A leading American arms expert has picked holes in the draft nuclear safeguards accord submitted by India to the International Atomic Energy Agency saying there are some clauses which may raise questions on the effectiveness of the nuclear watchdog to monitor the country's civilian nuclear programme.
Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association in Washington, said the provisions needed clarity before the IAEA gives its seal of approval to the safeguards pact, which is the next step in the operationalisation of the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal. The draft was circulated to IAEA's Board of Governors in Vienna on Wednesday.
Kimball said the draft also does not make a mention of nuclear facilities that India has voluntarily agreed to place under IAEA safeguards saying it was 'abnormal'. Although those facilities --14 of the nation's 22 reactors--are listed in a separate and widely published Civil Nuclear Separation Plan drawn up two years ago by India, the empty annexe raised questions among critics. India's motives were not clear, he said, but added that it appeared "they're trying to preserve their options to put some reactors in or take some out" from IAEA monitoring, depending on future bilateral nuclear cooperation agreements.