President George W. Bush's vaunted nuclear cooperation deal with India is facing
new difficulties which may prevent it taking effect this year, U.S. officials
and experts said on Tuesday.
Caught up with defense and homeland security issues, the U.S. Congress may
not give final approval to the agreement before ending its legislative session,
leaving the deal's fate to a new Congress that will take office in 2007, they
said.
Also, India has objected to key provisions, causing some U.S. officials to
question New Delhi's commitment. The deal would allow nuclear-armed India to buy
American atomic fuel and reactors for the first time in 30 years even though it
has not signed the nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.
U.S. Senate leaders plan to meet on Wednesday to discuss a possible timetable
for action but the hurdles are considerable, congressional sources said.
"It's unlikely to get done. We have limited legislative days left and much to
do," a congressional aide said.
Congress could adjourn as early as Sept. 29 but there are plans for a "lame
duck" session after the November election.
A senior U.S. official said the administration still hopes the Senate will
act. "There is strong bipartisan support for the legislation but their calendar
is complicated," he said.
The nuclear agreement was announced by Bush and Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh in July 2005. It cannot take effect until the U.S. Senate and the
House of Representatives change U.S. law banning nuclear cooperation with India
and approve technical details in a separate cooperation agreement.
Also, the Nuclear Suppliers Group, an international body which controls
nuclear exports, must change its rules and India must agree with the U.N.
nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), on inspecting
civilian nuclear facilities.
The House in July overwhelmingly approved the nuclear deal. It requires the
rising South Asian power to forgo future nuclear testing and cooperate with the
United States in curbing nuclear exports.
The Senate has not acted partly because of a jammed work schedule.
Congressional sources said despite Bush's rhetorical commitment, there is little
sign he is expending political capital to win passage.
Source: Reuters