WORLD XTRA
Sumit Ganguly
Walk Away
As India's parliament considers a nuclear deal with the United States, the Bush administration would do well to heed the gambler's advice.
Kenny Rogers, one of country music's icons, has a line in the song "The Gambler" in which a card shark tells a greenhorn that he needs to "know when to walk away and know when to run." This piece of homespun wisdom may or may not have much value for poker players. However, in the game of international politics, where the stakes are considerably higher, it is invaluable advice. As the Bush administration enters the high noon of its negotiations with India over a civilian nuclear cooperation agreement designed to end India's decades-long nuclear isolation—a result of unwillingness to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)—the United States needs to heed the gambler's admonition.
After carefully negotiating the civilian nuclear deal with India over the past three years and after having shepherded the appropriate domestic legislation through Congress, the administration justly fears that the deal may collapse in India's fractious parliament. To save the day, key administration officials and a handful of critical congressional supporters have publicly urged Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Congress Party-led coalition government to swiftly conclude its internal deliberations as well as its ongoing discussions with the International Atomic Energy Agency. Though entirely well-meaning, these efforts have had exactly the opposite effect within India.
India's two communist parties, quite predictably, were hostile toward the deal from the outset. They correctly feared that the agreement, if concluded, would end India's long diplomatic estrangement from the United States and result in closer Indo-U.S. strategic ties. In attempts to torpedo the agreement they raised every possible bogey about it, arguing that it would curb India's political autonomy, that it would do little to alleviate India's chronic energy woes and that it would leave the country vulnerable to American economic clout. The agreement also faced specious attacks from the right-of-center Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which claimed that it would hamstring India's ongoing nuclear weapons program.
The government sought to allay the misgivings of its communist allies in parliament and attempted to publicly refute the BJP's dubious charges. However, it adopted too conciliatory a posture toward the communists and failed to bluntly refute the BJP's questionable claims. As a consequence it faced growing public skepticism about the deal, and it became increasingly mired in the vortex of India's rough-and-tumble politics. Sensing that the agreement was running into increasing opposition, whether ideological or opportunistic, the United States started to openly lean on Singh and the Congress Party to ensure that the process did not entirely stall. Sadly, that effort only helped generate a counterpush from the communists, who now found a new target to attack. They promptly asserted that the assiduous American quest to consummate the deal cloaked a more insidious agenda—obviously the United States had far more to gain from the agreement than India.
Confronted with this new line of attack, and looking toward a national election next year, some members of the Congress Party have started to fret about the wisdom of trying to wrap up the deal.
Under these delicate circumstances, any further public declarations on the part of the Bush administration and its small band of congressional allies are only likely to further undermine the deal's fragile prospects of passage. Instead the administration should declare a victory of sorts: it successfully negotiated the terms of the deal with India, helped pass appropriate domestic legislation and was prepared to take the final step with the requisite international bodies to enable India to participate in global nuclear commerce. Only the intransigence and cupidity at the two ends of India's political spectrum have placed the deal in serious jeopardy. The only way out of this impasse is to adopt a posture of disinterest in its eventual outcome. As the card shark in "The Gambler" concludes, the United States is now "plain out of aces." To save its weak hand it needs to know that the time has come to walk away from the deal and let the chips fall as they may.
Sumit Ganguly is the director of research at the Center on American and Global Security at Indiana University, Bloomington and an adjunct fellow at the Pacific Council on International Policy in Los Angeles.
© 2008


Loading Menu
Member Comments
Posted By: Silentmajority @ 05/24/2008 6:11:39 AM
Comment: To Nins:
You have read only NEWSWEEK, which has despertely wanted Obama to win. But the good news is that Obama is KURONBO, and that No KURONBO has been elected President of the U.S..
Wait till November to weep in dismay, Nins!
Posted By: Nins @ 05/23/2008 11:47:59 PM
Comment:
There are three reasons why McCain will lose in November:
THE EXPENSIVE WAR IN IRAQ which McCain supports, even though 73% of Americans are against it ,
THE FAILING ECONOMY (McCain himself admits he knows nothing about economics), and
McCAIN's COMPLETE LACK OF FOREIGN RELATIONS EXPERIENCE and his insistence on following in W. Bush's failed footsteps. Bush insists that he "doesn't negotiate." Never were the results of that felt more acutely then last week, when after asking the Saudis to increase oil production, they laughed in Bush's face, and raised the price of oil from $92 per barrel to $134 per barrel in a few short days.
Do you really think the American middle class is stupid enough to vote for McCain, regardless of the economy, the war, rising oil prices, and our loss of prestige in the international community?
Karl Rove will have to come up with a new "playbook." Obama is a far stronger candidate than any of the light weights Rove has taken down before. Kerry went down in flames when Swift Boated in 2004. So did McCain, when Swift Boated him over the TRUE fact that McCain collaborated with the enemy when he was a POW. But Obama has been Swift Boated over and over, and he is still standing.
Incidentally, Obama hasn't Swift Boated anyone, despite the fact that they are all attacking him, he just stays on message. The man is strong, and he has integrity.
Americans will see that, and vote for him.