BHR India Good Deal Addendum

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    INDIA DEAL GOOD

    India Deal Good...........................................................................................................................................................1

    1nc Shell (1/2)................................................................................................................................................................2

    1nc Shell (2/2)................................................................................................................................................................3

    India Deal Pass.............................................................................................................................................................4

    India Deal Pass India................................................................................................................................................5

    India Deal Pass India................................................................................................................................................6

    India Deal Pass IAEA / NSG...................................................................................................................................7

    India Deal Pass US....................................................................................................................................................8

    Brink / Top of Agenda...............................................................................................................................................10

    Bush pushing internationally / focus......................................................................................................................11

    PC Key India Deal......................................................................................................................................................12

    India Deal Good Economy....................................................................................................................................13

    India Deal Good Russia/China/India Axis..........................................................................................................14India Deal T/Case Warming..................................................................................................................................15

    AT: India Deal tanks relations

    .......................................................................................................................................................................................16

    AT: No time before November.................................................................................................................................17

    AT: India nuclear plants bad....................................................................................................................................18

    AT: No international support...................................................................................................................................19

    AT: Obama/McCain will pass anyway....................................................................................................................20

    ......................................................................................................................................................................................20

    (AFF) Obama will pass anyway..............................................................................................................................21

    For more evidence, in particular for Bush PC internals, check the original India Deal Bad file.

    Liz Lemon

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    1NC SHELL (1/2)

    A. Bushs pushing the India Deal is key to getting it passed in Congress before January

    Associated Press, 7/8/08, [Deb Riechmann, Bush pushes US-India nuclear deal,

    http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iDhfdxlthyulzNbmR8KGjPKvNzaAD91Q0D6O0]

    TOYAKO, Japan (AP) President Bush defended a languishing deal his administration negotiated to sell

    India nuclear fuel and technology, saying he reassured India's prime minister that the pact was important for bothcountries despite heavy opposition on both sides. Bush's meeting on Wednesday with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was

    one of a series of one-and-one sessions the president scheduled on the final day of the three-day G-8 summit of economic powers.

    "I respect the prime minister a lot," Bush said, speaking with reporters after their meeting. "I also respect India a

    lot. And I think it's very important that the United States continues to work with our friend to develop

    not only a new strategic relationship, but a relationship that addresses some of the world's problems. We

    talked about the India-U.S. nuclear deal how important that is for our respective countries." Singh said, "Inthis increasingly interdependent world that we live in, whether it the question of climate change or whether it is a question of managing the global

    economy, India and the United States must stand tall, must stand shoulder to shoulder." If ratified by Washington and New Delhi, the pact would

    reverse three decades of U.S. policy by allowing the sale of atomic fuel and technology to India, which has not signed international nonproliferation

    accords but has tested nuclear weapons. In return, India, would open its civilian reactors to international inspections. U.S. critics worry the agreement

    could spark a nuclear arms race in Asia and weaken international efforts to prevent states like Iran and North Korea from acquiring nuclear weapons.

    In India, critics say it would undermine India's weapons program and give Washington too much influence over Indian foreign policy. Singh's

    communist allies withdrew their support for his four-year-old coalition government on Tuesday to protest the government's plan to push forward with

    the nuclear deal. Bush is trying to prod Congress to approve the pact before time runs out on his

    administration in January.

    B. Link

    1. [Insert plan is unpopular]

    2. Political capital is key to India Deals passage through Congress

    AsiaPulse News, 12/30/05, [ANALYSIS - INDIA-US TIES SCALE NEW HEIGHTS IN 2005.

    http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-12195593_ITM]

    Since July 2005, the Republican administration has been trying to go about drumming up support

    domestically from a Congress that is miffed at being left out in the first stages. Further, one of the queries raisedis what Washington is going to do if Beijing or Moscow goes about their own ways with "their" commercial or

    interested partner. There are real questions if this Bush White House has enough political muscle to get the

    "deal" through Congress given not only its troubles on Capitol Hill on non-India related issues but also if

    it has strength to take on those who are adamantly opposed to this who have the power of persuading

    key Congressional leaders.

