Authors: Robert M Hathaway
Volume: 30
Issue: 1
Pagination: 7-14
ISSN: 0196125X
Subject Terms: Sanctions
International relations-US
Nuclear tests
Arms control
Geographic Names: United States
US
India
Pakistan
Abstract:
Earlier convinced of the need to maintain a tough stance, by the end
of 1999 US lawmakers had turned their backs on sanctions as a tool of
non-proliferation policy. Lawmakers' refusal to impose sanctions against India and Pakistan for conducting nuclear tests is examined.
Copyright Arms Control Association Jan/Feb 2000
Full Text:
Earlier convinced of the need to maintain a tough stance, by the end
of 1999 U.S. lawmakers had turned their backs on sanctions as a tool of
nonproliferation policy.
May 1998 was not a good month for U.S. non-proliferation efforts. On
May 11 and 13, India detonated five nuclear devices, its first nuclear
tests in nearly a quarter century Not to be outdone, its bitter rival
Pakistan conducted six nuclear tests of its own toward the end of the month.
These
sudden developments, long feared but nonetheless catching American
officials
and intelligence analysts by surprise, effectively blew U.S. policy
toward
the South Asian subcontinent to smithereens and laid down a direct
challenge
to the global non-proliferation regime.
Within the U.S. Congress, non-proliferation advocates like
Representative
Edward Markey (D-MA) and India-bashers such as Representative Dan
Burton
(R-IN) voiced outrage and called for the immediate triggering of
sanctions
under Sec. 102(b) of the Arms Export Control Act, universally known as
the Glenn amendment. New Delhi's actions were "reckless, shameful and
irresponsible,"
Markey insisted. Burton urged his House colleagues to "stop
subsidizing
India's nuclear progress" by cutting U.S. economic assistance to New
Delhi.
"India took a terrible, terrible step yesterday," Senator Tom Harkin
(D-IA)
told the Senate the day after India's first round of tests.
Paraphrasing
Franklin Roosevelt, the Iowa Democrat declared that "yesterday is a
day
that will live in infamy for the Nation of India."'
Of greater interest was the response of those who earlier had been
among
India's most vocal supporters. Representative Frank Pallone (D-Nj),
perhaps
New Delhi's leading champion on Capitol Hill, expressed regret at the
tests
but insisted they should not derail the U.S.-India relationship. But
other
lawmakers usually sympathetic to India were less supportive. Many of
the
leading members of the House's India caucus remained noticeably
silent,
and some privately suggested that the caucus publicly condemn India.
Several
legislators, including House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-MO),
canceled
plans to visit India. "In light of the nuclear tests," a Gephardt
spokesman
explained, "we did not want there to be the appearance of business as
usual.
The situation was exacerbated 17 days later, when Pakistan conducted
its
own tests. Aside from the expected condemnations of Pakistan and
criticism
of the Clinton administration for allowing events to get so out of
hand,
a number of members voiced anxiety that South Asian tensions could
spiral
out of control. "This is the most serious situation since the Cuban
missile
crisis," Senator John McCain (R-AZ) warned, a judgment seconded by
Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-NY) .3
Only days after the tests, President Bill Clinton responded as he was
legally
obligated under the Glenn amendment, slapping wide-ranging economic
and
military sanctions on New Delhi and Islamabad. Yet no sooner had
Washington
taken this stand on behalf of global non-proliferation norms than it
began
to walk back from its position. Within 18 months, the U.S. Congress
swung
from applauding strict sanctions to urging the president to waive not
only
the Glenn amendment, but also the Pressler and Symington amendments,
which
mandate further penalties for states engaged in certain nuclear
activity.
(For more information on this legislation, see text box on p. 11.)
Earlier
convinced of the need to maintain a tough stance as an object lesson
for
other nuclear threshold states, by the end of 1999 U.S. lawmakers had
completely
turned their backs on sanctions as a tool of non-proliferation policy.
