Leading Indian-American entrepreneur and activist Swadesh Chatterjee in his book 'Building Bridges: How Indian-Americans Brought the United States and India Closer Together', provides a first-hand account of the involvement of the influential community in getting the deal through the US Congress.
"The Indian government hired high-powered and high-priced lobbyists to press their case, but it was really the Indian-American community that took the lead in the campaign for civil nuclear agreement," writes Chatterjee.
"Swadesh, you are wasting your time," the then powerful Congressman, Gary Ackerman, a leading lawmaker of the House Caucus on India and Indian Americans told him, when he went and met him and sought his support.
"This deal is dead on arrival," Ackerman told Chatterjee, according to the book.
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"There were few takers for the bill," Chatterjee told PTI here.
"But we were determined to get the bill through the Congress. This we strongly felt was in the best interest of both India and the US. We believed that this was the golden opportunity for the two countries to come together," Chatterjee said.
"Swadesh, I need your help getting this accord through Congress," Sen was quoted as saying in the book.
"How can we get this done? Who should U reach out to? What organizations should I work with?" the Ambassador asked.
"The task was not that easy. It was like moving a mountain. But we finally did it," he said.
When a small group of some 20 top Indian Americans met Sen at a club near the Indian Embassy in Washington DC, Chatterjee told the job was not that easy.
"We need to unite Indian Americans and work together, but as you all know, we are two million Indian Americans, but we have 10 million egoes. We need to keep those egos in the deep freezer for a few years," Chatterjee told the group.