    Liz Lemon

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    1NC SHELL (2/2)

    C. Impact

    1. India deal is key to preventing proliferation

    AFP, 7/10/08, [US welcomes India's decision to move ahead with nuke deal

    http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jzMQc2CTXdWzXUGsBQ-pa66jqdGA]

    US envoy Schulte was adamant that the US-India deal "will help strengthen the global non-proliferation

    regime and help India meet its growing energy demands in an environmentally friendly way."

    Proponents of the US-India accord say it will bring India -- which has not signed the Nuclear Non-

    Proliferation Treaty (NPT) -- into the non-proliferation mainstream. In addition, it will bring India, which

    is running out of uranium to fuel its reactors, into the fold of global nuclear commerce after being shut

    out for decades.

    2. WMD proliferation causes extinction

    Hitchens 12/26/02 (Christopher Hitchens is a columnist forVanity Fair "WMD" and "Inspection"http://www.slate.com/id/2076026)

    The term "WMD," then, appears to be both an over- and understatement. It can overstate the destructive

    power of some weaponry, while understating its wickedness. The two most destructive moments of the last Gulf War were,in point of casualties, the revenge taken by Saddam on the Shia and Kurdish intifada in the conflict's closing moments; in point of

    physical mayhem, his decision to ignite the Kuwaiti oilfields during Iraq's ignominious retreat. The main weapon in the first

    instance was the helicopter-gunship, and the chief one in the second instance was high explosive. Mass

    destruction of humans and resources was the outcome in each case, but this tells us little about the weaponry (while telling usa good deal about the regime). The term "WMD" originated, as far as I can tell, as a Soviet expression during the protracted '70s and

    '80s negotiations about arms control and dtente. It was a generalization, as well as something of a euphemism, but it was also a

    loosely pejorative way of referring to thermonuclear weaponry. This kind of warfare obviously meets all conditions

    of condemnation, because it causes unimaginable damage to cities and to the infrastructure, as well as

    vaporizing civilians by the million and tearing apart the web of nature that we call the ecology. Insofar as we

    can tell, it also threatens the whole biosphere and creates long-term risks from radiation and climatic

    change. At its worst, it could cause extinction rather than mere extermination: killing everybody alive, as

    well as those yet unborna true and apocalyptic "end of history." No gas or bug or nerve agent can quite

    do that.

    Liz Lemon

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    INDIA DEAL PASS

    India deal is already passing through India and the IAEA. All thats needed now is fordemocrats like Biden and Obama to push it through.

    Times of India,7/18/08, [N-Deal possible even if govt loses trust vote, http://timesofindia.indiatimes.

    com /N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cms]

    If it goes into cold storage after the trust vote, itll be because the government chose to do so. For, the

    government has to only see the agreement through the IAEA board. The next few stages will be

    spearheaded by the US, not India. According to sources in the government, if the UPA coalition fails the trustvote and becomes a caretaker government, they would be constrained from taking any fresh policy decisions. "But

    there is no law that prevents a government from carrying on with its existing policies," said a source.

    However, the PM has said India would halt the process if he lost the trust vote. If he is held to his word, then in the

    event of a loss on Tuesday, he would have to signal to the IAEA that India cannot attend the meeting on August 1.Legally, there is nothing that stops the government. In many ways, the deal then goes out of Indias hands

    as it will be the responsibility of the US to pilot it through the NSG. Meanwhile, the US top diplomat,

    William Burns, will be in Vienna on Friday, when foreign secretary Shiv Shankar Menon briefs the IAEA

    board and NSG members. Burns replaces Nick Burns who negotiated the deal. William is also expected to

    visit India days after the trust vote for talks. Sources also said German chancellor Angela Merkel has

    indicated that, as president of the NSG, she would call an NSG meeting within days of the IAEA clearing

    the deal. In the US, senator Joe Biden has also gone on record to say that he would fight "like the devil"

    to clear the deal if India does its bit . Moreover,BarackObamas support for the deal has almost put it on

    auto pilot. Significantly, on Thursday the Chinese government indicated its own emerging flexibility on

    support to the deal.

