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House expected to approve US-India nuclear energy bill

by Stephanie Griffith
Washington (AFP) Jul 26, 2006
ATTENTION -, ADDS quotes, detail /// The US House of Representatives was expected late Wednesday to approve a controversial US-India civilian nuclear energy deal, which supporters said will be the cornerstone of a new strategic alliance between the two countries.

"This will be known as the day when Congress signaled definitively the end of the Cold War paradigm governing interactions between New Delhi and Washington," US Representative Tom Lantos, the top Democrat on the House of Representatives' International Affairs Committee, said on the chamber floor.

He said passage of the bill -- the United States and India Nuclear Cooperation Promotion Act -- would launch "a new era of mutual respect and cooperation."

A vote on the measure is likely in the House of Representatives late Wednesday. The bill emerged after a meeting last year between US President George W. Bush and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Democratic and Republican leaders in both houses of Congress have expressed strong support for the bill. If it becomes law, the measure would reverse some three decades of US policy to restrict access to nuclear technology.

The United States has withheld its civilian nuclear know-how from India since 1974, when it conducted its first nuclear test.

India tested nuclear weapons in 1974 and 1998 and, as a result, is currently banned by the United States and other major powers from buying fuel for atomic reactors and other related equipment.

But some lawmakers have expressed doubts about extending civil nuclear technology to India, which is not a member of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, without first putting the most stringent of safeguards in place.

"We must continue to strengthen our relationship with India while still protecting our security interests at home and abroad," Democrat Ike Skelton said.

"Congress must exert strong oversight over any nuclear agreement between our two nations to ensure that we do not enable India to increase its nuclear weapons arsenal."

Under the deal, the United States will aid the development of civil nuclear power in India in return for New Delhi placing its civil nuclear facilities under International Atomic Energy Agency inspections.

Supporters greet the deal as a sign of a geopolitical re-alliance following the Cold War, one which allows India to jump-start its quest for alternative energy, as its economy booms.

Detractors say, however, they are not convinced that India can be trusted to safeguard critical atomic secrets, or to refrain from using atomic material to gain an edge over neighboring rival power, Pakistan.

"We are deeply concerned that this proposal, in its current form, will blow a hole in the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, allow India to greatly increase the size of its nuclear arsenal, and potentially spark a nuclear arms race in Asia," House Democrat Ed Markey told a press conference Tuesday.

Markey said the bill would allow India to dramatically increase its production of nuclear weapons.

"The agreement would create a huge exemption for India from US non-proliferation laws and international norms," he said. "By shipping India fuel for its civilian reactors, this legislation potentially frees up their entire supply of domestic uranium for use in weapons."

He added: "This will result in a bonanza of newly available nuclear material for weapons, which experts estimate could allow them to increase their nuclear weapons production from seven warheads a year to 40-50 warheads a year."

Critics also fear the bill could ratchet up the arms race in Asia.

"Just yesterday the world learned that Pakistan is building a huge new plutonium-production reactor, which will allow them to increase their weapons production from two to three weapons a year to 40-50," Markey said.

"If you think that Pakistan's new reactor and this nuclear deal with India aren't related, you're fooling yourself."

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No sign from NKorea on nuke talks: US
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) Jul 26, 2006
North Korea has given no sign that it is willing to rejoin talks on its nuclear program on the sidelines of regional security talks here, US envoy Christopher Hill said Wednesday.







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