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India, U.S. agree to nuclear pact

Originally posted by Tariq Iqbal@Mar 13 2006, 11:22 PM
Excellent thinking Mr. Neo. If your following with the recent news and discussion which i just read in the strategic discussion forum it seems that Pakistan now understands that too. No matter what we do now, i have been living in United States, now its easy, and a funny jokes that i get hit with once in a while me being a "terrorist" of some kind even though i am not Arab or look like Arab.

The hatred have spread all over, and there is not much we can do to stop. If we stay aligned with Chinese it will be much promising alliance and support from both sides, and our whole country loves China, whereas the same thing is not true with being with the United States, but just being aligned with a little time with them is in our common interest even if they are not promising ally.

The future looks like India-Russia and Pakistan-China. United States will act like whatever as the government and congress politics change.
[post=7013]Quoted post[/post]​

Thanks you Tariq,

I've lived here in Amsterdam for past 27 years and never been discriminated once.
But the 9/11 events have changed the world and we're being victomised all over the world....

But coming back to the topic, indeed I've been following debates in Pakistani media aswell as on different forums, Pakistan foreign policy will take a major shift soon and will become more independant.

You see, US has always taken advantage of military rule in our country. Even preaching democracy they have been supporting our military dictators and whenever their goals are achieved...bang...be get sanctioned again.

But hopefully this sanctions/embargo era is history now, we've developped and demonstrated out nukes and we're heading towards democracy.
Mush has promised that his coupe will be countries last, I certainly hope he's right about that!

China may not be as advanced as the US, but that may not be a problem at all.
If you look at the huge amounts that are being pomped into R n D, China will conquer whatever technology they need in next two decades.

Basically they have everything to match our military requirements, so why waste time going after the US?
Its true that US aid has helped us in the past and even today, twothird of our FDI is coming from there.
Our government will do much wiser to persue close economic ties with the US but develop an independant foreign policy with China as our main ally.
 
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N-deals should not be country-specific: Pakistan

March 19, 2006

By Indo Asian News Service

Washington, March 19 (IANS) Reacting to the introduction in the US Congress of a bill on the nuclear deal with India, Pakistan has said there should not be country-specific pacts on a subject as critical as nuclear technology, Online news agency reported.

'We do understand and appreciate the underpinnings of the US' de-hyphenated policy in South Asia, but this should not be leaning so heavily on one side,' Jehangir Karamat, Pakistan's ambassador to the US, said in a statement.

He was reacting to the bill on the landmark India-US nuclear deal that was introduced in the US Senate and House of Representatives Thursday.

'Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has said our security policy is no longer India-centric. He has also emphasised minimum deterrence as a pillar of our policy, and has said that we do not want an arms race with India,' Karamat noted.

'Earlier, we had tabled 'reciprocal restraint' as a concept which could be bilaterally discussed. We hope the US policy will take these aspects into consideration.

'It is also our hope that the US policy will not be based on transitory and evolving trends, but rather on relationships that are maturing in these fluid situations,' Karamat said.

http://www.dailyindia.com/show/9650.php/N-...cific:_Pakistan

Pakistan is trying hard to get the same nuclear deal, but i guess its not going to happen. :lol:
 
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Indo-US nuclear deal in trouble: Report

April 03, 2006 19:21 IST
Last Updated: April 03, 2006 19:57 IST


As the Indo-US nuclear deal faced new hurdles, a leading American daily on Monday said the pact was in 'trouble' because it did not take lawmakers into confidence from the outset.

Close on the heels of some lawmakers of the India Caucus opposing the landmark deal, a section of American scientists, known for their anti-nuclear weapons stance, have said that the pact was bad for the long-term security interests of the US, India and the world.

In a lengthy piece tracing the origins of the deal and the final moments leading to its actual announcement last July, the Washington Post said it was in trouble partly because -- in what some critics say was an echo of the Iraq invasion -- there was little consultation with the Congress or within the foreign-affairs bureaucracy before it was announced."

"Last month in New Delhi, US President George W Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh reached an agreement on how India will implement the deal. But nuclear specialists in the US government say their concerns about weapons proliferation also were overridden in final talks," the Post said.

It said it was only after the announcement that the Bush administration began briefing members of Congress and in the process created lasting problems.

"The way they (Bush administration) jammed it through is going to haunt us," an unnamed senior official was quoted in the daily as saying.

