Indian envoy upbeat on US nuclear pact, Bush visit (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-23 09:38
A senior Indian envoy said on Thursday he was confident India and the United
States would be able to implement a new civilian nuclear cooperation deal that
critics say could harm efforts to curb the spread of nuclear weapons.
After two days of talks with senior U.S. officials and lawmakers, Indian
Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran told reporters he was "going back very encouraged
by the environment with regard to the implementation of this agreement."
"We came to the conclusion that we should be in the position to make a
significant advance on this initiative before the visit of President Bush," he
said, referring to the U.S. leader's plans to visit India in early 2006.
At a landmark summit on July 18, U.S. President George W. Bush and Indian
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh signed a deal that would give India access to
nuclear technology, including fuel and reactors, that it has been denied for 25
years.
The agreement, which must be approved by the U.S. Congress, commits India to
place nuclear facilities associated with its civilian energy program under
international inspection.
US officials met with Indian Foreign Secretary
Shyam Saran, pictured 13 December 2005, to discuss democracy and security
in South Asia, United Nations reform, trade and investment, a State
Department spokesman
said.[AFP/File] | Non-proliferation experts and some U.S. lawmakers have criticized Bush's
decision to end Washington's two-decade-long policy of denying India access to
nuclear technology. India rejects the nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty and has
developed nuclear weapons in a race with nuclear-armed rival Pakistan.
In a two-day visit to Washington, Saran met with US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Richard Lugar and
senior Pentagon and Department of Energy officials.
While sounding upbeat, Saran did not give details about how Washington and
New Delhi would implement the nuclear deal. He said a second round of talks
would be held in India next month.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters the Bush
administration would ask Congress to change U.S. laws to facilitate the atomic
deal once India presented a plan to separate its civilian and military nuclear
programs.
"When we have a plan that is able to be implemented, in our view, then that's
the point at which we would go to the Congress to ask for some changes in the
law," he said.
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