    India Deal will pass US and India will ensure it gets ratified by the IAEA and NSG

    Thaindian News, 7/23/08, [http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/india-news/us-will-convince-pak-not-

    to-vote-against-india-at-iaea-mulford_10075083.html, US will convince Pak not to vote against India at

    IAEA: Mulford]

    The United States will convince Pakistan into not voting against the India-specific safeguards agreement

    when the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) meets in Vienna,

    Austria, later this month or early next month to give its approval to it, said U.S. Ambassador to India,

    David C. Mulford.

    Conveying this message through a phono with select media at the American Centre here from

    Washington, Ambassador Mulford said he was well aware of Islamabads reservations on the pact and on

    the US-India civil nuclear cooperation agreement, and expressed conviction about the Bush

    Administrations ability to persuade Pakistan to cooperate on the matter.

    We will address Pakistans role at the IAEA, he said.

    Welcoming the support in the Indian Parliament for the US-India civil nuclear cooperation initiative,

    Ambassador Mulford said a day after the UPA Government had won the trust vote by 275 to 256 that:

    We will work closely with Government of India in days ahead for rapid completion of the ratification

    process through IAEA, Nuclear Suppliers Group and US Congress .

    Liz Lemon

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cmshttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/N-Deal_possible_even_if_govt_loses_trust_vote/articleshow/3247394.cms
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    INDIA DEAL PASS INDIA

    India Deal will pass in India they won the key vote of confidence on July 22

    nd

    .

    Business Week, 7/22/08, [Mehul Srivastava and Nandini Lakshman, India-U.S. Nuclear Deal Is in Sight

    http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/jul2008/gb20080722_699536.htm?chan=top+news_top+n

    ews+index_news+%2B+analysis]

    The Indian government won a vote of confidence July 22, with 275 members of Parliament voting to

    support the coalition of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, vs. 256 who voted against. The victory opens

    the way for India to ratify a long-delayed nuclear accord with the U.S.

    The India Deal is popular with the Indian public

    Times of India, 7/15/08, ['Safeguards agreement won't hamper strategic programme'

    15 Jul 2008, http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/We_will_conclude_nuclear_deal_PM/

    articleshow/3235358.cms]

    In an expression of confidence that government will win the July 22 trust vote in Lok Sabha, Prime Minister

    Manmohan Singh on Tuesday said that people understand the significance of the initiatives taken by it and "endorse

    them". "The Prime Minister expressed confidence that the people of India understood the significance of

    the initiatives being taken by the UPA Government and endorse them," a brief note, issued by PM's media

    advisor after Singh's meeting with a group of editors at his residence here, said.

    India deal will pass Singhs loss of communist support and gain of support from another

    group means hell be able to pass it.

    Christian Science Monitor, 7/10/08, [Howard LaFranchi, U.S., India revive sweeping nuke deal,

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0710/p02s01-usfp.html]

    Singh formally lost Communist support from his coalition this week, but picked up the support of

    another small parliamentary group to make up for the loss. India experts see the deal as a legacy issue

    for Singh, who faces rough parliamentary elections next year. "Legacy" is also a word that arises with

    respect to Bush, who came into office with a foreign policy team set on finding ways of countering

    China's rise. "This deal offers a unique chance to set the direction of US-India relations on a productive

    path for the next administrations in Washington and New Delhi," says Bruce Riedel, a South Asia expert

    who served under three administrations and is now at the Brookings Institution in Washington. Failure toapprove the deal this year would be a "serious setback," he says, but improvements in US-India relations

    in recent years mean "our partnership is strong enough to survive if the deal falters."

    Liz Lemon

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    INDIA DEAL PASS INDIA

    India deal will pass India has already given it to the IAEA for approval

    Reuters, 7/16/08, [IAEA to consider India nuclear plan on August 1,http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008%5C07%5C16%5Cstory_16-7-2008_pg4_15]

    After protracted delays caused by a split in the governing coalition over the 2005 deal, India took the first

    step toward implementing it last Wednesday by handing the draft nuclear safeguards plan to the IAEA

    board for approval. The pact reached by India and the IAEAs inspectorate early this year would subject

    its declared civilian nuclear reactors - 14 among 22 plants - to regular non-proliferation checks.