The Post said, the leading concerns or check lists of the top non proliferation officials like Robert Joseph and John Rood of the State Department never really made it to the final list as officials who were eager to clinch the deal with India took them off.

"We never even got to the stage where we could negotiate them," a senior official told the daily.

Rood, according to the report, made forceful presentations to the Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns on some of the non-proliferation concerns that are now being raised in Congress, the non-proliferation think tanks and the scientific community.

"Without a limit on fissile material production, the deal could allow India to make many more weapons than it needed. There was also concern about rewarding a country that built nuclear weapons in secret, which North Korea and Iran are accused of doing. Some in the administration said the deal would hurt US efforts to pressure those countries on their programs," it said.

And then the revelation that India was demanding until the last minute that Washington recognise the country as a nuclear weapons state. "They were really demanding that we recognize them as a weapons state," a senior official who was knowledgeable about the discussions told the newspaper.

"Thank God we said no to that, but they almost got it. The Indians were incredibly greedy that day. They were getting 99 per cent of what they asked for and still they pushed for 100," the official said.

Meanwhile, the Federation of American Scientists has said that it was clearly opposed to the legislation.

"The agreement with India is contrary to the long-term security of the United States, India and the world," FAS, which is endorsed by 67 Nobel Laureates, said in a petition circulated to its members and associates on March 27.

Urging its members to sign the petition and write to their local Congressmen and Senators, the advisory said the ongoing process to introduce a bill in the Congress to give effect to the pact will circumvent future Congressional review and weaken international non-proliferation efforts.

"The Bush administration has submitted a bill to Congress, HR 4974, which revokes Congressional review and evaluation of any future nuclear trade deal with India. We need your help to defeat this legislation."

The FAS, established in 1945 by scientists associated with the Manhattan Project that built the first atom bomb, said, "Allowing India to bypass the Non-proliferation Treaty weakens the entire international non-proliferation effort. While the NPT is not perfect, it should be strengthened, not undermined. Moreover, the United States cannot rightfully criticize India's nuclear program while at the same time developing a national security strategy that increases the emphasis on nuclear weapons."

"We believe that the United States should withhold nuclear cooperation from India and work vigorously with other nuclear powers to dramatically reduce the number and salience of nuclear weapons," it said.

http://in.rediff.com/news/2006/apr/03ndeal1.htm
 
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5f03b62fdbdbba90cccda6ac0c231bf5.jpg
Energy hungry India needs nuclear power

The US Congress begins considering a controversial plan on Tuesday to share civilian nuclear technology with India.
The proposed deal faces scrutiny this week in the powerful US Senate Foreign Relations Committee and House International Relations Committee.
Lawmakers will then vote on whether to allow such ties with a state which resists full nuclear inspections.
The US and Indian governments both see the deal as crucial. Critics say non-proliferation efforts will be hit.
They say it could boost India's nuclear arsenal and sends the wrong message to countries like Iran, whose nuclear ambitions Washington opposes.
'Strategic'
President George W Bush finalised the agreement during a landmark trip to India in March.
fcdf139671d6f4e10bf26e3aa9824512.jpg
Both governments see the deal as crucial


It reverses US policy, which has restricted nuclear co-operation since India, which has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), tested a nuclear weapon in 1974.
Under the deal, energy-hungry India will get access to US civil nuclear technology and open its nuclear facilities to inspection.
But its nuclear weapons sites will remain off-limits.
The deal faces a first key vote in the House of Representatives International Relations Committee on Tuesday, before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee takes it up on Wednesday, the Associated Press news agency reports.
If the legislation is passed by the committees, it will then be voted on by the full House and Senate.
aa854a18beb67d350c08be42d3fbf500.gif
NUCLEAR POWER IN INDIA
India has 14 reactors in commercial operation and nine under construction
Nuclear power supplies about 3% of India's electricity
By 2050, nuclear power is expected to provide 25% of the country's electricity
India has limited coal and uranium reserves
Its huge thorium reserves - about 25% of the world's total - are expected to fuel its nuclear power programme long-term
Source: Uranium Information Center

d8834ca267e765585fbe628095f231fb.gif


Global nuclear powers


The BBC's Shahzeb Jillani in Washington says lobbying has been intensifying to garner support for the deal.
Our correspondent says opinion is divided in Washington on whether the Bush administration has the bipartisan support it claims it has on the deal.
Last week, US Vice President Dick Cheney said he hoped Congress would move quickly to enact the legislation.
He said the deal was "one of the most important strategic foreign policy initiatives of President Bush's second term".
Critics believe that at a time when the stand-off with North Korea and Iran is deepening, a civilian co-operation deal with a country which has not signed the NPT severely undermines the global nuclear non-proliferation regime.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5120782.stm
 
