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U.S. President George W. Bush (R) welcomes India's Foreign Minister Pranab Kumar Mukherjee to a meeting in the Oval Office at the White House March 24, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, March 24 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice met with Indian Minister of External Affairs Prenab Kumar
Mukherjee here Monday with the two sides having pledged to beef up cooperation
relations in various fields.
"We have had an opportunity to talk about the deepening of our economic ties, of our defense
cooperation, the deepening of our dialogue about regional issues," Rice told
reporters after the meeting.
On the U.S.-India civil nuclear cooperation deal,
Rice insisted that it is "good for both sides and good for the future of
nonproliferation ... we will continue to work on that agreement." But the
secretary did not elaborate.
Mukherjee, who joined the briefing, spoke highly of
the development of India-U.S. relations, saying "we agreed to maintain the
positive momentum, generate particularly by the visits of Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh in the United States in July 2005 and that of President Bush to
India in March 2006. "
The Indian minister also called the U.S.-India civil
nuclear cooperation deal a "landmark agreement." Admitting "we have some
political problems in our country," he noted "Currently, we are engaged in
resoling those problems."
The United States and India reached the historic
agreement on civil nuclear cooperation in March 2006, under which India will get
access to U.S. civil nuclear technology on condition that India is to separate
nuclear facilities for civilian and military use and open its nuclear facilities
for inspection. The nuclear deal has met with strong opposition in both India
and the United States.