    Liz Lemon

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    INDIA DEAL PASS IAEA / NSG

    The IAEA and NSG will approve the India Deal

    AFP, 7/3/08, [India to push ahead with US nuclear deal: officials,

    http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5g-fUCuWRQRNkgZXjCZz6_ZjJl_Ig]

    Before the deal is voted on by the US Congress, New Delhi needs to negotiate an accord with the

    International Atomic Energy Agency to allow inspections of its atomic plants and earn a waiver from the

    45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group. Political analysts however said it was likely that the Congress party

    would be able to muster the numbers to survive and carry the pact forward while putting off early polls.

    "The SP has been saying the main challenge is to keep communal forces at bay," said political analyst and

    author Rasheed Kidwai. This means they would like to ensure that the Congress government survives

    and keeps the (opposition Hindu nationalist) Bharatiya Janata Party out.

    India deal will be approved by the NSG because of US support

    Time, 7/17/08, [Nuclear Brinksmanship

    http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1823707,00.html]

    The agreement that has caused so much turmoil in Indian politics and so much trouble for Singh is

    a version of a pact that the U.S. has signed with more than a dozen other nations. It would open up

    nuclear-materials trade between the U.S. and India, with the proviso that some of India's nuclear reactors

    be open to inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency. That's a big concession for India,

    which withstood international sanctions and withering criticism after its 1998 nuclear weapons tests and

    has chafed ever since at the idea of submitting its nuclear program to any outside review. But the country

    needs clean energy, and signing the agreement would be a first step toward joining the Nuclear Suppliers

    Group (NSG) the club of 45 nations committed to both nuclear energy and nonproliferation. With U.S.

    backing, the NSG may allow India to join even though the country has not signed the international

    Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

    Liz Lemon

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    INDIA DEAL PASS US

    The US will ratify the deal because of Indias vote of confidence

    Thaindian News, 7/23/08, [http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/india-news/us-will-convince-pak-not-

    to-vote-against-india-at-iaea-mulford_10075083.html, US will convince Pak not to vote against India at

    IAEA: Mulford]

    Replying to a question on whether the Bush Administration expected internal resistance to the deal,

    Mulford replied in the affirmative, but added: We do expect a bipartisan majority to hold up in Congress.

    The US Congress will have to meet before September when it breaks for session to meet only after the

    Presidential election process is completed in January next year.

    The US has pledged to move forward on the civilian nuclear deal with India after Prime MinisterManmohan Singh won a vote of confidence in the Parliament.

    We think that we can move forward with this, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said about the

    nuclear deal at the daily briefing on Tuesday.

    If their legislature lets it move forward, then we can do the same here, and then well be able to get this

    wrapped up, she elaborated. (ANI)

    Mo ev

    Time of India, 7/22/08, [We will work with India to wrap up nuke pact: US,

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/We_can_work_with_India_to_wrap_up_nuke_pact_US/articlesh

    ow/3266251.cms]

    As the UPA government won the confidence motion, the United States on Tuesday said governments of

    the two countries would be able to wrap up the civil nuclear pact before the time runs out. "We think we

    can move forward with this. If their legislature lets it move forward then we can do the same here and

    then we'll be able to get this wrapped up," White House Press Secretary Dana Perino said here. She said

    "there aren't that many days left where Congress is going to be in session" and enough US lawmakers

    backed the agreement to secure its ratification.

    Liz Lemon

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    India Deal Pass US

    Biden will focus all his energy to push the deal if India passes it.

    Press Trust of India, 7/16/08, [Biden to push like the devil if N-deal comes to Congress,

    http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/5C8D8C3E099C99E165257 4880046B514?]

    Joseph Biden, the Chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee who will be one of the

    major players on Capitol Hill when the final package gets there, warned of the tight window that

    Congress is facing prior to its adjournment.

    Once that occurs, under our law, there is a 30-day of continuous session which will take about 50

    days to get there,

    But then top Democrat said I am going to push like the devil If they (India) get their end done to do

    it. I am an optimist. I am not going to say it (clock) has run out. PTI

    The US will pass the India deal Biden is pushing.

    Press Trust of India, 7/16/08, [Biden to push like the devil if N-deal comes to Congress,

    http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/5C8D8C3E099C99E165257 4880046B514?]

