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Indo-Russian nuclear tie-up may raise eyebrows in U.S.
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
BOSTON, OCT. 4. The Clinton administration has not substantively
commented on the Russian President, Mr. Vladimir Putin's visit to
India and the signing of the strategic partnership accord between
the two countries that envisages closer cooperation on nuclear
and defence issues and on combating terrorism.
One view is that it is unlikely that Washington would react at
all, given that the administration is now in the election mode
and that the period between now and the coming and settling down
of the next administration will not see much activity.
At the State Department on Tuesday, the deputy spokesman, Mr.
Philip Reeker, was more concerned about Russia and Yugoslavia and
demanded that Moscow turn over Mr. Slobodan Milosevic to the
International War Crimes Tribunal should he show up in the
Russian capital. ``There's an indictment that calls for any
country to hand him over to The Hague. That's very clear,
including Russia... we expect the indictment to be followed.''
On the major initiatives taken by India and Russia in the last
few days, analysts feel an adverse reaction was unlikely from the
Clinton administration given that what transpired in New Delhi
during Mr. Putin's visit had been envisioned for some time now.
One senior diplomat was confident that Washington would see
things in the proper perspective.
From a non-official perspective, it is said that while Mr.
Putin's visit to India and the agreements signed breathed new
life into an old relationship, from Russia's standpoint it would
be fairly limited as it did not have large resources.
It is being stressed that the days of the zero-sum game are long
over; as also in the recognition that major Asian powers are
taking steps to come to terms with global, regional and bilateral
issues in a changing environment, even if Washington is
uncomfortable and does not accept the notion of a multipolar
world.
The agreements between New Delhi and Moscow on military hardware
are ``not a big deal'', said a South Asia analyst and pointed out
that China and even the United States had struck similar deals
with Russia.
However, there are at least two areas that would merit some
attention. The fact that India and Russia have agreed to
cooperate closely on nuclear issues will raise some eyebrows in
the non-proliferation community here.
At the same time, experts say, Mr. Putin has been very careful in
his statements, particularly when it came to recognising India as
a nuclear weapons state.
Another area of importance was Afghanistan and what India and
Russia planned to do by way of cooperating to combat terrorism.
If indeed the two countries were talking about military
cooperation, then the line-up would seem like the U.S., Russia,
India, China and Iran targeting the Taliban which could put
Pakistan in a tight spot. This could raise problems in the
future, it is being said.
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