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Rice
warns Congress against tinkering with US-India nuclear deal

US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
By P. Parameswaran
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com
04 06 06
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice warned Congress Wednesday that
altering a landmark civilian nuclear deal with India could destroy a
new partnership with the Asian giant.
US lawmakers are reportedly sceptical about the deal clinched by President
George W. Bush and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on March 2 because
New Delhi has refused to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
and has developed nuclear weapons.
But Rice, speaking at hearings in the Senate and House of Representatives,
pushed lawmakers to endorse the deal for energy-starved India to gain
access to long-denied civilian nuclear technology in return for placing
a majority of its nuclear reactors under international inspection.
"What would happen if this initiative were defeated or changed
in a way that fundamentally alters its substance?" she asked.
"All the hostility and suspicion of the past would be redoubled,"
she said, recalling Cold War tensions, when relations were "bedeviled"
and there was "structural ambivalence" between the two nations.
Rice cautioned lawmakers that a failed nuclear deal would also "hand
the enemies of this new relationship a great victory. We would slide
backward, when we should be striding forward," she said.
The top US diplomat said Russia, Britain, France and Australia had all
backed the deal, which could only be effective if Congress amended the
US Atomic Energy Act prohibiting nuclear sales to non-NPT signatories.
Critics argue that the agreement smacked of a double standard and could
embolden nuclear renegades such as Iran and North Korea even though
officials say India's nuclear non-proliferation record was exemplary.
Dick Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called
for "a thorough, bipartisan review" of the deal in the context
of non-proliferation goals, global energy requirements, environmental
concerns, and the US geo-strategic relationship with India.
Henry Hyde, head of the House international relations committee, said
"the principal area of contention by far" concerns the deal's
possible detrimental impact on global nonproliferation policy.
Democratic senators Joseph Biden and John Kerry said Congress was being
asked to approve the deal without having details of safeguards to be
imposed on India by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
"I am uncomfortable voting to change the overall structure without
seeing those safeguards, knowing what they're going to be," Kerry
said.
Rice said the head of India's atomic energy commission was travelling
to Vienna this week to begin negotiations with the IAEA on the safeguards
agreement.
She said she told Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran "in no uncertain
terms that this was going to be an issue with Congress and that they
ought to negotiate with the IAEA as quickly as possible."
US lawmakers also wanted India to implement its commitment to a multilateral
fissile material cut-off treaty.
"We've told the Indians they need to be helpful in that. They've
promised that they will. And we will press them very hard to help us
on that," Rice said.
She stoutly defended the deal, saying it would "clearly enhance
energy security, benefit the environment and does strengthen the international
nuclear nonproliferation regime."
On worries over India's nuclear weapons, she said New Delhi would never
accept a unilateral freeze or cap on its atomic arsenal considering
the security situation in its neighbourhood.
"No one can credibly assert that India would accept what would
amount to an arms control agreement that did not include other key countries
like China and Pakistan," she added.
It is not clear when Congress will make the changes to the law but the
Bush administration wants it to act before summer.
Some lawmakers were reported saying the complex issue would probably
not be taken up until after the November Congressional elections.
Once endorsed by Congress, the nuclear deal is widely expected to be
adopted by the international Nuclear Suppliers Group to effectively
end India's status as a nuclear pariah.
AFP
04 05 06 2156 GMT
Copyright
© 2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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