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US Senate debates stalled Indian nuke deal
WASHINGTON—The U.S. Senate on Thursday finally began to debate
long-stalled legislation that would open the door to nuclear cooperation
between the United States and India for first time in three decades.
Critics planned to seek amendments that would mitigate their concerns
that the deal would encourage an arms race between India and nuclear
rival Pakistan.
But key Senate leaders who are prime authors of the legislation
expressed confidence that the bill would ultimately pass, putting India
a major step closer to being able to purchase U.S. nuclear fuel,
reactors and related technology.
“This legislation will allow the United States to engage in peaceful
nuclear cooperation while safeguarding U.S. national security and
non-proliferation efforts as well as congressional prerogatives,”
Republican Richard Lugar of Indiana, chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee told the Senate.
Lugar, a respected advocate of efforts to stem the spread of weapons of
mass destruction, called the nuclear agreement “the most important
strategic diplomatic initiative” undertaken by President George W. Bush.
Sen. Joseph Biden (news, bio, voting record), who is expected to become
committee chairman when Democrats take control of Congress in January
and who co-sponsored the bill with Lugar, stressed the need for
cooperation with India, one of the “pillars of security in the 21st
century.”
But Democratic Sen. Byron Dorgan (news, bio, voting record) of North
Dakota argued that the agreement would enable India — which never signed
the landmark nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty — to accelerate production
of nuclear weapons, increasing tensions with nuclear rival, Pakistan.
More broadly, Dorgan said, the deal repudiated decades of U.S. policy of
“telling the world it’s our responsibility and our major goal to stop
the spread of nuclear weapons.” “It’s a horrible mistake,” he said.
The deal, which would bring India in line with some key international
norms, was reached in principle by Bush and Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh in July 2005.
It would require the rising South Asian power to open civilian nuclear
facilities to international inspections, forgo future nuclear tests and
cooperate with the United States and other nations on halting the spread
of nuclear exports.
If the Senate approves the bill, it will have to reconcile differences
with the House of Representatives version, then both chambers would have
to vote again on a final bill. But that is not the end of the
road.—Agencies |