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Black B****:devil: is here in pakistan too and asked Pakistan to deploy 10,000 troops on the border with Afghanistan, which Pakistan happily agreed to do. Not so sure whether they are really happy? Pakistan is also gonna ask her (Conda lisaa Rice) to provide the same sort of nuclear tech which they are providing to India.
 
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Wednesday, 28 June 2006, 06:06 GMT 07:06 UK
US panel backs India nuclear deal


A US Congressional panel has backed a controversial plan to share civilian nuclear technology with India.

The deal offers US nuclear technology to India in exchange for inspectors' access to Indian civilian reactors.

The House of Representatives' International Relations Committee voted 37-5 for the deal, which must still be put to another panel and to Congress.

The agreement was hailed as historic by supporters, although critics say it will damage non-proliferation efforts.

Strategic re-alignment

President George W Bush finalised the agreement during a landmark trip to India in March.

Under the deal, energy-hungry India will get access to US civil nuclear technology and fuel, in return for opening its civilian nuclear facilities to inspection.

But its nuclear weapons sites will remain off-limits.

NUCLEAR POWER IN INDIA

* India has 14 reactors in commercial operation and nine under construction
* Nuclear power supplies about 3% of India's electricity
* By 2050, nuclear power is expected to provide 25% of the country's electricity
* India has limited coal and uranium reserves
* Its huge thorium reserves - about 25% of the world's total - are expected to fuel its nuclear power programme long-term
* Source: Uranium Information Center


The agreement reverses US policy, which has restricted nuclear co-operation since India, which has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), tested a nuclear weapon in 1974.

"This is a historic hearing," said Democrat representative Tom Lantos, a sponsor of the proposed legislation.

He said the importance of the bill could not be overstated and the deal signalled a "sweeping strategic re-alignment" of India's global policies.

Indian analysts lauded the US panel backing the nuclear deal.

"The world has recognised India as a responsible nuclear weapon power. This debate is proof of this," C Rajamohan told the NDTV news channel.

The Indian Express newspaper said the "strong bipartisan support [in the House of Representatives' International Relations Committee] suggests that the political momentum behind this historic but controversial nuclear deal .. may now be unstoppable".

'Knifed'

But critics of the deal say it could boost India's nuclear arsenal and sends the wrong message to countries like Iran, whose nuclear ambitions Washington opposes.

"The NPT has been knifed by an executive action," said Republican representative Jim Leach.

"Anyone who wants to present this as a happy day is making a very serious mistake."

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh (left) and President Bush If the proposed deal is passed by the powerful US Senate Foreign Relations Committee later this week, it will then be voted on by the full House and Senate.

The BBC's Shahzeb Jillani in Washington says opinion is divided in Washington on whether the Bush administration has the bipartisan support it claims it has on the deal.

Last week, US Vice President Dick Cheney said he hoped Congress would move quickly to enact the legislation.

He said the deal was "one of the most important strategic foreign policy initiatives of President Bush's second term".

Critics believe that at a time when the stand-off with North Korea and Iran is deepening, a civilian co-operation deal with a country which has not signed the NPT severely undermines the global nuclear non-proliferation regime.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/south_asia/5120782.stm
 
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Its a moral victory for India to have passed the Congressional Panel.
But now the difficult part of the compain begins as Congress in next where the real opposition is.

Good luck! :thumbsup:
 
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Neo said:
Its a moral victory for India to have passed the Congressional Panel.
But now the difficult part of the compain begins as Congress in next where the real opposition is.

Good luck! :thumbsup:

As far as i can see there is no chance in a million that the deal will not pass.
simply bcause US govt wants the deal...its plain to see ...when bush visited india he was as kneen and pressing for the deal as was the indian govt, further he even was willing to scale down his side of the bargain jus to make the deal pass ...the point is..both sides are desperate for a thaw in their relationship and there is no better chance to make this happen than by agreeing on the nuclear deal.
 
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Bush cannot run again. He's a lame duck President. There's nothing he can offer to the hold outs that would tip the scale.

