- Weather | Horoscope | Stocks
expressindia web
HomeBlogsCricketAstrologyShoppingHotelsTendersClassifieds OpinionsTravel
| Make this your homepage | Archive
Expressindia » Story

We are fully committed to nuclear deal, says US

Font Size -

Agencies

Posted online: Friday , March 28, 2008 at 03:19:50
Updated: Friday , March 28, 2008 at 03:19:50


Washington, March 28: The US has said it was “fully prepared” to move forward on the civilian nuclear agreement with India once New Delhi takes a decision on domestic political issues related to it.

“.... they had a discussion about where we stand. We made it clear that we are fully prepared once the Indian Government has taken certain steps to submit the agreements to the Congress so that they can be passed,” State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said when asked about the talks between US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Minister of External Affairs Pranab Mukherjee earlier this week.

Mukherjee wrapped up his two-day visit on Tuesday during which he held talks with President George W Bush and Rice. The Minister said the government was trying to build consensus on the deal as there were reservations from the Left and the BJP.

Though US lawmakers had been pressing on a July timeline, the White House said after the parleys that the deal had not reached a “now or never” stage.

“The Indian Government has some decisions to make and with respect to the agreement and its own domestic politics and those are decisions only the Indian Government can take and solely for them,” McCormack said.

He said the US was “still committed to doing what we can to move the agreement forward, but again the Indian Government is going to have to make some decisions for itself.” The spokesman also said that Afghanistan did not come up in the discussions between Rice and Mukherjee.

“... in the meetings that I attended, the issue of Afghanistan did not come up. Now, generally speaking we have encouraged all the countries in the region to do what they can to improve relations with one another, but also within the region.

McCormack said: “There are some real possibilities there if you look at a at the very least a North-South access running from India up through Central Asia opportunities for trade and energy cooperation...."

Ads by Google
Post Comments
Name* Email ID*
Subject* Country*
Message*
Characters remaining
 
TERMS OF USE: The views represented here are not neccesarily endorsed by www.expressindia.com and its allied websites. All messages will be moderated and no message that has inflammatory, abusive, derogatory language or any language deemed unfit for publication by the editor will be displayed. Though it will be endeavoured that as many messages as possible be displayed, there will be time lag between the submission and publication of the messages. The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message.
I agree to the terms of use.
nuclear deal by jati hoon on 28 Mar 2008

Politics is a art of diplomacy, so keep on talking, keep on talking.

Sikh student's turban set afire in US Study finds desk jobs potentially life-threatening Madhuri bids adieu to films, for now Rescue ops on as China quake toll nears 12,000 Controversial ‘godman’ taken into custody




Group Websites
Indian Express Financial Express Screen Loksatta Kashmir Live Biz Publications
Featured Services
© 2008 Indian Express Newspapers (Mumbai) Ltd. All rights reserved
The Indian Express Group | Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Work With Us | Site Map
Rate this Article
0
Average Rating

Bookmark this Page
  • What is this?
    Digg

    On Digg, users share intersting online content by submitting links to the site. At that point, the Digg audience can vote on whether or not they think it is interesting. Articles with lots of votes, or "diggs," rise up higher on the site's main page and topical subsection pages. Another form of social sharing, this site also lets users categorize the content they are submitting to Digg and label it with descriptions of up to 350 characters. Digg users can also submit comments on each content item submitted to the site.

    To register, go to: http://digg.com/register

    del.icio.us

    At its most basic level, del.icio.us allows users to save their bookmarks online. Del.icio.us also gives users the ability to "tag" their bookmarks with descriptive category names. For example, someone who has bookmarked multiple Web pages that deal with the Washington Nationals baseball team could tag those links with any terms they want, like "baseball," "nationals," "natsfan," etc.

    As members of a "social bookmarking" community, del.icio.us sers can also see how many other people have bookmarked the same pages, and they can look at those users' bookmark collections to find other interesting online content.

    To register, go to: http://del.icio.us/register

    Reddit

    Reddit allows users to submit news articles and other online content to the site. Users also give articles a thumbs-up or thumbs-down. Reddit then uses those votes to build a user profile and to find articles to recommend to you. Users can also submit comments on items posted to the site.

    To register, go to: http://reddit.com/login