under similar arrangements and procedures.
In addition, 30 days of continuous session must elapse after the President has submitted the
report. The proposed arrangement shall not take effect if Congress adopts a joint resolution of
disapproval within this 30-day period. Section 201 requires that such a resolution “be considered
pursuant to the procedures set forth in section 130 i” of the AEA. Section 205, however, shortens
from 45 to 15 days the amount of time that the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the
House Foreign Affairs Committee have to report the resolution.150



149 H.R. 7061 required the President to consult with the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee regarding any such initiative or negotiations.
150 See CRS Report RS22937, Nuclear Cooperation with Other Countries: A Primer, by Paul K. Kerr and Mary Beth
Nikitin.
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Appendix. India’s September 5, 2008, Statement on
Disarmament and Nonproliferation

Statement by External Affairs Minister of India Shri Pranab Mukherjee on the Civil Nuclear
Initiative
To reiterate India’s stand on disarmament and nonproliferation, EAM has made the following
statement:
A Plenary meeting of the Nuclear Suppliers Group to consider an exception for India from
its guidelines to allow for full civil nuclear cooperation with India is being held in Vienna
from September 4-5, 2008.
India has a long-standing and steadfast commitment to universal, non-discriminatory and
total elimination of nuclear weapons. The vision of a world free of nuclear weapons which
Shri Rajiv Gandhi put before the UN in 1988 still has universal resonance.
We approach our dialogue with the Nuclear Suppliers Group and all its members in a spirit
of cooperation that allows for an ongoing frank exchange of views on subjects of mutual
interest and concern. Such a dialogue will strengthen our relationship in the years to come.
Our civil nuclear initiative will strengthen the international non-proliferation regime. India
believes that the opening of full civil nuclear cooperation will be good for India and for the
world. It will have a profound positive impact on global energy security and international
efforts to combat climate change.
India has recently submitted a Working Paper on Nuclear Disarmament to the UN General
Assembly, containing initiatives on nuclear disarmament. These include the reaffirmation of
the unequivocal commitment of all nuclear weapon States to the goal of complete
elimination of nuclear weapons; negotiation of a Convention on the complete prohibition of
the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons; and negotiation of a Nuclear Weapons
Convention prohibiting the development, production, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons
and on their destruction, leading to the global, non-discriminatory and verifiable elimination
of nuclear weapons within a specified timeframe.
We remain committed to a voluntary, unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing. We do not
subscribe to any arms race, including a nuclear arms race. We have always tempered the
exercise of our strategic autonomy with a sense of global responsibility. We affirm our
policy of no-first-use of nuclear weapons.
We are committed to work with others towards the conclusion of a multilateral Fissile
Material Cut-off Treaty in the Conference on Disarmament that is universal, non-
discriminatory and verifiable.
India has an impeccable non-proliferation record. We have in place an effective and
comprehensive system of national export controls, which has been constantly updated to
meet the highest international standards. This is manifested in the enactment of the Weapons
of Mass Destruction and their Delivery Systems Act in 2005. India has taken the necessary
steps to secure nuclear materials and technology through comprehensive export control
legislation and through harmonization and committing to adhere to Missile Technology
Control Regime and Nuclear Suppliers Group guidelines.
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India will not be the source of proliferation of sensitive technologies, including enrichment
and reprocessing transfers. We stand for the strengthening of the non-proliferation regime.
We support international efforts to limit the spread of ENR equipment or technologies to
states that do not have them. We will work together with the international community to
advance our common objective of non-proliferation. In this regard, India is interested in
participating as a supplier nation, particularly for Thorium-based fuel and in establishment of
international fuel banks, which also benefit India.
India places great value on the role played by the IAEA’s nuclear safeguards system. We
look forward to working with the IAEA in implementing the India-specific Safeguards
Agreement concluded with the IAEA. In keeping with our commitment to sign and adhere to
an Additional Protocol with respect to India’s civil nuclear facilities, we are working closely
with the IAEA to ensure early conclusion of an Additional Protocol to the Safeguards
Agreement.

Author Contact Information

Paul K. Kerr

Analyst in Nonproliferation
pkerr@crs.loc.gov, 7-8693


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