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Here is a historic deal that has sealed India's status as
an upcoming nuclear power and has erased the decade old US
policy with regard to this energy-starved nation, ushering
India into the world's exclusive nuclear club.
The
nuclear deal will give foreign businessmen the opportunity
to provide 20,000 megawatts of nuclear power for
India-business worth an estimated $60 billion. Optimism
over the deal drove
the Bombay exchange to an all-time record high.
"I
have always been touched by your warm praise for India and
the Indian people.
We sincerely acknowledge your deep personal commitment to
a closer economic and strategic
partnership between our two countries," the Prime
Minister said.
This
landmark agreement included a joint consensus on nuclear
reactors, fuel and expertise, in return of the acceptance
of international safeguards by the emerging Asian power.
This
accord would end India’s long isolation as a nuclear
maverick that defied world appeals and developed nuclear
weapons. India agreed to separate its tightly entwined
nuclear industry - declaring 14 reactors as commercial
facilities and eight as military - and to open the
civilian side to international inspections for the first
time.
The
nuclear deal will give foreign businessmen the opportunity
to provide 20,000 megawatts of nuclear power for
India-business worth an estimated $60 billion. Optimism
over the deal drove the Bombay exchange to an all-time
record high.
However,
the agreement must be approved by Congress, and Bush
acknowledged that might be difficult because India still
refuses to sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.
Segregation
of the civilian and military nuclear facilities had been
the obtrusive point in implementing the deal. But chief
negotiators Shyam Saran and Nicholas Burns, who had been
lucubrating for the past few days, rolled it out at the
last-minute.
Indeed
there was a general feeling if Bush had nothing to show on
the nuclear deal, his visit would be deemed a failure. But
now that an agreement on separation of nuclear facilities
has been announced with much grandeur, plenty still
remains to be done.
For
the nuclear agreement to be formalized three important
hurdles need to be crossed. One, US Congress has to make
amendments to American laws regarding non-proliferation.
Two,
US has to get approval from the Nuclear Suppliers Group
before the deal can come through. Finally, the IAEA needs
to prepare India-specific safeguards, so that nuclear
rules and regulations that apply to NPT countries won’t
apply to India.
It
is likely that approval by US Congress might prove to be
the biggest hurdle. There is considerable opposition to
the deal in Capitol Hill and the Bush administration will
have to pull out all stops to get it through.
Bush
sounded confident that he would be able to convince
Congress about merits of the deal. At an earlier speech
delivered at Asia Society and while briefing the press in
New Delhi, Bush has been at pains to link the deal with
his energy policy.
He
has said that the nuclear deal with India would help
reduce global oil prices and that it would lead to use of
cleaner energy and a better environment.
This
is recognition of the fact that in future India, along
with China, will be one of the largest consumers of oil as
well as the world's biggest polluters. Whether this
argument will wash with US Congress remains to be seen.
"I’m
trying to think differently, not stay stuck in the
past," said Bush, who has made improving relations
with India a goal of his administration. Celebrating their
agreement, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said,
"We have made history today, and I thank you."
The
deal was sealed a day before Bush begins an overnight
visit to Pakistan, a close ally struggling with its own
terrorism problems.
The
US-India nuclear deal was seen as the centerpiece of
better relations between the world’s oldest and most
powerful democracy and the world’s largest and
fastest-growing one.
India
has more than 1 billion people, and its booming economy
has created millions of jobs along with consumer demands
that have attracted American businesses. India’s middle
class has swelled to 300 million - more than the
population of the United States. Still, 80 percent of
Indians live on less than $2 a day.
Bush
acknowledged that Washington and New Delhi were estranged
during the Cold War, when India declared itself a
nonaligned nation but tilted toward Moscow. "Now the
relationship is changing dramatically," he said.
To
honor India’s independence leader, M.K. Gandhi, Bush, in
black socks, and Mrs. Bush in white slippers, laid a
wreath at a memorial to Gandhi and bowed their heads for a
moment of silence. They then walked around the slab of
black marble, marking the spot where Gandhi was cremated
in 1948, for the customary tossing of flower petals.
But
it’s doubtful that what happened next is in any of the
protocol books.
An
Indian photographer apparently didn’t get the coveted
shot of Bush throwing colorful petals on the memorial, and
so called for a redo. With a somewhat quizzical look, Bush
complied, and then threw even more petals to make sure
photographers had snapped what they needed.
Bush
and Singh announced new bilateral cooperation on issues
from investment, trade and health to agriculture, the
environment and even mangoes. Bush agreed to resume
imports of the juicy, large-pitted fruit after a 17-year
ban.