I really do not understand the timing of this deal. If there were $10bil worth of reactors that India wants, then it's a different story. As much as those anti-deal Congressmen wants to spew about NPT, American jobs and especailly American wallets would dictate their votes.

Since there isn't, those Congressmen got nothing to lose by upholding America's word in the NPT and since most are democrats, stick it to the Republicans for advancing a nuclear holocaust.

The deal can still be passed but now, it's a matter of horse trading. Bush, however, got no horses to trade. It's what the Republicans are willing to give up ... and I don't see them offerring much.

I'm also seeing India repeating China's mistakes. China simply assumed that since they made a deal with the US Executive Branch, that their jobs were over. India is right now saying it's Bush's cabinet's job to pass this treaty.

Contrast that to the US-Canada Free Trade Agreement and its successor, the North American Free Trade Agreement. Canada's Foreign Minister stayed in Washington the last two days before the votes to last minute lobby reluctant Congressmen and Senators.

There's still alot of work to be done and it would be a mistake to assume, it's all Bush's part.
 
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Lilo said:
...the point is..both sides are desperate for a thaw in their relationship and there is no better chance to make this happen than by agreeing on the nuclear deal.

I've heard this before but never understood how US can be desperate for anything India has to offer.
There are other ways for the States to please India, free tarde is already in the cards and doors are open for US massive defence industry so the nuke deal is just a bonus.
Believe me, even if this deal is blown off, US and India will continue work together and expand their ties.

India needs the US harder than the other way around.
 
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Neo said:
I've heard this before but never understood how US can be desperate for anything India has to offer.
There are other ways for the States to please India, free tarde is already in the cards and doors are open for US massive defence industry so the nuke deal is just a bonus.
Believe me, even if this deal is blown off, US and India will continue work together and expand their ties.

India needs the US harder than the other way around.

Neo,
Our politicians for decades have potrayed the US as the unseen hand supporting pakistan and opposing india whenever possible.Positive perception regarding US in the indian public started growing only after the kargil war but hasnt reached a critical mass yet,such as to warrant a significant change in our foreign policy.Even now a significant % of indians dont like Usa as seen by the vocal protests by the socialist parties(especially the left) on bush's visit.And if this highly publicised deal falls on its face ,the left parties will get the ammo to influence a wider indian opinion to become anit-US and the Indo-american patnership will be consigned to a formal level and will never materialise into its more deeper(strategic) form.Free trade and other sops which come with it are all good ,but they are not good enough.Indian public is gullible.Many of them may not even know what free trade is.But they know what nuke power stands for (courtesy:the widely politicised nuclear tests) so there is no precipitating factor better than the nuke deal to turn around their opinion.

And as far as defence deals are concerned, a country would rather do business with its strategic partner compared to a neutral one.So if the nuke deal fails,the mrca order would go to russia and so will all other significant defence deals.And america would be preferred only for minor needs and the defence cooperation though growing, will grow at a snail's pace.

btw American's needs are many,they want access to indian markets,they want a powerful country to counter the potential threat posed by china and they want our support in the increasingly isolated positions they are finding themselves on the world stage.
India needs the US harder than the other way around.
U r missing the point, its not abt who needs whom harder,buts its abt wether they need each other or not.

Bush cannot run again. He's a lame duck President. There's nothing he can offer to the hold outs that would tip the scale.

I really do not understand the timing of this deal. If there were $10bil worth of reactors that India wants, then it's a different story. As much as those anti-deal Congressmen wants to spew about NPT, American jobs and especailly American wallets would dictate their votes.

Since there isn't, those Congressmen got nothing to lose by upholding America's word in the NPT and since most are democrats, stick it to the Republicans for advancing a nuclear holocaust.

The deal can still be passed but now, it's a matter of horse trading. Bush, however, got no horses to trade. It's what the Republicans are willing to give up ... and I don't see them offerring much.

I'm also seeing India repeating China's mistakes. China simply assumed that since they made a deal with the US Executive Branch, that their jobs were over. India is right now saying it's Bush's cabinet's job to pass this treaty.

Contrast that to the US-Canada Free Trade Agreement and its successor, the North American Free Trade Agreement. Canada's Foreign Minister stayed in Washington the last two days before the votes to last minute lobby reluctant Congressmen and Senators.

There's still alot of work to be done and it would be a mistake to assume, it's all Bush's part.

