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| India and the US have concluded a
civil nuclear deal and a number of cooperation deals in trade,
agriculture, science and technologies on Thursday.(Photo:
Xinhua) | NEW DELHI, March 2
(Xinhuanet) -- India and the United States have pushed forward their
strategic partnership by clinching a civil nuclear deal and a number of
cooperation deals in trade, agriculture, science and technologies on Thursday.
The two countries finalized the plan to separate
India's civilian and military nuclear facilities, a breakthrough to realize the
Indo-U.S. overall civil nuclear cooperation, after Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh held a two-hour talk with visiting U.S. President George W. Bush
on the second day of his visit to India.
New Delhi is in the air that the two countries are
coming closer and bilateral relations seemed at an all time best.
Singh announced that while India had "successfully"
prepared plan for separation of its civilian and military nuclear reactors, it
was now up to the U.S. Congress to take it further.
In response, Bush said: "I am looking forward to
working with our United States Congress to change decades of law that will
enable us to move forward in this important initiative."
The nuclear deal, first reached during Singh's visit
to Washington in July last year, will allow India access to uranium, U.S.
civilian nuclear technology and bring India out of nuclear isolation.
There are concerns that the move will
set a bad example for other countries as India has refused to sign
the Non-Proliferation Treaty after it conducted nuclear tests in 1998.
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Two high-ranking officials
from both US and India sides.(Photo:
Xinhua) | To address the concerns, Bush said: "Proliferation is
certainly a concern and a part of our discussions, and we've got a good faith
gesture by the Indian government that I'll be able to take to the Congress."
New Delhi and Washington have had a hard bargain on
finalizing a separation plan that satisfied both. They used to have differences
over whether India's fast breeder reactor and some other research projects
should be put in civilian list.
How these differences were ironed out are yet to be
revealed as the Indian government did not release the details of the plan.
But New Delhi Television quoted sources as saying
that India planned to open 14 of its 22 reactors for international inspection.
Two days before Bush's arrival here for a three-day
visit, Singh had assured the Indian Parliament that India would not, in any
case, put its fast-breeder reactors under international safeguards.
With the separation plan sealed, Bush will have to
push the Congress to amend the law and get the Nuclear Suppliers' Group to
accept it so that Washington can fulfill its promise to supply fuel and
technologies to New Delhi.
Besides progress in the nuclear deal, the two
countries added more on their bilateral ties development.
"Many of the areas that our cooperation now covers
are essential to India's national development. They include energy, agriculture,
science and technology, trade and investment, high technology, health and a
clean environment. This is a highly ambitious agenda, one that is befitting our
growing strategic partnership," Singh said.
The joint statement, announced by the two leaders
Thursday, outlined how India and the United States endorsed the efforts of the
U.S.-India Trade Policy Forum on reduction of barriers to trade and investment,
aiming at doubling bilateral trade in three years.
The two nations also agreed to expand cooperation in agriculture, science and technology, and civil space, including space exploration, satellite navigation and earth science. Enditem [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] |