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India, US look to steer N-deal past issues

By Sridhar Krishnaswami in Washington
April 30, 2007 10:29 IST
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Indian and United States officials will on Tuesday hold talks on ironing out differences on a proposed agreement to operationalise the civilian nuclear deal.

Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon, who arrived in Washington on Monday, will interact with the Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky in the context of the Global Issues Forum but the senior Indian official's trip has assumed importance against the backdrop of a perception in Washington that negotiations on the 123 Agreement were not moving in the pace it should be.

Menon will on Tuesday hold discussions with the US Under Secretary Nicholas Burns amid 'frustration' in the US at the slow pace of negotiations and India's insistence on right to reprocess spent nuclear fuel and perennial cooperation even if it were to conduct an atomic test.

They will be joined in their discussions by senior officials of the two sides. In fact, Menon and top officials of the two sides will interact in the evening itself at a working dinner hosted by Burns.

Significantly, the meeting between Menon and Burns will take place ten days after senior officials from the two sides met in the South African city of Cape Town.

Indian officials had said that 'some progress' was made during the discussions but some differences remained for which further parleys were required.

India, while noting its declared policy of unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing, refuses to accept it as legally binding by including a clause in the 123 Agreement.

New Delhi insists that civilian nuclear cooperation should not be affected if India were to conduct a nuclear test and should be treated at par with other nuclear weapon countries in this regard.

The top Indian official will on Monday attend the Fifth Meeting of the United States-India Global Issues Forum at the State Department, which is being hosted by Dobriansky. The first meeting of the GIF took place in 2002.

At least four sets of issues are to be discussed between India and the United States at the Global Issues Forum with the first pertaining to democracy issues, as it pertains to the community of democracies; the United Nations Democracy Fund and in the evaluation of the number of grants that have already been made and if a second tranche is required.

In the realm of democracy, officials say Afghanistan will merit some detailed attention. The United States, it is being stressed, is highly appreciative of the role played by India in the movement of democratic initiatives in Afghanistan.


The second set of issues that are to be discussed at the GIF will be trafficking in persons and refugee issues both within the framework of the US and UN. A third set of discussion topics will be around the Human Rights Committee that has been recently established of which the United States is not a member.

Washington and New Delhi will also be dealing with such issues as science and technology, climate change and avian flu.
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Sridhar Krishnaswami in Washington
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