Officer,
There may not be any immediate goodies for the american public but iam sure the senators will comprehend the strategic importance of the deal.
Last time i heard,the indian secretary of state shyam saran was in US promoting the deal along with the NRI lobby which is strongly backing it.We can even expect the stronger jewish/israeli lobby supporting it.And after the backing of the senate panel by 16-2 yesterday,iam now even more sure.

A US Senate committee has backed a controversial plan to share civilian nuclear technology with India.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee took an hour to endorse the legislation by 16-2. It was cleared by a House of Representatives panel on Tuesday.


The deal offers US nuclear technology to India in exchange for inspectors' access to Indian civilian reactors.

The accord has been hailed as historic by some, but critics say it will damage non-proliferation efforts.

The BBC's Shahzeb Jillani in Washington says the bill is on target to be ratified by the full House and Senate in July.

Comfortable majority


The plans were described by Senator Richard Lugar, the Senate committee's Republican chairman, as "the most important strategic diplomatic initiative undertaken by President Bush".

President Bush in India

The proposed agreement reverses US policy to restrict nuclear co-operation with Delhi because it has not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), and has twice tested nuclear weapons in 1974 and 1998.

On Tuesday, the International Relations Committee of the House of Representatives voted 37-5 in support of Mr Bush's initiative.

Mr Bush finalised the agreement during a landmark trip to India in March.

Under the deal, energy-hungry India will get access to US civil nuclear technology and fuel, in return for opening its civilian nuclear facilities to inspection.

But its nuclear weapons sites will remain off-limits.

NUCLEAR POWER IN INDIA

* India has 14 reactors in commercial operation and nine under construction
* Nuclear power supplies about 3% of India's electricity
* By 2050, nuclear power is expected to provide 25% of the country's electricity
* India has limited coal and uranium reserves
* Its huge thorium reserves - about 25% of the world's total - are expected to fuel its nuclear power programme long-term
* Source: Uranium Information Center


Critics of the deal say it could boost India's nuclear arsenal and sends the wrong message to countries like Iran, whose nuclear ambitions Washington opposes.

India's main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party has termed the deal as "unacceptable".

It said that it would make India "perpetually dependent" on the US for all initiatives in the application of nuclear energy.

Senior BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi told reporters on Thursday that the part of the deal allowing India's nuclear installations to be inspected by the International Atomic Energy Agency was "very intrusive" and "immensely disruptive".

India has made clear that the final agreement must not bind it to supporting the US's Iran policy and does not prevent it from developing its own fissile material.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/south_asia/5130022.stm
 
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I can't see July. India must come to terms with the IAEA 1st and that paperwork must be submitted to Congress before any vote is to take place (unless they dropped the IAEA requirement ... which I doubt).

There are alot of strong voices out there. McCain is "tentatively for the deal" but not the way it is currently written. Clinton will definetely wants limits on India's fissible materials and testing. Leach will vote no.

It's way too close to call at the moment.
 
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objections are from both sides there are some reservations on part of US memebrs as well as some on part of Indian members parliament

i cant say the deal would be okyed by the US senat sooner or it will take some time but the deal has some complexities

the leftiest in indian parliament want Manmohan government to get it passed first from the parliament.

http://sify.com/news/fullstory.php?id=14239630


Left wants nuclear deal ratified by ParliamentSaturday, 01 July , 2006, 09:44
Irked over Prime Minister Manmohan Singh 'belying' his assurance in Parliament on the Indo-US nuclear deal, the Left parties on Friday demanded a constitutional amendment to make it binding on the Executive to get the nod of Parliament before entering into any bilateral or multi-lateral agreement.
Leaders of Communist Party of India, Communist Party of India (Marxist), Forward Bloc and Revolutionary Socialist Party said it was 'unfortunate' that the Executive was not Constitutionally bound to get such treaties ratified by Parliament.
They felt treaties that affect the whole country must have the sanction of Parliament and the Constitution should be amended accordingly. Left leaders, while asserting that they would raise the issue in the monsoon session of Parliament, said it was strange that such an important deal had not been ratified by Parliament.