Congressional anger over the South Asian tests had given way to
acceptance,
even understanding. Congress, it would appear, had abandoned 25 years
of
non-proliferation activity.
The U.S. Congress was trying to achieve multiple objectives that were
not
entirely compatible. Concerned about proliferation and wanting a voice
in foreign policy that would compete with the execufive branch, it had
mandated the sanctions. But when faced with post-Cold War national
interests,
the growing influence of the domestic South Asian-American community
and
an increasing interest in the subcontinent by U.S. business, the
legislators
moved non-proliferation to the back burner and renounced with dizzying
speed the sanctions on India and Pakistan they had so recently
supported.
The impact of these steps on the non-proliferation regime is not yet
clear.
But what is apparent is that Congress' love-hate relationship with
sanctions
as a tool of foreign policy is far from over.
The Retreat
Discomfort with the Glenn amendment sanctions surfaced shortly after
they
were imposed on Pakistan and served to trigger a broader discussion of
the utility of sanctions in general. It was time "to engage in a
serious
debate on the merits of using unilateral economic sanctions to achieve
foreign policy goals," Senator Richard Lugar (R-IN) declared.
Observing
that the threat of sanctions had deterred neither India nor Pakistan
from
testing, he worried that U.S. sanctions could destabilize a Pakistan
already
burdened with enormous economic and political problems. "An unstable
Pakistan
with nuclear weapons," he added, "is not in our interests."4
Other comments focused more narrowly on U.S. economic interests.
"Pakistan
is not a trading partner we can afford to lose," cautioned the
chairman
of the House Agriculture Committee, Robert Smith (ROR), reflecting
sentiment
especially pronounced in wheat-growing areas of the Pacific Northwest.
"There is no leverage in cutting off our sales," complained Senator
Mitch
McConnell (R-KY). "It does not make a difference on the dinner table
in
Islamabad, but it sure will in Topeka."5
Recognizing this widespread dissatisfaction with sanctions, the Senate
leadership created a special 18-member task force, headed by McConnell
and Joseph Biden (D-DE), to examine both the way the India and
Pakistan
sanctions were working, and the larger question of how effective
sanctions
are in influencing the behavior of other nations. "There's a feeling
on
both sides of the aisle that perhaps the proclivity to place economic
sanctions
on countries around the world and with not a clear way of ending those
has become a problem," explained Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-MS) in
what
was clearly an understatement. 6
It did not take long for this uneasiness over the Glenn amendment
sanctions
to translate into congressional action. The initial breach in the
sanctions
regime came in early July, less than two months after the first Indian
test. The impetus behind this move was readily apparent. Pakistan was
the
leading foreign buyer of U.S. white wheat, and the third largest
overseas
purchaser of all U.S. wheat. But unless Congress acted to permit
export
financing, U.S. farmers would be unable to participate in winter wheat
auctions in Pakistan, scheduled for mid-July.
"We are six days away from a disaster," warned Senator Ron Wyden (D-
OR)
in early July. "Farmers around the country are staring an economic
train
wreck in the eye."' The full Senate apparently agreed, rushing through
legislation without the normal committee review and voting 98-0 to
give
both India and Pakistan a one-year exemption from Glenn amendment
restrictions
on Department of Agriculture financing for the purchase of
agricultural
commodities from U.S. farmers.' The Senate bill originally contained
authority
for the president to waive other sanctions as well, but a filibuster
threat
by Senator John Glenn (DOH), author of the Glenn amendment and perhaps
the Senate's leading non-proliferation expert, succeeded in getting
this
provision dropped.
Action in the House was equally swift and revealing of congressional
priorities.
Representatives Robert Livingston (R-LA) and David Obey (D-WI), the
chairman
and ranking minority member, respectively, of the House Appropriations
Committee, urged a more considered approach, but not even these senior
power brokers could slow the stampede. This legislation, its
supporters
argued, did not indicate any lessening of the U.S. commitment to
nonproliferation.
