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Bush, Singh discuss US-India nuke pact

by Staff Writers
Crawford, Texas (AFP) Aug 14, 2007
US President George W. Bush and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday discussed the controversial US-India civilian nuclear energy agreement, the White House said.

Their telephone conversation came as US officials look for ways to overcome stiff opposition in India and in the US Congress to the pact, which the embattled Bush sees as a key foreign policy victory.

"What I would point out to you is that the president and Prime Minister Singh have been very supportive of it, as it is debated there in India" after being concluded last month, said Bush spokeswoman Dana Perino.

"We'll see if we can get you some more, in terms of how we can support Prime Minister Singh. The civil nuclear agreement has many wonderful aspects to it, one of them being bringing India into the system of some monitoring and compliance," she added.

The accord, which covers civil nuclear technology and seeks to bring India into the loop of global atomic commerce after a gap of three decades, was rejected almost immediately by the opposition and Singh's communist allies.

"You have a country that has explosive population that very much needs access to clean-burning electricity, of which nuclear power certainly would be," Perino told reporters while Bush was on his Texas ranch.

"And that would help raise economic levels across the country, help create jobs, as well as make sure that people aren't suffering from the ill effects that you can get from traditional energy uses like coal, that can harm people's health," she said.

"And nuclear power, obviously, doesn't have greenhouse gases, which can contribute to helping us reach the goals that the president has set for reducing greenhouse gas emissions," said Perino.

The spokeswoman noted that Bush had invited major global polluters, including China and India, to Washington for a September 27-28 conference on curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

The deal clinched in Washington last month allows India to buy civilian nuclear technology while possessing nuclear weapons, making it an exception under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

One of the trickiest issues -- whether India's unilateral decision to test nuclear weapons would end the deal -- appeared to have been sidestepped.

The deal must also be approved by the US Congress and other nations under the umbrella of the Nuclear Suppliers Group.

Bush also congratulated Singh and India on the 60th anniversary of its independence, and the two also discussed efforts to restart stalled global trade talks, as well as regional security issues, said Perino.

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