CPI leaders A B Bardhan and Shamim Faizi said the Prime Minister had assured that India would open its civilian nuclear facilities for International Atomic Energy Agency inspections only after the deal gets the US Congress nod.
But the draft bill says the US will amend its Atomic Energy Act, vital to passing of the deal, only after India commits its facilities for IAEA safeguards in perpetuity, they added. "It is putting the cart before the horse," Bardhan said.
"In our country the executive [ministers] are going about signing any number of agreements—be it bilateral or multi-lateral—all of them binding on a vast country like ours with all their complexities and complications," he added.
The CPI general secretary emphasised since India occupied a leading geo-political position, developing countries looked up to it while approaching their problems in foreign policy, international trade and economic spheres.
"We do not approve of our ministers going abroad and signing deals with the World Trade Organisation and tell us at the end that this was done... Parliament sanction should be a must for such deals," Badhan said.
Endorsing Bardhan's view, CPI(M) floor leader in the Lok Sabha Basudev Acharya said that during debates in Parliament on the issue, the Left had always been demanding that any international deal or an agreement must have Parliament's sanction. "It has become necessary to amend the constitution for the purpose," he added. Forward Bloc National Secretary G Devrajan stressed that all international treaties, particularly matters relating to economy and foreign policy, must get Parliament nod. RSP leader and Rajya Sabha member Abani Roy said the step had become all the more necessary as such deals contained terms and conditions by which the country committed itself to international obligations.

http://sify.com/news/fullstory.php?id=14239630
 
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India, IAEA discuss nuke safeguards

http://www.hindustantimes.com/on/img/0.gif

Press Trust of India
New Delhi, July 8, 2006

Officials of India and the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) met here on Saturday to negotiate the proposed Safeguards Agreement, which is required to be put in place to allow the international community to resume nuclear trade with New Delhi.
The Indian side was headed by Joint Secretary (Disarmament) in the External Affairs ministry Hamid Ali Rao.
Officials of the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) also participated in discussions with the IAEA delegation.
Under the Indo-US civil nuclear deal signed in March during the visit of President George W Bush here, New Delhi and the IAEA have to work out an 'India-specific Safeguards Agreement' for supervision of civilian nuclear facilities of this country.
In the civil nuclear agreement, India had classified 14 of its 22 atomic reactors as civilian, which will be covered under the IAEA safeguards agreement.
After the signing of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal, Atomic Energy Commission chairman Anil Kakodkar had travelled to Vienna to hold preliminary discussions with IAEA officials on the proposed Safeguards agreement.
India is expected to seek an early conclusion of the agreement with IAEA in view of the US Congress' desire to see progress on it before the American Parliament approves a change of law to allow nuclear trade with New Delhi.
International Committees of both US House of Representatives and the Senate recently approved two bills providing for a change of law that will end India's nuclear apartheid.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/on/img/0.gifhttp://www.hindustantimes.com/on/img/0.gif










http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1738760,0008.htm
 
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The US on Friday allayed India's fears over the final shape of the nuclear deal between the two countries, maintaining that the pact would be on the lines of what was originally agreed upon by President George W Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

"I am confident that the final legislation of the nuclear deal will be on the lines of what George Bush agreed upon when he visited India," US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Richard Bucher said here.
During Bush's India visit in early March, he and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had followed upon their landmark statement of July 18, 2005 and arrived at an agreement on the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal.

However, critics say the legislation the US Congress and Senate are expected to finalise to allow nuclear commerce with India may contain new conditionalities on New Delhi.

"Apprehensions are there in India and in the US but we should not worry about this. We should only think about the final outcome of the legislation which I am confident will be within the framework of what both countries agreed," he said while addressing a function organised by the Indian Chamber of Commerce (ICC).

Boucher said one of the reasons for the civil nuclear energy cooperation agreement was that India get clean energy and "it does not push on the petroleum reserves".

"It (the deal) is the beginning of a new relationship. The USA recognises India as a rising global power and one of the emerging five largest economies of the world," he said.

"India and USA are natural allies," he said.
Boucher said the main challenges before India and the US are to combat HIV/AIDS, climatic change, narcotics and to jointly fight the common scourge of terrorism.

Earlier, the visiting US official met West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya at the state secretariat in the Writers Buildings and assured that the US would contribute towards the economic progress of this eastern Indian state.

"We are trying to organise trade delegations and we are talking to the US companies about the improved situation in West Bengal," Boucher said after the hour-long meeting with Bhattacharya.

Boucher also complimented the chief minister for his efforts to improve the fiscal condition of the state.

"Here is, within the system, somebody on the ground who is trying very hard to improve the economic life of the state," he said of Bhattacharya.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1760761,001301790001.htm
 
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