    Cautioning that the time frame for the passage of the Indo-US nuclear deal is "very, very tight", an

    influential American lawmaker has vowed to "push like the devil" if India gets it end done and the accord

    is presented to Congress for final approval. Joseph Biden, the Chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign

    Relations Committee who will be one of the major players on Capitol Hill when the final package gets

    there, warned of the tight window that Congress is facing prior to its adjournment.

    Liz Lemon

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    BRINK / TOPOF AGENDA

    Now is the key time to pass the deal if we wait too long it wont pass.

    Press Trust of India, 7/16/08, [Biden to push like the devil if N-deal comes to Congress,

    http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/5C8D8C3E099C99E165257 4880046B514?]

    Joseph Biden, the Chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee who will be one of the

    major players on Capitol Hill when the final package gets there, warned of the tight window that

    Congress is facing prior to its adjournment. "It's possible, but it's very, very tight," Biden told

    rediff.Com/India Abroad. Under the present scheme of things, the House of Representatives is due to

    adjourn on September 26 and the Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid recently announced that he will

    have the same date too as far as the Senate is concerned. Biden said he spoke of the time lines in New

    Delhi when he was there some three months ago, making the point that the nuclear deal will have to get

    the approval of the IAEA and the Nuclear Suppliers Group before it lands on Capitol Hill.

    Now is the key time to pass the India Deal if we dont ratify it now it will never go through.

    Times of India, 6/22/08, [Why rush N-deal now? Govt wants quick IAEA, NSG nod, Indrani Bagchi,

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Why_rush_N-

    deal_now_Govt_wants_quick_IAEA_NSG_nod/articleshow/3152487.cms

    This is the place where the Bush administration will have to mount its strongest showing - but with theadministration haemorrhaging top officials every day, America is getting weaker and weaker. In fact, the

    Left rightly calculated that the longer they take over the deal, the less would be its chances of going

    through.

    Liz Lemon

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    BUSHPUSHINGINTERNATIONALLY /FOCUS

    Bush is focusing all his energy in pushing the deal internationally

    The Economic Times, 7/10/08, [N-Deal action shifts to G-8, http://economictimes. indiatimes

    .com/PoliticsNation/N-Deal_action_shifts_to_G-8/articleshow/3216507.cms]

    Since Tuesday, Mr Manmohan Singh has gone about his business as usual without getting perturbed by

    political developments in India. His meeting with Mr Bush happened early Wednesday morning, hours

    before Left parties formally withdrew support to the UPA government. Mr Bushs assurance that the US

    will support India and even lobby with other developed nations at the NSG is significant because the

    proceedings at the NSG need to be fast-tracked and pushed simultaneously with the proceedings at IAEA

    board of governors. With the US throwing its weight behind the next steps at IAEA and NSG, things are

    expected to move fast.

    Liz Lemon

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    PC KEY INDIA DEAL

    Bush needs political capital to get the deal passed in Congress

    Washington Post,7/18/08, [Jayshree Bajoria, Council on Foreign Relations,

    An Uncertain Deal with India, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-

    dyn/content/article/2008/07/18/AR2008071801269.html]

    President Bush has his own problems persuading Congress to pass the deal before it adjourns for the year

    on September 26. The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, a Washington-based nonpartisan

    policy organization, has asked the suppliers group and Congress not to make a hasty decision on the

    nuclear agreement, saying it undermines global nonproliferation efforts. Both U.S. presidential

    candidates Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) have indicated support for the deal,

    but it is not clear if they would present it to Congress in its current form.

