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full details of nuclear deal between india & usa

2007-01-14 07:11:15 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in News & Events Current Events

6 answers

the full details are not yet available to the public.

2007-01-14 12:59:52 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

India-US-Nuke Deal
India has made it clear that it would not accept any legal binding on nuclear testing.

"There is no question of signing the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). We have our voluntary moratorium (on nuclear testing). That position remains," Doordarshan News said here Saturday, quoting National Security Adviser M K Narayanan who was talking with reporters while accompanying Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on his three-day visit to the Philippines.

He was asked about US insistence on a legal binding banning nuclear tests and putting a cap on fissile material.

Noting that it has certain concerns with regard to the recently- enacted US law on civil nuclear cooperation, India has already made it clear that it will "walk out" of the deal if at any point it seems to undermine its national interests.

New Delhi, however, expressed confidence that the elements over which it has "genuine" reason for concern, including conditional access to reprocessing technology and reprocessing of spent fuel, would be addressed in the 123 agreement being negotiated to operationalize the deal.

Prime minister's special envoy on nuclear issue Shyam Saran recently said India has conveyed to the US that it was not ready to accept any legally-binding provision on future nuclear testing in the 123 agreement and emphasized that New Delhi would agree to fissile material control only under any multilateral framework.

He said India will retain the right to conduct nuclear test but would have to be prepared for repercussions such as snapping of the civil nuclear cooperation with the US since the waivers in the recent act do not apply to future detonations.

"There are concerns, of course... If at any point, it becomes apparent that it (deal) is something which would undermine India's national interests, we will walk out, no matter how much political investment has been made," he said.

2007-01-14 08:14:45 · answer #2 · answered by sunnyd_137 3 · 1 0

The deal is in the pastime and progression of the rustic.Our villages which have under no circumstances had electrical energy will all burn astounding.that's ridiculous for the Congress social gathering to buckle all the way down to the blackmail of the communists who're those hostile to any type of progression.they favor to maintain the rustic nevertheless in the bullock cart age even as some thing else of the international has graduated to the jet age.quickly they'd all bypass one step extra into the area vacation age and we are able to nevertheless be flogging the bullocks if we enable the communists have their way.

2016-10-31 02:23:49 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Lets just say.. India got the better of the deal..

2007-01-17 19:58:47 · answer #4 · answered by BigWashSr 7 · 0 0

it is a legal cinformation from us india is a nuclear power

2007-01-14 12:59:55 · answer #5 · answered by keral 6 · 0 0

Internet can throw some light.

2007-01-14 07:52:48 · answer #6 · answered by minootoo 7 · 0 0

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