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Bush 'working hard' to get nuclear deal approved

Even as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh flew back to New York after a meeting with President George Bush, the India-US nuclear agreement was headed for a close finish on Friday with an approval resolution being introduced in the House of Representatives but with a controversial provision in the Senate version remaining intact.

  • IANS
  • Published: 23:32 September 26, 2008
  • Gulf News

Washington: Even as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh flew back to New York after a meeting with President George Bush, the India-US nuclear agreement was headed for a close finish on Friday with an approval resolution being introduced in the House of Representatives but with a controversial provision in the Senate version remaining intact.

The bill introduced Thursday by the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Howard Berman, like the Senate Committee version, makes the implementing of the 123 Agreement subject to the provisions of the Atomic Energy Act, the Hyde Act and any other applicable US law.

But contrary to the general impression, there is no reference to "testing" except by implication in either bill.

Both bills only affirm "it is the policy of the United States to seek to prevent the transfer to India of nuclear equipment, materials, or technology from other participating governments in the Nuclear Suppliers Group or from any other source."

National security

While the US Atomic Energy Act provides for automatic termination of nuclear cooperation agreements under Section 123 if India conducts a nuclear test, Section 129 of the same law also gives the president authority to issue a waiver on grounds of national security.

India has all along maintained that it would be bound only by its 123 agreement. This too provides for consultations that would "take into account whether the circumstances that may lead to termination or cessation resulted from a Party's serious concern about a changed security environment or as a response to similar actions by other States which could impact national security."

Berman, who had been earlier reluctant to move the deal forward due to some reservations about the Nuclear Suppliers' Group waiver to India, introduced the bill even as Manmohan Singh flew into Washington for a meeting with Bush amid some expectations that the agreement could still be through before he returned to New York.

Bush assured Manmohan Singh that his administration was "working hard to get it passed by the Congress as quickly as possible."

"The nuclear deal has taken a lot of work on both our parts, a lot of courage on your part and of course we want the agreement to satisfy you and get it out of our Congress," Bush told Manmohan Singh in the presence of journalists at the White House's Oval Office.

But the Indian leader had to leave for New York at night without the agreement in his pocket after an emotional farewell meeting with Bush marked by much mutual encomiums.

As the Senate version is slightly different, the upper chamber too didn't vote on the measure Thursday apparently waiting for the final House version to emerge.

If the two passed versions are not identical, a select committee would have to meet in a "conference" to reconcile them before Bush can sign in it into law.

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