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"What"
"Uranium, sir. The fuel for nuclear reactors. India has significant uranium deposits — particularly in Singhbhum, in what will be the state of Bihar.
We also have the world's largest reserves of thorium — in the beach sands of Kerala and Tamil Nadu.
Thorium can be used in advanced reactor designs that produce more fuel than they consu.
India's natural resource endownt in nuclear materials is extraordinary — if we develop it properly, we could beco not just energy-independent but energy-dominant."
Nehru stared at him. "How do you know about uranium deposits in Singhbhum? The geological surveys are still preliminary—"
"I've studied the available geological data extensively, sir. The sedintary formations in Singhbhum are consistent with uranium-bearing minerals.
I would recomnd an imdiate, comprehensive geological survey to confirm the deposits and assess their extent."
Because I know they're there, Vikram thought. The Jaduguda uranium mine in Singhbhum will be operational by 1967 in the original tiline.
I'm just pointing people in the right direction — twenty years early.
"Fascinating." Nehru was genuinely excited — scientific discoveries appealed to him in a way that political maneuvering never quite could.
"I'll ask Bhabha to include a geological survey in his program proposal. And the thorium — you're certain about Kerala?"
"Absolutely certain, sir. The monazite sands of the Kerala coast contain thorium concentrations that are unique in the world.
A thorium-based nuclear program could give India energy security for centuries — literally centuries."
"This is exactly the kind of thinking I want from you, Rathore. Not just economics and politics — science. Technology. The tools that will actually build the India we dream of."
And the tools that will defend it, Vikram added silently. But that conversation is for later.
Vikram left Nehru's residence at noon, his mind churning with plans and possibilities.
The Nehru relationship was stabilized — not perfect, but functional. The economic study was progressing.
The nuclear conversation had opened a door that Vikram intended to walk through very carefully and very quickly.
But first, he had a eting to prepare for. Not with a politician or a bureaucrat — with a scientist.
Homi Jehangir Bhabha.
Vikram spent the next six days preparing for the Bhabha eting with the sa intensity he'd brought to every other critical encounter since his rebirth.
He read everything available on nuclear physics — not the advanced quantum chanics that Bhabha would know far better than any version of Vikram, but the practical dinsions: reactor design, fuel cycles, enrichnt processes, materials science, and — crucially — the dual-use potential of civilian nuclear technology.
He needed to speak Bhabha's language well enough to be taken seriously while steering the conversation toward specific outcos.
He also drafted a docunt that he titled "India's Nuclear Future: A Strategic Frawork for Atomic Energy Developnt." The docunt outlined a three-phase nuclear program:
Phase One: Foundation (1947-1952).
Establish the Atomic Energy Commission.
Recruit and train nuclear scientists — sending the best Indian students to study at the world's leading nuclear research facilities in Britain, the United States, Canada, and France.
Begin geological surveys for uranium and thorium. Construct India's first research reactor — a small facility for scientific experints and isotope production, modeled on the reactors being built at Chalk River in Canada and Harwell in Britain.
Phase Two: Capability (1952-1957).
Build India's first power-generating reactor.
Develop indigenous fuel processing capability — uranium mining, milling, and conversion.
Establish a plutonium reprocessing facility — technically required for advanced reactor fuel cycles, but also the key technology for nuclear weapons production.
Begin research into thorium reactor designs.
Phase Three: Mastery (1957-1962).
Achieve nuclear energy self-sufficiency. Develop advanced reactor designs using India's thorium reserves.
Build a network of nuclear power plants across the country.
And — buried in the technical language of reactor physics — develop the capability to produce weapons-grade nuclear material "for strategic contingency purposes."
The docunt was carefully calibrated. On the surface, it was a civilian energy program — exactly what Nehru wanted.
Underneath, it contained every elent needed for a nuclear weapons program — enrichnt capability, reprocessing, weapons-grade material production — disguised as components of an advanced civilian fuel cycle.
Bhabha will see through the disguise imdiately, Vikram thought. He's too brilliant not to. But he'll also understand the necessity.
Bhabha was a patriot as well as a scientist — in the original tiline, he advocated for nuclear weapons as early as the 1950s.
He just never had the political support to move forward until it was almost too late.
This ti, he gets the support from day one. And by the ti India needs a nuclear deterrent — when China tests its bomb — we'll be ready.
Homi Bhabha arrived in Delhi on June 14th.
