1st Edition

India's Nuclear Debate Exceptionalism and the Bomb

By Priyanjali Malik Copyright 2010
    354 Pages
    by Routledge India

    354 Pages
    by Routledge India

    Making the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party’s nuclear tests in 1998 its starting point, this book examines how opinion amongst India’s ‘attentive’ public shifted from supporting nuclear abstinence to accepting — and even feeling a need for — a more assertive policy, by examining the complexities of the debate in India on nuclear policy in the 1990s.

    The study seeks to account for the shift in opinion by looking at the parallel processes of how nuclear policy became an important part of the public discourse in India, and what it came to symbolise for the country’s intelligentsia during this decade. It argues that the pressure on New Delhi in the early 1990s to fall in line with the non-proliferation regime, magnified by India’s declining global influence at the time, caused the issue to cease being one of defence, making it a focus of nationalist pride instead. The country’s nuclear programme thus emerged as a test of its ability to withstand external compulsions, guaranteeing not so much the sanctity of its borders as a certain political idea of it — that of a modern, scientific and, most importantly, ‘sovereign’ state able to defend its policies and set its goals.

     

    1. Introduction 2. Establishing India's Nuclear Rhetoric, 1947-1990 3. Creating a Nuclear Debate in the 1990s 4. Defining and Defending India, 1990-1996 5. Confronting the Nuclear Option: The CTBT and Sovereignty 6. Negotiating 'Nuclear India' after the CTBT 7. Defending Nuclear India 8.Conclusion: The Idea of Nuclear India

    Biography

    Priyanjali Malik is an independent researcher based in the UK.

    "[A] fine, meticulously researched and well-written book... This is a scholarly work through and through but the crisis of 2001-2002, the subcontinent’s equivalent of the Cuban missile crisis in terms of brinks and abysses beyond, is written up so vividly it has a touch of a chiller-thriller about it." - Peter Hennessy, "ueen Mary, University of London, UK; International Affairs 87:2, 2011