Besides
nuclear diplomacy, Bush also succeeded at the mango
maneuver or the mango diplomacy. During his visit to India
last week, the US President, George Bush, said he was
looking forward to eating Indian mangoes. Taking advantage
of this statement, the Centre is trying to export mangoes
to Washington this year itself.
India
is the biggest mango producer in the world accounting for
nearly half of the global production but it is only the
third largest exporter.
Mango
makes up 15 per cent of the total fresh fruits export from
the country.
Barring
a few hurdles, the Indian mango exporters face, in
particular irradiation, they are upbeat and will try and
drive home the advantage to export mangoes to the US.
Add
India’s prime minister to the list of people giving
President Bush a hard time for not visiting the country’s
famed Taj Mahal
As
the leaders toasted each other and their nation’s ties
before lunch alongside several hundred guests, Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh briefly paused and addressed Bush’s
wife, Laura.
"I
am truly sorry the president is not taking you to Taj
Mahal this time," Singh said. "I hope he will be
more chivalrous next time you are here."
The
president said Singh was not alone in his disappointment.
"I've been hearing about it from Laura ever since I
told her that we weren’t going," Bush said.
The
majestic 17th-century white marble mausoleum is a monument
of love, built by Mogul Emperor Shah Jahan in memory of
his favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal.
But
it’s in Agra, 130 miles east of New Delhi, a distance
that apparently was deemed too far for the president, even
to demonstrate his affection for the first lady.
The
other guests at the luncheon banquet included railway
Minister Lalu Prasad, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder
Singh, former Prime Minister IK Gujaral, US officials and
top chief executives.
"I
have always been touched by your warm praise for India and
the Indian people. We sincerely acknowledge your deep
personal commitment to a closer economic and strategic
partnership between our two countries," the Prime
Minister said.
Bush,
on his part, appreciated the Indian hospitality and warmth
extended to him and his wife once again and lauded the
country's human rights endeavor, its multiculturalism and
religious tolerance.
Amidst
the entire hullabaloo, the first lady Laura Bush broke off
from her husband’s entourage, after being greeted on her
debut trip to India with stately pomp and took off to
visit the set of the Indian version of "Sesame
Street."
Mrs.
Bush met the stars known to millions of Indian children.
She taught counting to a 5-year-old inquisitive girl named
Chamki and chatted with a giant, colorful lion named
Bhoombah who believes he is a descendant of one of India's
many former kings.
The
show is partly funded by the U.S. government and aimed at
India’s 157 million children under age six - equal to
more than half of the entire U.S. population. Mrs. Bush’s
episode is expected to reach an estimated 40 million
households when it airs in the coming months.
At
the show’s set - designed to look like a middle-class
Indian neighborhood - Mrs. Bush and Indian social activist
Nafisa Ali met Chamki at a phone booth that doubles as
cybercafe. Then they stopped outside a house to greet
Bhoombah, who asked in his gruff voice how the first lady
was doing.
"I’m
doing great," replied Mrs. Bush, who also visited the
set of the Egyptian version of the show during a trip to
Cairo last year. "I love to be with characters from
Sesame Street."
Afterward,
she shot her scene with Chamki, who sat on a swing hanging
from the branch of a tree as Bush and Ali helped her learn
to count.
It
took two takes, and then Bush headed out for "Prayas,"
a home for adolescent boys and girls, that helps care for
50,000 neglected street children.
Meanwhile,
in Pakistan, US President George W. Bush, an avid baseball
fan, tried his hand at a sport hugely popular in parts of
the old British empire-cricket- and was pronounced
"not bad" for a first-timer.
He
got a quick lesson on how to hold the bat from Shaharyar
Khan, chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board.
Then
the president was coached while batting at the wicket by
Salman Butt, a member of Pakistan’s cricket team, with
Inzamam-ul-Haq, the team captain, nearby to also lend his
expertise.
Bush,
in a blue shirt with sleeves rolled up, played with tennis
balls, which are much softer than stone-hard cricket
balls.
Pakistan’s
most famous-ever cricketer, former
captain-turned-politician Imran Khan, spent confined to
his home where authorities detained him to thwart his plan
to lead a march to protest against Bush’s visit.
Bush
has received more than a warm welcome from India. He will
go back with many prizes firmly in his pocket. Widely
regarded as the trip’s trophy is the deal for
cooperation on civilian nuclear technology, which will
give India access to U.S. nuclear know how and fuel.
Certainly, it is a huge public success for Bush. |