New Delhi, Apr.24 (ANI): In what could prove to be a spanner in growing ties between India and United States, the U.S.Embassy in New Delhi today issued a statement on behalf of Washington that said that the UNited States has not recognised India as a nuclear weapons state, and had no intention of amending or renegotiating the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).
"We do not recognize India as a nuclear weapon state, and do not seek to amend or renegotiate the NPT. We understand, however, that India will not join the NPT as a non-nuclear weapon state. As Under Secretary Burns has stated on numerous occasions, we understand that India will continue to
maintain its strategic program, although we believe the majority of future growth will be on the civilian side," said the U.S.Embassy statement.
Seeking to put the lid on concerns about the July 18, 2005 US-Indian civilian nuclear deal, the U.S.Embassy in Delhi said that the two joint statements issued by both governments between July 2005 and March 2006, clearly spelt out the objectives behind the landmark agreement.
"The July 18, 2005 and March 2, 2006 Joint Statements recognize India's strong record regarding nuclear technology exports and its public commitments to work within the global nonproliferation regime to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and the technology that supports the development of those weapons," the Embassy said in a statement on Monday.
The statements, it said also underscored India's real and growing energy needs and the prospective role of nuclear energy in this context. India is pursuing "economic growth at eight percent, nine percent, and it's going to need an energy supply and it needs to diversify its energy, too, to clean technologies like nuclear energy. We cannot begin to share those technologies with India without an agreement of this kind, it added.
The effort by the U.S. to seek an exemption for India from the full-scope safeguards requirement of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) Guidelines and amend U.S. laws will, once successful, allow India to benefit from international cooperation in the civil nuclear sector, the statement said, adding that the separation of India's nuclear program, the declaration of its civilian facilities, and the placement of those facilities under IAEA safeguards will help ensure that nuclear material, equipment, and technologies supplied by NSG members are exclusively applied to the civil sector.
This assurance is consistent with the obligations undertaken by states party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). All NSG members are parties to the NPT. (ANI)
http://in.news.yahoo.com/060424/139/63rc6.html
"We do not recognize India as a nuclear weapon state, and do not seek to amend or renegotiate the NPT. We understand, however, that India will not join the NPT as a non-nuclear weapon state. As Under Secretary Burns has stated on numerous occasions, we understand that India will continue to
maintain its strategic program, although we believe the majority of future growth will be on the civilian side," said the U.S.Embassy statement.
Seeking to put the lid on concerns about the July 18, 2005 US-Indian civilian nuclear deal, the U.S.Embassy in Delhi said that the two joint statements issued by both governments between July 2005 and March 2006, clearly spelt out the objectives behind the landmark agreement.
"The July 18, 2005 and March 2, 2006 Joint Statements recognize India's strong record regarding nuclear technology exports and its public commitments to work within the global nonproliferation regime to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and the technology that supports the development of those weapons," the Embassy said in a statement on Monday.
The statements, it said also underscored India's real and growing energy needs and the prospective role of nuclear energy in this context. India is pursuing "economic growth at eight percent, nine percent, and it's going to need an energy supply and it needs to diversify its energy, too, to clean technologies like nuclear energy. We cannot begin to share those technologies with India without an agreement of this kind, it added.
The effort by the U.S. to seek an exemption for India from the full-scope safeguards requirement of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) Guidelines and amend U.S. laws will, once successful, allow India to benefit from international cooperation in the civil nuclear sector, the statement said, adding that the separation of India's nuclear program, the declaration of its civilian facilities, and the placement of those facilities under IAEA safeguards will help ensure that nuclear material, equipment, and technologies supplied by NSG members are exclusively applied to the civil sector.
This assurance is consistent with the obligations undertaken by states party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). All NSG members are parties to the NPT. (ANI)
http://in.news.yahoo.com/060424/139/63rc6.html