Detail delays signing of nuke pact with India
Washington Post
NEW DELHI — U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met with top Indian officials Saturday but was unable to sign a historic nuclear trade agreement between the two countries because of what appeared to be a bureaucratic hurdle.
Indian officials insisted that they will sign the deal only after President Bush does so in Washington.
The controversial pact, which seeks to end India’s 34-year-old nuclear isolation, was approved by the U.S. House and Senate last week. Rice said that Bush would sign it “very soon” but that “there are administrative delays that need to be worked through.”
“But let me be clear, the ‘123 agreement’ is done,” she said at a news conference with India’s foreign minister, Pranab Mukherjee. “It’s a matter of signing that agreement. I don’t want anyone to think we have open issues. We, in fact, don’t have open issues.”
But Mukherjee said that the agreement was in its “last lap” and that his government will be “in a position to sign” at a mutually convenient date only after Bush gives his approval.
Many Indians had expected Rice to sign the agreement during her visit, but an Indian foreign ministry advisory issued late Friday did not mention it. Before leaving Washington, Rice had told reporters that Bush “does not have to sign before I sign.”
After Bush signs the legislation, he must certify that the agreement is consistent with U.S. obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and that the United States will work with international agencies to further restrict transfers of technology related to uranium enrichment and reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel.
The deal facilitates India’s access to global nuclear fuel and technology even though the country has not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty. India conducted nuclear tests in 1974 and 1998, which led to international sanctions, and continues to produce fissile material. The subject of nuclear testing was at the heart of political opposition to the accord in India.
The agreement is expected to generate business worth more than $100 billion over the next two decades and tens of thousands of jobs in the United States and India. The deal also seeks to position India as a counterweight to China, which is rising as a global powerhouse.
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