    Liz Lemon

    http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/audience/media/071108_india_deal_undermines_authority/http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/audience/media/071108_india_deal_undermines_authority/http://www.cfr.org/publication/14750/http://www.cfr.org/publication/14750/http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/audience/media/071108_india_deal_undermines_authority/http://www.cfr.org/publication/14750/
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    INDIA DEAL GOOD ECONOMY

    A. The India Deal is key to control inflation

    Times of India, 7/15/08, ['Safeguards agreement won't hamper strategic programme',

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/We_will_conclude_nuclear_deal_PM/ articleshow/3235358.cms]

    These include USA, Russia, France and China, he said adding concluding the agreements with IAEA and

    the NSG would end the era of nuclear apartheid against India. The Prime Minister also used the occasion toreject charges by the opposition and Left that Government was compromising the country's foreign policy. "India

    will never allow any extraneous interference in the conduct of our independent foreign policy," he asserted while

    making it clear that New Delhi would continue to seek good relations with all its Asian neighbours. Facing strident

    criticism over inflation and rising prices, the Prime Minister outlined the steps taken by his government to

    sustain the growth momentum and curb inflation "in the face of external pressures" on account of rising

    crude oil prices. He also spelt out measures to insulate the poor "to the extent possible" from inflation. The PrimeMinister also spoke about the initiatives being taken to boost agricultural production and farmers' welfare.

    B. India economy key to global economy

    Business Week, 3/8/07, [Navin Chadda, Managing Director at the Mayfield Fund which has invested in

    two Indian companies, India's Economy: Off the Launch Pad,

    http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2007/tc20070307_581741.htm?chan=top+news_top

    +news+index]

    When I talk about India, I often refer to the image of a rocket ship launching. The country is taking off,

    and I see this in real time when I travel there every six weeks. The Indian economy is one of the fastestgrowing in the world, with GDP growth touching 9.3% last year. Simultaneously, India is experiencing

    exponential domestic growth for retail products and services due to the burgeoning middle class, which

    consists of 300 million consumers. Many people still equate India with off-shoring and the IT services of

    Infosys (INFY), TCS, and Wipro (WIT). While those remain dominant, over the past five years Indian

    companies have vaulted new sectors to prominence on the global stage including technology,

    manufacturing, pharmaceutical, infrastructure, energy, consumer retail, telecom, financial services,

    media, and hospitality. India has developed a global brand that reflects its best-of-breed ability in not

    only IT but many other industries as well.

    C. Global economic decline would cause a nuclear war

    Walter Russell Mead, Senior Fellow for U.S. Foreign Policy at the Council on Foreign Relations, World

    Policy Institute, 1992, p. unknown

    Hundreds of millions billions of people have pinned their hopes on the international market economy.

    They and their leaders have embraced market principles and drawn closer to the west because they

    believe that our system can work for them. But what if it cant? What if the global economy stagnates or

    even shrinks? In that case, we will face a new period of international conflict: South against North, rich

    against poor. Russia, China, India these countries with their billions of people and their nuclear

    weapons will pose a much greater danger to world order than Germany and Japan did in the 30s.

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    INDIA DEAL GOOD RUSSIA/CHINA/INDIA AXIS

    A. India deal is key to preventing the Russia-China-India axis.

    Gobarev, 2000 , [Independent Security Policy Analyst Based in Washington, D.C., Previous Scholar at WoodrowWilson Center & George Washington University, India as a World Power Changing Washingtons Myopic Policy,

    http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa381.pdf]

    The concerns that such a move would invite increased nuclear proliferation do not seem justified. Rogue countries

    currently working on acquiring nuclear weapons will continue to do so independently of U.S. recognition of Indias nuclear

    status. Moreover, many states, especially in the Third World, would welcome a conciliatory move as evidence

    that the United States wishes to pursue an equitable foreign and international security policy for all nations,

    not merely for developed countries. Britain, France, Russia, and China, the members of the nuclear club, are

    likely to follow the U.S. move . Russia and China would be outmaneuvered, since a crucial foreign policyand international security initiative dealing with India would have passed from them to America. That movewould also deal a heavy blow to those in China, Russia, and India itself who dream of building the tripartite strategicalliance to oppose the United States. U.S. recognition of India as a nuclear power would remove the main obstacle

    to making America and India friends and de facto strategic partners. Such an initiative by Washington would

    likely mean Indias acceptance of U.S. proposals on nonproliferation of WMD technology and fissile

    materials. India would join international talks on ending the production of fissile materials for nuclear

    weapons and would install effective controls for nuclear-related materials. Those measures would reduce

    the threat of proliferation from India and begin U.S.-Indian cooperation on counterproliferation.