To the contrary, by crafting a more focused sanctions policy, it would
help secure the domestic base for maintaining sanctions.
Such elaborate rationalizations could not hide the actual intent of
most
members, however. Hardly a word about nonproliferation figured in the
House
debate. No one displayed anger at India or Pakistan for violating
long-standing
international norms against testing. Instead, the debate was all about
helping the U.S. farmer, about not losing markets or penalizing
American
wheat growers. The House's leading non-proliferation proponents were
noticeably
absent during the debate. Not surprisingly, the House followed the
Senate's
lead and adopted the measure in time for American farmers to take part
in the Pakistani wheat auction.9
This modest step was quickly followed by others. The day after the
House's
approval of the wheat relief bill, the Senate, with the blessing of
the
administration, adopted the Brownback amendment. The Brownback
amendment-named
for its author, Kansas Republican Sam Brownback, chairman of the
Senate
subcommittee on Near Eastern and South Asian affairs-provided the
president
with the authority to waive, for a period of one year, Glenn,
Symington
and Pressler amendment sanctions, except for those pertaining to
military
assistance, dual-use exports and military sales.
Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC), chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee,
complained that the Senate had "rushed forward, willy nilly," without
adequate
review or committee hearings, but chose not to block passage.10 Glenn,
who might have been expected to protest this gutting of his namesake
legislation,
was conveniently away from Washington training for the space shuttle
flight
he was to make later in the year. Recalling Glenn's absence sometime
afterward,
one insider conceded that while not deliberately planned, Senate
action
on the legislation at the very moment its primary opponent was
preoccupied
with other matters was more than simply a happy coincidence.
The Brownback amendment (formally known as the India-Pakistan Relief
Act
of 1998) was incorporated into the fiscal 1999 omnibus appropriations
bill
and signed into law in October 1998. Following its adoption, President
Clinton quickly restored funding for U.S. military training programs
in
India and Pakistan, as well as government-backed financing and credit
guarantees
for U.S. firms doing business there. Clinton also lifted restrictions
on
U.S. commercial loans and credits to both countries and announced that
Washington would support a pending Pakistani request before the
International
Monetary Fund. Encouraged by the absence of opposition to these steps,
Clinton then moved to eliminate another long-standing irritant in the
U.S.-Pakistani
relationship by agreeing to pay Islamabad $325 million in cash and
$140
million in goods as compensation for 28 F-16 aircraft that Pakistan
had
earlier bought, but whose delivery had been prevented by the 1990
triggering
of the Pressler amendment. Once more, Capitol Hill acquiesced
virtually
without dissent.
In October 1999, Congress took a further step by adopting, as part of
the
defense appropriations bill, another, more sweeping Brownback
amendment-sometimes
called Brownback II. This measure gave the president permanent
authority
to waive, with respect to India and Pakistan, all the provisions of
the
Glenn amendment. In addition, it authorized the president to waive the
Symington and Pressler amendment sanctions, which had prohibited
almost
all U.S. economic and military assistance to Pakistan since 1990.
Finally,
the legislation stated that the "broad application" of export controls
on Indian and Pakistani government agencies and private companies
suspected
of having links to their country's nuclear or missile programs (the
so-called
"entities list") was "inconsistent" with U.S. national security
interests.
Instead, the lawmakers urged the executive branch to apply U.S. export
controls only to those agencies and companies that made "direct and
material
contributions to weapons of mass destruction and missile programs and
only
to those items that can contribute to such programs."
Brownback II represented an extraordinary reversal of American policy.
The measure handed the president the authority to lift all sanctions
imposed
upon India and Pakistan as a result of their 1998 nuclear tests. More
remarkably
yet, Congress abandoned even those sanctions it had placed upon
Pakistan
prior to Islamabad's tests. Seventeen months after its nuclear
detonations,
Pakistan found itself far better off vis-a-vis American nuclear
non-proliferation
law than it had been at any time since 1990. Finally, with its
statement
on export controls, the U.S. Congress appeared to condemn rigorous
steps
to prevent the transfer of sensitive technology that might be used in
the
nuclear weapons or missile programs of India or Pakistan, and
implicitly
authorized the export of materials that might indirectly assist those
programs.
