Sunday, August 30, 2009

Rajesh Rajagopalan on the Pokhran-2 test controversy


Rajesh Rajagopalan has posted a brief comment on his blog about the controversy over the yield of the Pokhran-2 nuclear tests . . .

He argues that the controversy does not particularly affect India's nuclear deterrence capability.
Click Here to Read More..

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Updated with seminar report: Amandeep Gill to talk about India's arms control policy


Amandeep Gill of the Disarmament and International Security Affairs (DISA) division of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) will speak at the CIPOD Wednesday seminar on 'India and the New Arms Control Agenda' on August 19, 2009.

Keep reading for a report on his presentation . . .

Gill is Director at DISA. He has extensive experience in arms control and disarmament issues, having dealt with it for almost ten years of his service in the MEA. He was also a Visiting Fellow at the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), Stanford University. He wrote recently in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists that India was unlikely to sign the CTBT even if the US Senate ratifies the treaty.

Updated 24/08/09: Here's a brief summary of Gill's presentation:

Amandeep Gill presented his view of India’s position on the new arms control agenda at the CIPOD Wednesday seminar on August 19. He was speaking in his personal capacity.

He stated that India’s arms control positions were organic and alive, based both on principles and pragmatism. These positions have an inherent link with national security, as it became clear during the CTBT debate. India will support global, verifiable and non-discriminatory disarmament measures but the Indian Government has a responsibility to its citizens with regard to their security in a nuclearised world. Apart from this link with national security, the debate in India regarding our arms control positions was also now more open. He felt that there was a broad consensus that the correct way to approach the process of disarmament is through delegitimizing nuclear weapons through measures such as de-alerting.

There is also a global context: nuclear postures are changing the world over. Both the US and China are enhancing their nuclear triad, with new delivery capabilities as well as missile defence and asymmetric capabilities. India is also developing a triad capability but on a much more modest scale. There are a number of causes for concern in these global developments including the possibility of a nuclearised Korean peninsula and concern over Iran’s nuclear technology development. Regarding the non-proliferation regime, Gill said that the Bush administration, though unilateralist, showed pragmatism in going beyond the existing regimes. While current problems dictate a need to modify and go beyond existing regimes, there is resistance to this.

Regarding India’s position on specific issues, Gill reiterated the Indian position that the NPT was a flawed treaty, flaws which were reinforced in 1995 when the treaty was extended indefinitely. But it was unrealistic for India to expect that the treaty would be modified to let India in as a nuclear weapon state, just as it was unrealistic to expect that India will join the treaty as a non-nuclear weapon state. While the NPT itself can stay, we also need to go beyond it to prevent proliferation. On CTBT and testing, Indian restraint has been unparalleled, but the CTBT needs to be a logical and necessary step on the path towards nuclear disarmament. In India many still see it as part of the old non-proliferation regime which discriminated against India. Ultimately, it is a matter of perception: if others see India as a partner rather than as a target, Indian views of the CTBT will also change.

On the FMCT, India can engage confidently with the rest of the world. Its position on fundamentals has not changed since 1993: it wants a multilateral, non-discriminatory and verifiable treaty that meets its national security concerns. On Iran, he said that Iran has made commitments that it needs to live up to and the appropriate body to deal with the issue is the IAEA.

Click Here to Read More..

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Prof. Amitabh Mattoo to attend roundtable at Kings College, London


Prof. Amtabh Mattoo will be attending a roundtable discussion at Kings College, London (2-3 September, 2009). . .

The roundtable will discuss South Asian issues and include some leading scholars and commentators on South Asia, including Daniel Markey, Siddharth Varadarajan, Anatol Lieven, Kanwal Sibal, Vikram Sood, Stephen Cohen, Hilary Seynnott, Ashley Tellis, and Gurmeet Kanwal.
Click Here to Read More..

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Professors Mattoo and Swaran Singh at University of Hull

Professors Amitabh Mattoo and Swaran Singh (diplomacy and Disarmament Division, CIPOD) will be attending a conference titled After the First Decade: The Politics of Nuclear Weapons in South Asia being organized by the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Hull, UK (28-29 August).

Prof. Mattoo will be talking about India's nuclear arms control and disarmament policy while Prof. Singh will talk about India's nuclear doctrine. A full copy of the programme can be found here.
Click Here to Read More..

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Amitabh Mattoo on India's Pakistan policy


Prof. Amitabh Mattoo recently published an essay in the Financial Express on Indian policy towards Pakistan.

He argues that different policy proponents (he calls them the subedars, the the saudagars and the sufis) need to come together to fashion a policy that would simultaneously maintain deterrence, seek engagement and be open to radical change within Pakistan whenever possible. The full essay can be found here. Comments and discussion welcome . . .
Click Here to Read More..

Friday, August 7, 2009

Himadeep Muppidi to talk at CIPOD on 'The Colonial Signs of International Relations'


Himadeep Muppidi, Associate Professor of Political Science at Vassar College, will give a lecture at CIPOD on Wednesday, 12 August, at 11:00 am.

Prof. Muppidi completed his MA and MPhil at SIS, and PhD at the University of Minnesota. His book, The Politics of the Global, was based on his PhD and published by the University of Minnesota Press in 2004. His talk will be based on his forthcoming book.
Click Here to Read More..

Dr. Siddharth Mallavarappu to lecture on 'Human Rights and Global Governance'


On August 12th, at the invitation of the German Development Institute, Bonn, Dr. Mallavarapu will be addressing young professionals participating in a Global Governance School . . .

The participants are drawn primarily from the newly emerging economies of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Dr. Maalavarapu's presentation shall focus on various sources of skepticism articulated by the Global South with regard to mainstream international human rights thinking. While engaging the idea of human rights, the presentation shall also audit key human rights actors, institutions and prevalent practices. The objective of the presentation is to help stimulate further reflection about some of the limits of the contemporary rights discourse.
Click Here to Read More..

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

INS-TERI National Workshop


The Indian Nuclear Society (INS) and The Energy Resource Institute (TERI) are organizing a joint conference on “Nuclear energy development in India: Addressing climate change, public perception and large scale deployment”. Details about the conference can be found here.


Thanks to Dr. Negi, who forwarded the details.
Click Here to Read More..

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Lawrence Prabhakar to lecture on nuclear disarmament


Lawrence Prabhakar, Associate Professor at theDepartment of Political Science, Madras Christian College, Chennai, will lecture on 'Nuclear Deterrence and Nuclear Disarmament: New Vistas in the 21st Century'. The lecture will be held in Room 203, SIS Building, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, on 4th August, 2009 (Tuesday), at 3:00 pm.
Dr. Prabhakar has written and lectured extensively on Indian security issues.
Click Here to Read More..

Scott Sagan to lecture on 'No First Use'


Scott Sagan will be delivering a lecture on 'The Case for No First Use' based on his recent essay of the same title in Survival. The lecture will be held in Room 203, SIS Building, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, at 3:00 pm on 5 August 2009 (Wednesday). No invitations are required to attend.
Click Here to Read More..

New Cipod blog

This is the new CIPOD Blog. The blog was set up on August 3, 2009. It will take a while for us to get fully up to speed on this blog. But we do hope that you will keep visiting us and help promote a healthy dialogue about international politics, especially but not exclusively, from an academic perspective.
Click Here to Read More..