He was forty years old — a compact, elegant man with refined features, brilliant dark eyes, and the impeccable grooming of soone who took personal presentation as seriously as scientific rigor.
He wore a perfectly tailored English suit — Savile Row, Vikram guessed — and carried himself with the easy confidence of a man who was accustod to being the smartest person in any room and didn't feel the need to advertise the fact.
The eting took place at Nehru's residence — the sa garden where Vikram and Nehru had walked a week earlier. Nehru hosted, making introductions with the enthusiasm of a man bringing together two of his favorite people.
"Homi, this is Vikram Rathore — the young economist I've told you about.
Rathore, this is Dr. Homi Bhabha — the man who will make India a nuclear power."
Bhabha shook Vikram's hand with a grip that was surprisingly strong for a man who spent his days with equations rather than weights.
His eyes assessed Vikram with the rapid, comprehensive evaluation of a scientist examining a new specin.
"Nehru tells you know about uranium deposits in Singhbhum," Bhabha said. "That's an unusual area of expertise for an economist."
"I have unusual areas of expertise, Dr. Bhabha."
"So I've been told. Shall we sit?"
They sat — Nehru, Bhabha, and Vikram — around a garden table laden with tea, sandwiches, and a plate of the almond biscuits that Bhabha was known to favor.
The setting was informal, but the conversation that followed was anything but.
Bhabha began by outlining his vision for India's atomic energy program — a vision that Vikram already knew intimately from studying its historical implentation.
The Atomic Energy Commission. Research reactors. Power reactors. Fuel cycle developnt. International collaborations. Scientist training.
It was brilliant, comprehensive, and — in Vikram's assessnt — about fifteen years too slow.
"Dr. Bhabha," Vikram said when the physicist paused, "I've taken the liberty of drafting a frawork docunt that builds on your vision. May I share it?"
Bhabha raised an eyebrow — he was not accustod to economists offering opinions on nuclear physics programs.
But Nehru nodded encouragingly, and Bhabha accepted the docunt with polite curiosity.
He read it in silence for twenty minutes.
The silence stretched. Nehru fidgeted. Vikram waited.
When Bhabha finally looked up, his expression had changed completely. The polite curiosity was gone, replaced by sothing far more intense — a combination of surprise, excitent, and sharp suspicion.
"Mr. Rathore," Bhabha said carefully, "this docunt contains technical proposals that are extraordinarily specific.
The reactor design paraters you've outlined for the Phase One research reactor are not theoretical — they're engineering specifications.
The fuel cycle you've proposed — including the reprocessing facility in Phase Two — is technically feasible but represents capabilities that, as far as I know, only three countries currently possess.
And the thorium reactor concept in Phase Three..." He trailed off, shaking his head slowly. "I've been working on thorium utilization theory for two years, and I haven't reached the level of detail you've included here."
Nehru looked between them, his expression a mix of pride and bewildernt. He understood the significance of Bhabha's reaction even if he didn't grasp the technical details.
"Where did you get this information?" Bhabha asked directly.
Vikram t his gaze. "I've studied the available literature extensively, Dr. Bhabha.
The physics is published — Fermi's work, the Manhattan Project declassified reports, the British and Canadian reactor programs.
What I've done is synthesize this information into a practical frawork tailored to India's specific resources and needs."
"No." Bhabha's voice was firm. "What you've done goes beyond synthesis. The thorium fuel cycle you've described — the three-stage approach using natural uranium, plutonium, and thorium-233 — this is original thinking.
I've been moving in this direction myself, but you've leapfrogged months of my theoretical work and produced engineering-level specifications."
He set the docunt down and looked at Vikram with the piercing intensity of a mind that would not rest until it understood sothing.
"Either you're the most gifted nuclear engineer I've never heard of, or you have access to information that isn't publicly available. Which is it?"
The three-stage nuclear program, Vikram thought. Bhabha's own creation — the concept he developed in the 1950s and that remained the foundation of India's nuclear strategy for decades.
I've just presented it to him a decade early, in a form more advanced than his current thinking.
I've been too specific. Again. The sa problem I had with non, with Mahalanobis, with everyone.
My knowledge is too detailed, too precise, too far ahead of what's possible for a twenty-four-year-old economist.
But he couldn't take it back. And with Bhabha — unlike with politicians — he couldn't rely on vague references to "sources" or "intuition." Scientists demanded evidence and explanations. They didn't accept mystery.
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To be continued..
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