Report on a conversation with Indian Ambassador Dalal. Topics discussed include the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, India and Pakistan's nuclear programs, the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), and the upcoming election of a new Executive Director.
March 27, 1984
Ciphered Telegram No. 87, Embassy of Hungary in India to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry
This document was made possible with support from Carnegie Corporation of New York (CCNY)
An influential Congress Party member of the parliament, who is usually a reliable informant, confidentially and in private told an official of our embassy that Indian government circles and the leading circles of the Congress Party regard the results of the Soviet defense minister's visit in India as “disappointing.” The Soviet side was unwilling to provide the modern military technology that India asked for, and to share technologies [with India]. At the parliamentary session held in the recent days, government party deputies had heated conversations of an anti-Soviet character over this question and other irritating issues. According to the informant, all this will negatively affect the whole system of Soviet-Indian relations. “For the sake of Indian-Soviet friendship,” the informant asked us to inform the Soviet comrades about this issue in an appropriate form. Over here we have not taken any step toward the Soviet embassy. I shared the information with our military attaché, but he will not take any step, either.
– 87 – T. –
Report from an informant in the Parliament of India on the Congress Party's frustrations with Soviet Union and the Soviet's unwillingness to share military technology.
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