US Senators Deliver Deadline to India on Nuclear Deal


20 February 2008

Three leading U.S. senators have told India's prime minister his government has only weeks to finalize a civilian(n.平民 a.平民的) nuclear deal(vi.做买卖;对付) with the United States or senators in Washington will not have time to ratify the agreement. It is the strongest and most specific warning(n.警告,告诫,鉴诫) India has received that time is running out for it to decide the fate of the controversial deal. VOA Correspondent Steve Herman reports from New Delhi.

Sens. John Kerry (l), Joe Biden (center) and Chuck Hagel (r) speak to reporters in New Delhi, 20 Feb 2008
Senators John Kerry (l), Joe Biden (center) Chuck Hagel (r) speak to reporters in New Delhi, 20 Feb 2008
Between visits to Pakistan and Afghanistan, Senators John Kerry, Joe Biden and Chuck Hagel stopped in New Delhi to tell Prime Minister Manmohan Singh that little time remains to conclude the civilian(n.平民 a.平民的) nuclear-fuel agreement between(ad.当中,中间) the United States and India.

India remains locked in talks with the International Atomic Energy Agency, which needs to approve a safeguards agreement for the deal(vi.做买卖;对付) to go through. India also must obtain a waiver from the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group before the pact can(vt.装罐头) go to the U.S. Senate for an up-or-down vote. The group oversees the export and re-transfer of nuclear materials.

Senator John Kerry in New Delhi, 20 Feb 2008
Senator John Kerry in New Delhi, 20 Feb 2008
Senator Kerry, the South Asian Affairs Sub-Committee chairman, explained to Mr. Singh and other top Indian government officials the U.S. Senate's schedule in a presidential election year means lawmakers in Washington face critical time constraints.

"In order to be able to have time to debate this and pass it in the Senate, it would really probably have to be received somewhere in May, at the latest, in order to give time to be able to pass," he said. "So I think somewhere in the next weeks some kind of decision has got to happen because we are just going to run out of time."

Biden, who leads the Senate Foreign(a.无关的) Relations Committee, predicted that if either of his Democratic Party's contenders for president, Senator(n.参议员;评议员) Hillary Clinton or Senator(n.参议员;评议员) Barack Obama, win the White(a.白种(人)的) House, the deal(vi.做买卖;对付) would certainly have to be renegotiated. He said Democrats are moving towards(prep.为了,有助于) - and not away from - stricter controls on nuclear proliferation.

U.S. lawmakers opposed to the deal(vi.做买卖;对付) have argued it could strengthen India's nuclear-weapons arsenal and trigger(n.扳机 vt.触发,引起) a regional arms race.

Senator Joe Biden speak to reporter in New Delhi, 20 Feb 2008
Senator Joe Biden, 20 Feb 2008
Biden says Prime Minister Singh told the three senators that he has run into domestic(a.养在家里的) political obstacles.

"He explained his difficulties to us. He indicated he was going to pursue the effort," he said. "We were wise enough not to ask him any more than he would ask us. Precisely what(a.所…的,尽可能多的) he would do and how he would do it, when he would do it, and what(a.所…的,尽可能多的) his coalition would do. But we walked away with a sense that he valued the agreement still and he still wanted the agreement."

Prime Minister Singh made no public comment on the warning(n.警告,告诫,鉴诫) delivered by the senators.

The three senators also expressed concern(n.所关切的事;商行) that the deal's failure could mean the Indo-American relationship will suffer, with Indians mistakenly blaming the collapse of the landmark agreement on the U.S. Senate.

Both governments have touted the nuclear deal(vi.做买卖;对付) as the centerpiece of a new era in relations between(ad.当中,中间) Washington and New Delhi. But India's domestic(a.养在家里的) opponents to the agreement contend(vi.竞争 vt.坚决主张) it will bring India too close in strategic alignment(n.队列;结盟,联合) with the United States. Some also feel(vi.摸起来) it impinges on India's sovereign(n.君主 a.统治的) right to test nuclear weapons free of foreign(a.无关的) restrictions.

The pact would give India access to American nuclear fuel and reactors. Such international cooperation has been out of the question(vt.问,询问,讯问) since India set(n.集(合)) off atomic weapons tests in 1974 and again in 1998, and refused to sign(n.征兆,迹象,病症) treaties on non-proliferation and nuclear testing.

 

分类:Special Reports

更新日期: 2008-02-20

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生词表

alignment: n.队列;结盟,联合

between: ad.当中,中间

can: vt.装罐头

civilian: n.平民 a.平民的

concern: n.所关切的事;商行

contend: vi.竞争 vt.坚决主张

deal: vi.做买卖;对付

domestic: a.养在家里的

feel: vi.摸起来

fore: ad.在前面 a.先前的

foreign: a.无关的

foreign: a.无关的

question: vt.问,询问,讯问

senator: n.参议员;评议员

set: n.集(合)

sign: n.征兆,迹象,病症

sovereign: n.君主 a.统治的

towards: prep.为了,有助于

trigger: n.扳机 vt.触发,引起

warning: n.警告,告诫,鉴诫

what: a.所…的,尽可能多的

white: a.白种(人)的