 | - 4 to be charged in record ecstasy case, PG decides
(Aug 06, 2007)
- Deadlock at Rosh Pinah
(Aug 06, 2007)
- Computer theft ring cracked
(Aug 06, 2007)
- Our Nicolas Sarkozy must please stand up!
(May 17, 2007)
- Electricity in Namibia - Quo Vadis?
(May 17, 2007)
- Political Perspective
(May 17, 2007)
- Attacks On Media Persist
(May 17, 2007)
- 'Not guilty', says family shooting suspect Endjala
(May 16, 2007)
- Racist backlash angers City Lutheran pastor
(May 16, 2007)
- Episode two in rugby’s Who’s the Boss?
(May 15, 2007)
|
|  |
 | - All topics
- Buisiness and Economy (May 10, 2007)
- Computer Games (May 11, 2007)
- Entertainment Music, Movies .... (Aug 06, 2007)
- Enviroment (May 17, 2007)
- General Health (May 16, 2007)
- International News (May 08, 2007)
- Namibia in the News (Aug 06, 2007)
- Namibian Elections 2004 (May 16, 2007)
- PostNuke (May 16, 2007)
- Religion (May 13, 2007)
- Science and Technology (May 16, 2007)
- Sport (May 17, 2007)
- Travel, Tourism (May 15, 2007)
|
|  |
|
|
 | | Posted by admin on Saturday, April 01, 2006 - 09:11 PM |
|  |
 |  | India's foreign secretary has urged US lawmakers to back a landmark
bilateral nuclear deal and resist making changes that would slow it
down.
Mr Saran urged bipartisan support for the deal in the US Congress
Shyam Saran told key lawmakers in Washington on Friday
that the deal was the result of complex talks and they should not
"upset the balance".
The deal giving India access to nuclear technology must gain Congress approval.
Mr Saran also said that reports that an Iranian naval ship had received training in India were "misleading".
'Courtesy visit'
Mr Saran said he expected Congress would put aside doubts over the controversial nuclear deal and give it its backing.
The agreement was finalised during US President George W Bush's visit to India last month.
India would be given access to US civil nuclear technology and open its nuclear facilities to inspection.
[This agreement] wasn't pulled as a rabbit out of a hat
But India has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) and critics say the deal sends the wrong message to
countries like Iran, whose nuclear ambitions Washington opposes.
Mr Saran said the deal was hammered out through complex
negotiations and lawmakers should not upset the "very, very delicate
balance".
"If you start making revisions and changes, that balance is likely to be upset," he said.
Mr Saran said there would be a "price to pay" if the deal foundered.
"It should be seen as a part and parcel of a much larger
relationship which has developed between the two countries," Mr Saran
said.
He said there would be a "a loss in terms of the built up expectations and enthusiasm" if the agreement was not backed.
The foreign secretary also sought to play down a visit by an Iranian naval vessel to India.
US lawmaker Tom Lantos had expressed misgivings over the
vessel but Mr Saran told him the ship was on a "courtesy visit" not a
training mission.
"Somehow somebody has given the impression that India
has engaged in training the Iranian navy or there were some joint
exercises, which is completely misleading," Mr Saran said. | |
|  |
|
|
|
|