    B. The Russia-China-India axis will lead to a nuclear war

    Julie M., Rahm, Winter 2001, [Writer for Parameters the United States Armys Senior Professional Journal, "Russia, China, India: A New Strategic Triangle for a New Cold War?" pp. 87-97.

    http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0IBR/is_4_31/ai_82064208/pg_1]

    Russia, China, and India watched the United States in conflicts throughout the 1990s and each learned the same lessons. Indian

    military and political sources were among the first to react to the Kosovo operation and to speculate on preliminary lessons to be

    learned. (23) "We are studying what's going on there [in Kosovo] and drawing our lessons from it." (24) A common theme in

    Indian, Russian, and Chinese thinking since Operation Desert Storm has been the importance of "forcemultipliers" provided by information technology, AWACs, mid-air refueling, unmanned aerial vehicles, and

    electronic warfare capabilities. Analysts in all three countries believe their armed forces can succeed against a

    high-technology foe if they use these force multipliers in combination with clever low-technology tactics,

    urban guerilla warfare, financial terrorism, computer , media warfare, diplomatic actions, and

    psychological warfare. (25) In light of the new "interventionist-oriented NATO doctrine" and the new capabilities of long-range precision conventional weapons, Indian military thinkers recommend upgrading its nuclear arms to deter Western

    intimidation and attack. This is a prime example of the drive toward nuclear weapons and its cascading effects predicted by General

    Makmut Gareyev, President of the Russian Academy of Military Science. He believes that countries, including Russia, that

    are unable to match an opponent in high-technology conventional weapons will resort to nuclear

    weapons in order to deter conventional strikes.

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    INDIA DEAL T/CASE WARMING

    India deal is key to solve warming

    David G. Victor, 3/17/2006,[Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations & Director of the Program on Energy& Sustainable Development at Stanford University, Nuclear power for India is good for us all,

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/03/16/opinion/edvictor.php]

    If the deal to supply India with nuclear technologies goes through, future generations may remember it

    for quite different reasons than the debate over nuclear proliferation. Nuclear power emits no carbon

    dioxide, the leading cause of global warming. And India, like most developing countries, has not been

    anxious to spend money to control its emissions of this and other so- called greenhouse gases. India is

    embracing nuclear power for other reasons - because it can help the country solve its chronic failure to

    supply the electricity needed for a burgeoning economy. But in effect, the deal would marry their interestin power with ours in protecting the planet. India is growing rapidly. In recent years its economy has

    swelled at more than 7 percent per year, and many analysts believe it is poised to grow even faster in the

    coming decade. The economic growth is feeding a voracious appetite for electricity that India's

    bankrupt utilities are unable to satisfy. Blackouts are commonplace. Farmers, who account for about two-

    fifths of all the power consumed, can barely rely on getting power for half of every day. In industrial

    zones, the lifeblood of India's vibrant economy, unstable power supplies are such trouble that the biggest

    companies usually build their own power plants. So most analysts expect that the demand for electricity

    will rise at about 10 percent a year. (For comparison, U.S. power demand notches up at just 2 percent annually.) Over thepast decade, about one third of India's new power supplies came from natural gas and hydro electricity. Both those sources have

    been good news for global warming - natural gas is the least carbon- intensive of all the fossil fuels, and most of India's

    hydroelectric dams probably emit almost no greenhouse gases. However, the bloom is coming off those greenhouse-friendly roses.

    New supplies of natural gas cost about twice what Indians are used to paying, and environmental objections are likely to scupperthe government's grand plans for new hydro dams. That leaves coal - the most carbon-intensive of all fossil fuels. Already

    more than half of India's new power supplies come from coal, and that could grow rapidly.

    Mo ev.

    David G. Victor, 3/17/2006,[Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations & Director of the Program on Energy& Sustainable Development at Stanford University, Nuclear power for India is good for us all,

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/03/16/opinion/edvictor.php]

    What is important is that the deal is not just a one- off venture, as the administration's backers, on the

    defensive, have suggested. It could frame a new approach to technology sharing and managing a more

    proliferation-proof fuel cycle that, in turn, will multiply the benefits of a cooler climate. Coal-rich Chinais among the many other countries that would welcome more nuclear power and whose emissions of

    carbon dioxide are growing fast - even faster than India's. Quite accidentally, it seems, the Bush

    administration has stumbled on part of an effective strategy to slow global warming. Now it should

    marry that clever scheme overseas with an effective plan here at home.

