U.S Congress poised to approve India nuclear deal
By
IANS
Washington: The landmark India-U.S nuclear deal is poised to clear the last hurdle with the Senate and the House conferees reporting success in breaking a logjam over a compromise enabling legislation.
The conferees, appointed by the two chambers to evolve a formula that would not only reconcile their differing versions but also substantially address New Delhi's concerns over the final bill, tabled their report in the House at 3.27 p.m.
The final bill combining provisions of the two versions is expected to come up for vote in both the House and Senate on Friday before it goes to President George Bush to sign it into law and reopen doors for nuclear commerce between India and United States after 30 years.
"This legislation will allow the United States to engage in peaceful nuclear cooperation while safeguarding US national security and non-proliferation efforts, as well as Congressional prerogatives," the four conference managers stated, commending the new legislation to the Congress.
"It is an opportunity to build a vital strategic partnership with a nation that shares our democratic values and will exert increasing influence on the world stage," said Senate and House foreign relations panels chairpersons Dick Lugar and Henry Hyde and ranking Democrats on the two panels, Joe Biden and Tom Lantos.
The bill reflects the widely held view in both the House and the Senate that peaceful nuclear cooperation with India can serve multiple US foreign policy and national security objectives, but that this must be secured in a manner that minimises potential risks to the global non-proliferation regime, they said.
The conference agreement will help solidify New Delhi's commitments to implement strong export controls, separate its civilian nuclear infrastructure from its weapons programme, and place additional civilian facilities under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards.
An agreement for peaceful nuclear cooperation with India would be a powerful incentive for India to cooperate closely with the United States in halting proliferation and abstaining from additional tests of nuclear weapons, they said.
In addressing India's concerns over the Iran issue, the conference changed the provision making the deal contingent on New Delhi aligning its Iran policy with that of Washington from a condition to an "expectation".
"The conferees, along with both Houses, place great emphasis on their expectation that India's full cooperation with efforts by the US and the international community to prevent Iran from acquiring the capability to produce nuclear weapons will be forthcoming," the report said.
There was no official word on what had held up the legislation, but reports suggested that House Republican Majority leader John Boehner, one of nine conferees, wanted an unrelated clause to increase India's H1-B visa quota to piggy ride on the bill.
The conferees, appointed by the two chambers to evolve a formula that would not only reconcile their differing versions but also substantially address New Delhi's concerns over the final bill, tabled their report in the House at 3.27 p.m.
The final bill combining provisions of the two versions is expected to come up for vote in both the House and Senate on Friday before it goes to President George Bush to sign it into law and reopen doors for nuclear commerce between India and United States after 30 years.
"This legislation will allow the United States to engage in peaceful nuclear cooperation while safeguarding US national security and non-proliferation efforts, as well as Congressional prerogatives," the four conference managers stated, commending the new legislation to the Congress.
"It is an opportunity to build a vital strategic partnership with a nation that shares our democratic values and will exert increasing influence on the world stage," said Senate and House foreign relations panels chairpersons Dick Lugar and Henry Hyde and ranking Democrats on the two panels, Joe Biden and Tom Lantos.
The bill reflects the widely held view in both the House and the Senate that peaceful nuclear cooperation with India can serve multiple US foreign policy and national security objectives, but that this must be secured in a manner that minimises potential risks to the global non-proliferation regime, they said.
The conference agreement will help solidify New Delhi's commitments to implement strong export controls, separate its civilian nuclear infrastructure from its weapons programme, and place additional civilian facilities under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards.
An agreement for peaceful nuclear cooperation with India would be a powerful incentive for India to cooperate closely with the United States in halting proliferation and abstaining from additional tests of nuclear weapons, they said.
In addressing India's concerns over the Iran issue, the conference changed the provision making the deal contingent on New Delhi aligning its Iran policy with that of Washington from a condition to an "expectation".
"The conferees, along with both Houses, place great emphasis on their expectation that India's full cooperation with efforts by the US and the international community to prevent Iran from acquiring the capability to produce nuclear weapons will be forthcoming," the report said.
There was no official word on what had held up the legislation, but reports suggested that House Republican Majority leader John Boehner, one of nine conferees, wanted an unrelated clause to increase India's H1-B visa quota to piggy ride on the bill.
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