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'India-US ties made remarkable progress after nuke deal'

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Press Trust of India Washington
The remarkable progress made by India and the US in their ties in a decade after the landmark civil nuclear deal, has opened up the true potential of their strategic partnership, diplomats and experts who played a key role in negotiating the deal said today.

As a result of India-US civil nuclear deal a decade ago, there has been unprecedented level of growth in relationship between the two largest democratic countries of the world, including a record defence and trade, said top diplomats, experts and academicians during a day-long panel discussion on 'The Future of the US-India Partnership: Ten Years After the Civil Nuclear Cooperation Initiative'.
 

"From the beginning this deal was much more than megawatt and reactors," the Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Nisha Desai Biswal, said in the opening session of the meet organised here jointly by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a think-tank and Confederation of Indian Industry.

"We have succeeded well in our expectations," Biswal said in presence of some of the prominent figures who played a key role in realising the landmark agreement.

Prominent among them were the former Deputy Secretary of State, William Burns, the former Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Nick Burns, the former foreign secretaries Shyam Saran and Shivshankar Menon and the former Indian Ambassador to the US, Ronen Sen.

"Our relationship with the US has transformed in the last 10 years," said Arun K Singh, the Indian Ambassador to the US, noting that a decade later the level of political comforts in doing things together is "unprecedented".

The "pendulum (of India-US relationship) has swung since the signing of the India-US civilian nuclear deal," he said in his address.

In her video address to the conference, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said signing of the nuclear deal is a landmark event in the bilateral relationship.

Rice, who first as the National Security Advisor and then as the Secretary of State was an architect of the deal, said that there were several death moments before it was inked.

For instance, a day before it was to be announced in the summer of 2005, the White House received a note from the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who was on a state visit to the US, that he would not signed the deal because the opposition were up in arm against it back home.

A few hours before the two leaders were to meet at the White House, Rice rushed to the Willard Hotel, where the Prime Minister was staying, to meet with her Indian counterparts and then finally the Prime Minister for one last meeting and push through.

"And it worked," Rice told the audience in her lengthy video address.

Noting that there is a strong record of achievements in India-US ties over the past one decade, William Burns, who is now president of Carnegie, said there is still a great deal to be done to realise the full potential of this relationship.

"This one deal unlocked the true potential of India-US relationship," said Chandrajit Banerjee, CII director general.

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First Published: Jul 13 2015 | 9:32 PM IST

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