It was a stunning retreat from Capitol Hill's decades-long reliance on
punitive measures to block the spread of weapons of mass
destruction.11
Never happy about being forced in 1990 to trigger the Pressler
amendment,
the executive branch saw Brownback II as the achievement of a long-
desired
objective. Administration officials were pleased with the measure in
another
respect as well. An earlier draft of the legislation would have
suspended
for five years the Glenn, Symington and Pressler sanctions, whereas
Brownback
II, as finally adopted, gave the president the latitude to lift the
sanctions
only when and if he saw fit. This flexibility, the State Department
believed,
would strengthen the president's hand in subsequent negotiations with
India
and Pakistan.
The timing of these proceedings also merits mention. A House-Senate
conference
committee adopted the defense appropriations bill containing Brownback
II on October 11, 1999. The following day the Pakistani military
dismissed
the civilian government in Islamabad and seized power. On October 13
and
14, the House and Senate respectively took up the defense bill. Both
houses
adopted the measure by substantial majorities. The military coup in
Pakistan
was all but ignored during debate over the bill, with only one member
of
either house troubling to go to the floor to express skepticism about
the
wisdom of a wholesale abandonment of sanctions against Pakistan at the
very moment the Pakistani military was throwing out a democratically
elected
government. True, Brownback 11 was but one small provision in a huge
bill
appropriating over one-quarter of a trillion dollars. Nonetheless,
this
silence about contemporaneous events in Islamabad suggests just how
far
Congress had traveled since the South Asian tests 17 months earlier.
South Asia in the Congressional Mindset
All in all, it had been a remarkable year and a half. The United
States
had imposed extensive sanctions and then just as quickly lifted not
only
Glenn amendment sanctions, but Symington and Pressler amendment
restrictions
as well. Initially expressing concern for the global non-proliferation
regime, Congress, in less than 18 months, had moved to the position
that
it should not jeopardize other interests in pursuit of unobtainable
non-proliferation
objectives. How does one explain this dramatic transformation in
congressional
attitudes and actions?
The Indian-American community
Part of the explanation is political. As the 1990s unfolded, South
Asia,
and India in particular, gained increasing prominence on the
congressional
agenda. This new politically inspired concern for the region partly
reflected
changes in the Asian-American community. As recently as 1980, there
were
only 387,000 IndianAmericans in the United States. But the next two
decades
saw a dramatic increase in the size of this community. By 1997, this
number
had more than tripled, to 1,215,000. (The total U.S. population during
the same period grew by 17.8 percent.) By the later date, the Indian-
American
community comprised the third largest Asian-American population in the
country, surpassed only by Chinese- and Filipino-Americans.
Numbers tell only part of the story. The Indian-American community is
also
highly educated and prosperous. Fiftyeight percent of the adult
community
has at least a bachelor's degree. A larger percentage of the Indian-
American
work force holds a managerial or professional position than any other
group
in the country, with especially high representation among well-paid
doctors,
engineers, scientists, architects and computer professionals. As a
result,
the Indian-American per capita income exceeds that of every other
group
in the country, including whites.12
[IMAGE PHOTOGRAPH] Captioned as: A Nebraska wheat farmer harvests his
field
in summer. U.S. wheat farmers would have faced significant economic
consequences
had Congress not waived the nuclear testing-related sanctions imposed
on
Pakistan, which is the third-largest importer of U.S. wheat.
Until recently, this wealth and status had not translated into
political
clout, but that is rapidly changing. Since the community is widely and
relatively evenly distributed throughout all parts of the country, few
congressional districts are without at least a handful of Indian-