INT81
International/DiplomacyRice to visit
India next month to wrap up n-dealBy Manish Chand and Arun Kumar New
York/Washington, Sep 26 IANS With the
nuclear deal poised for an approval by the US Congress, Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice
will visit
India next month to
sign the 123 bilateral agreement, that
will seal the landmark deal. "We are discussing the possibility of the visit of the Secretary of
State to
India. We have been trying it for sometime and looking for possibility of dates," Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon told
reporters Thursday night after talks between US President George Bush and
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. "Rice
will come to
India early next month. If the Congress approves the 123 pact, it
will be signed during Rice's visit," an official, privy to
nuclear negotiations, told IANS. The
India-US 123 pact, the bilateral accord that set terms for
nuclear business between the two
countries,
will be signed by External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee and Rice. Rice could not make it to an exclusive dinner Bush hosted for Manmohan Singh and his close aides Thursday at Old
Family Dining Room in the White
House as she was working overtime to swing Democrats to expedite Congressional approval for the
nuclear civilian agreement.The US
House of Representatives is poised to take up an approval resolution Friday that could lead to the Congressional approval, which
will effectively finalise the deal. The Congress is scheduled to break Sep 26 for the Nov 4
elections, but indications are that the two
chambers may
work through the weekend and maybe even into Monday to deal with the Bush administration's $700 billion
bail-out plan to save the US
financial system from its worst
crisis in decades.The Bush administration is also working overtime to ensure that the
India nucelar acord is wrapped up by the time Manmohan Singh concludes his five-day visit to the US Saturday. In his talks with Mammohan Singh at the White
House, Bush assured the
Indian prime minister that his administration was "working hard to get the deal passed as quickly as possible". He also underlined that Washington
wanted the deal to satisfy
New Delhi - a veiled
reference to some contentious provisions in the
bill which are being opposed by
India. The
bill introduced Thursday by
House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Howard Berman, like the Senate Committee version, makes the implementing 123 Agreement subject to the provisions of the Atomic
Energy Act, the Hyde Act and any other applicable US
law.But contrary to the general impression, there is no
reference to "testing" except by implication in either
bill.
India has maintained that it is only bound by the 123 agreement and does not
comment on internal political process in another
country. As the Senate version is slightly different, the upper
chamber too didn't vote on the measure Thursday, apparently waiting for the final
House version to emerge. If the two passed versions are not identical, a select committee would have to meet in a "conference" to reconcile them before Bush can
sign in it into
law.--Indo-Asian
News Servicemc/rn/vt 555
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