India in dilemma over 123 agreement
Sep 10, 2008 (The Hindu)

NEW DELHI: Forgotten amidst the euphoria over the Nuclear Suppliers Group waiver, the State Department letter revising key provisions of the 123 agreement continues to worry Indian officials who say it will be risky for the country to buy American nuclear equipment until this issue is sorted out.

Rice makes 'full-court press' to win US approval of nuke deal
Sep 9, 2008 (AFP)

WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is making what her spokesman calls a "full-court press" to win passage in Congress of a landmark US-India civilian nuclear cooperation deal before January.

Congress may get India atomic deal soon: U.S. official
Sep 9, 2008 (Reuters )

NEW DELHI: A controversial nuclear energy deal between India and the United States could be put before the U.S. Congress for ratification in the "next few days", the U.S. ambassador to India said on Tuesday.

Time short for US-India nuclear deal
Sep 8, 2008 (The Associated Press )

WASHINGTON: A U.S.-Indian civil nuclear cooperation accord, one of President Bush's top foreign policy initiatives, may finally have run out of time this year despite a crucial international endorsement secured during the weekend.

White House Making Last-Minute Push for India Nuclear Deal in Congress
Sep 8, 2008 (CQ Politics)

The Bush administration plans an all-out effort to win approval of a civilian nuclear deal with India before Congress adjourns, although political, procedural and policy issues are blocking the way.

McCain twits Obama over nuke deal
Sep 7, 2008 (The Times of India )

WASHINGTON: It isn't just in India that the US-India nuclear deal has become a political football. As if to prove that politicking is the life-blood of democracies, the two US presidential candidates also sparred over the deal while welcoming the Vienna waiver.

International Group Backs Nuclear Accord For U.S., India
Sep 7, 2008 (Washington Post)

HYDERABAD: International negotiators revoked a 34-year-old ban on nuclear trade with India on Saturday and backed a contentious nuclear energy agreement between the country and the United States.

Atomic Club Votes to End Restrictions on India
Sep 6, 2008 (The New York Times)

The worldwide body that regulates the sale of nuclear fuel and technology approved a landmark deal on Saturday to allow India to engage in nuclear trade for the first time in three decades, after a pressure campaign by the Bush administration and despite concerns about setting off an arms race in Asia.

India, U.S. chip away opposition to nuclear deal
Sep 5, 2008 (Reuters)

VIENNA: Resistance to lifting a global ban on nuclear trade with India diminished at a 45-nation meeting on Friday but it was unclear if a revised U.S. proposal would convince the last doubters.

Nuclear deal at end of road
Sep 5, 2008 (The Hindu)

VIENNA: The Group of Six like-minded states are continuing to insist on a clear "cause and effect" link between a future Indian atomic test and the termination of nuclear supplies and will block approval of the United States proposal to allow commerce with India when the Nuclear Suppliers Group reconvenes here Friday.

U.S. Letter Puts India's Premier On Defensive Over Nuclear Deal
Sep 5, 2008 (Washington Post)

NEW DELHI: As international negotiators met in Vienna to decide the fate of the contentious nuclear energy agreement between India and the United States, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government found itself facing a revived political battle at home over the deal because of the release of a secret letter in Washington.

U.S. says nuclear nations nearing deal on India trade
Sep 4, 2008 (Reuters)

VIENNA: The United States said on Thursday 45 nations were making headway towards agreement on lifting a ban on nuclear trade with India after Washington reworked a draft for the move to ease proliferation fears.

In India, Outcry Over U.S. Letter
Sep 4, 2008 (Washington Post)

NEW DELHI: A day after a secret letter from the U.S. State Department to Congress about the controversial nuclear energy deal with India was made public, Indian opposition figures cried foul, accusing Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of willfully misleading the nation about restrictive aspects of the deal.

Nuclear states mull U.S.-India deal again as clock ticks
Sep 3, 2008 (Reuters)

VIENNA: Forty-five nations meet on Thursday to try to bridge differences over a move to lift a ban on nuclear trade with India, needed to seal a U.S.-Indian atomic deal but seen by some as a threat to non-proliferation.

In Secret Letter, Tough U.S. Line on India Nuclear Deal
Sep 3, 2008 (Washington Post)

The United States will not sell sensitive nuclear technologies to India and would immediately terminate nuclear trade if New Delhi conducted a nuclear test, the Bush administration told Congress in correspondence that has remained secret for nine months.

Second NSG meet is ‘last chance’ for nuclear deal
Sep 2, 2008 (The Hindu)

NEW DELHI: As members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group slowly digest the revised American proposal to grant India a waiver from the cartel’s export guidelines, Indian officials say this week’s scheduled NSG meeting will be decisive in sealing the fate of the nuclear deal with the United States one way or another.

India sees red as China voices n-deal concerns
Sep 2, 2008 (The Times of India)

NEW DELHI: The odds are lengthening on the Indian nuclear deal as the opposition in the Nuclear Suppliers’ Group refuses to die down and India sticks to its “red lines” on refusing the amendments. In a clear sign of the growing challenge, China has indicated to the NSG that it would make its “concerns” regarding the Indian nuclear deal clear at the next meeting.

A Secondary Role for U.S. in India's Nuclear Future
Sep 2, 2008 (Washington Post)

NEW DELHI: Four months before India shocked the world by conducting underground nuclear tests in 1998, French President Jacques Chirac visited India, bringing along 100 business leaders and meeting with Indian p olicymakers and industrialists.

'US focused on bringing India n-deal to fruition'
Aug 29, 2008 (The Economic Times)

WASHINGTON: The United States has reiterated its priority right now is to bring into fruition the India-US nuclear deal and that's where its policy was focused presently.

U.S. seeks way out of India nuclear deal impasse
Aug 29, 2008 (Reuters)

VIENNA: The United States has told six nations its bid to lift a global ban on nuclear trade with India has stumbled over their objections and pressed them at a New Delhi meeting to relent, diplomats said on Friday.

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