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Strong support for India nuclear deal: US

File image Indian NPP.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 30, 2008
The US State Department voiced hope Tuesday that a civilian nuclear pact with India will clear the last legislative hurdle here, saying it has "strong bipartisan support."

The deal, which would lift a three decade-old ban on civilian nuclear trade with India, could go to a vote in the Senate as early as Wednesday, after it passed the House of Representatives on Saturday.

"I certainly hope that it can get done, because it would be a landmark agreement for India and the United States," said US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who has lobbied Congress hard to back the agreement.

Approval of the agreement, the top US diplomat said, "would be a way to solidify" what she called deepening relations between "two of the world's largest and great democracies."

Robert Wood, Rice's deputy spokesman, reckoned that chances were good that the deal would pass. "It's got strong bipartisan support. So we hope to see it happen," Wood told reporters.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he expected the deal to go before a Senate vote on Wednesday.

"We're still working on agreement to consider the US-India nuclear agreement. I'm quite sure we can finalize that so there can be a vote on that tomorrow (Wednesday)," Reid said.

The House of Representatives on Saturday passed the pact with by a 298-117 vote.

Signed by President George W. Bush and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in July 2005, the deal offers India access to Western technology and cheap atomic energy in return for New Delhi allowing UN inspections of some of its nuclear facilities.

A positive vote would finally end a three decades-old ban on nuclear trade with India imposed after it carried out its first nuclear test in 1974 and refused to sign the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

But critics fear that the deal with India will set a bad example to Iran and other countries they suspect are seeking a nuclear bomb.

For the last few weeks, Rice and other administration officials has been telephoning and meeting with members of both houses of the Democrat-controlled Congress to ensure them that the agreement carries proper safeguards.

"I think we're all done with that (providing reassurances). Obviously, if there needs to be any further reassurances of materials provided, we will do it," a State Department official told reporters.

"We're not guaranteed that it's going to happen, obviously, but we're optimistic, and we've worked hard to sell this agreement to Congress," the official said on the condition of anonymity.

During the vote at the weekend, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sought to allay any lasting concerns, saying the legislation would boost US oversight on any US civilian nuclear assistance to the South Asian nation.

She welcomed the vote saying in a statement that the accord "furthers our countries' strategic relationship while balancing nuclear non-proliferation concerns and India's growing energy needs.

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France's Areva eyes deal to supply two reactors to India
Paris (AFP) Sept 29, 2008
French energy firm Areva hopes to profit from an expected Franco-Indian nuclear pact by supplying the Asian giant with two of the latest design of reactors, the group said Monday.







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