Geography Reference
In-Depth Information
29.
C.Raja Mohan, 'India, Russia to Discuss Nuclear Issues', The Hindu, 3 Oct. 2000.
30.
Vladimir Orlov, 'Export Controls in Russia: Policies and Practices', The
Nonproliferation Review 6/4 (Fall 1999) pp.145-6.
31.
Ibid. p.147.
32.
Vladimir Radyuhin, 'India, Russia Nuclear Cooperation Will Continue', The Hindu,
17 Dec. 2000.
33.
Vitaly Fedchenko, 'The Russian-Indian Nuclear Cooperation: More Questions
Than Answers', Yaderny Kontrol 6/3 (Summer 2001) p.21. The International Atomic
Energy Agency does allow for export of nuclear supplies to non-nuclear states
without full scope safeguards if there are exceptional safety reasons to do so.
34.
Ibid. p.20
35.
Vladimir Radyuhin, 'India, Russia Nuclear Cooperation Will Continue', The Hindu,
17 Dec. 2000.
36.
'Russia Breaks Its Word', The Economist, 27 Jan. 2001.
37.
David Hoffman, 'Russia to Allow Nuclear Exports', The Washington Post, 12 May
2000.
38.
Vladimir Orlov, 'Undoing Adamov', The Moscow Times, 2 April 2001.
39.
Hanuska Emerick, 'Russia Commits to Iran Reactors', Reuters, 17 April 2001. See
also 'Russia Vows Speed on Iranian Reactor', International Herald Tribune, 17
April 2001.
40.
For a discussion on the repercussions of technology controls on Indo-Russian
relations, see for example Brahma Chellaney, 'The Implications of the Wassenaar
Group', in Deepa Ollapally and S.Rajagopal (eds.), Nuclear Cooperation:
Challenges and Prospects (Bangalore: Tyrox Press 1997) pp.84-5.
41.
For a superb discussion of the links, see Ahmed Rashid, Taliban: Militant Islam,
Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press
2000) passim .
42.
Jaswant Singh seems to have been a prime mover for a more US-oriented approach
in this regard. See Vasudevan (note 3). This may be seen as having paid off with
the establishment of the Indo-US Joint Working Group on Terrorism.
43.
See for example, National Bureau of Asian Research, 'Energy, Weapons
Proliferation and Conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus', Conference
Proceedings, US Institute of Peace, Washington DC, 20-21 April 1999, and Martha
Brill Olcott, 'Unfulfilled Promises in Central Asia', Paper at the Conference on
'Russia—Ten Years After', Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Washington DC, 7-9 June 2001.
44.
India has had a slight edge if calculated in terms actual deliveries of major
conventional weapons between 1995 and 1999. See SIPRI Yearbook 2000:
Armaments, Disarmament and International Security (Oxford: Oxford University
Press 2000) p.341.
45.
Jyotsana Bakshi, 'Russia-China Military-Technical Cooperation: Implications for
India', Strategic Analysis 24/4 (July 2000) p.637.
46.
McFaul (note 4). The brittleness of Sino-Russian amity is discussed by Robert
Scalapino, 'The People's Republic of China at Fifty', NBR Analysis 10/4 (Oct.
1999) pp.17-18. One area of increasing tension between China and Russia which
has yet to be explored in depth is the Chinese migration into Russia's Far East and
its demographic, economic and political implications.
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