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    AT: NOTIMEBEFORE NOVEMBER

    India deal will pass before November its a key issue in Washington

    Reuters, 7/16/08, [IAEA to consider India nuclear plan on August 1,

    http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008%5C07%5C16%5Cstory_16-7-2008_pg4_15]

    Washington said on Thursday it would seek to expedite the nuclear co-operation accord over

    international and domestic hurdles with time running out before an effective deadline set by US elections

    in November. Washington says the deal would forge a strategic partnership with the worlds largest

    democracy, help India meet exploding energy demand in an environmentally friendly way and open a

    nuclear market worth billions of dollars for Western firms.

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    AT: INDIANUCLEARPLANTSBAD

    Indian nuclear plants are structurally resilient tsunami proves

    Press Trust of India,7/16/08, [http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/

    AB25032896E272FA6525748800360FBA? Nuke plants safe, go for the deal: nuclear safety expert]

    India should shed its apprehensions over the safety of atomic power plants as well as reservations on the

    Indo-US nuclear deal and operationalise it to bring about a "paradigm shift" in the energy scenario, a

    nuclear safety expert said here today. "There are currently 400 nuclear reactors in operation in different

    parts of the world...Including in earthquake-prone places like Japan," said L K Krishnan, former Director,

    Safety Research and Health Physics Group, Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research of the Department

    of Atomic Energy at Kalpakkam near here. He said two well-known nuclear accidents, one at Chernobylin Russia and Three Mile islands in US are the rare ones. "The Chernobyl reactor is a different kind," said

    Krishnan, who takes pride in associating with the Kalpakkam nuclear power plant which withstood the

    2004 tsunami. The tsunami caused by the Indian ocean earthquake caused widespread damage in

    Kalpakkam coast, but the reactors remained unaffected and according to officials, no casualties were

    reported from the plant.

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    AT: NOINTERNATIONALSUPPORT

    India deal is popular with G8 and will be approved by the NSG

    The Economic Times, 7/10/08, [N-Deal action shifts to G-8, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com

    /PoliticsNation/N-Deal_action_shifts_to_G-8/articleshow/3216507.cms]

    US president George W Bush on Wednesday assured Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to actively push

    Indias case at the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group. Mr Singh got another major boost when the

    powerful group of eight (G-8) industrialised countries decided to adopt a more robust approach

    towards the civil nuclear co-operation with India to help meet Indias growing energy needs.

    We look forward to working with India, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the Nuclear Suppliers

    Group and other partners to advance Indias non-proliferation commitments and progress so as to

    facilitate a more robust approach to civil nuclear co-operation with India to help it meet its growing

    energy needs in a manner that enhances and reinforces the global non-proliferation regime, the Chairs

    Summary released at the end of the G-8 summit said here.

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    AT: OBAMA/MCCAINWILLPASSANYWAY

    The India Deal wont survive for the next presidential term

    AFP, 7/3/08, [India to push ahead with US nuclear deal: officials,

    http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5g-fUCuWRQRNkgZXjCZz6_ZjJl_Ig]

    The United States has been pressing India to move on the deal before the end of President George W.

    Bush's tenure, warning the pact may not survive in its current form under the next administration.

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    (AFF) OBAMAWILLPASSANYWAY

    Even if Bush cant pass the India deal before January, Obama will pass it in his term anyway

    Reuters, 7/11/08, [Obama states backing for Indo-U.S. nuclear deal

    http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSBOM6322320080711]

    Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama supports a civilian nuclear trade deal between India

    and the United States and would not push for changes to it, an Indian news magazine quoted him as

    saying. "I voted for the U.S.-India nuclear agreement because India is a strong democracy and a natural

    strategic partner for the U.S. in the 21st century," he told Outlook magazine, according to a transcript

    provided by the magazine on Friday. His support may prove decisive if India fails to finalize the deal

    before the end of President George W. Bush's term.