India proposes nuclear cooperation with China

India proposes nuclear cooperation with China
Wednesday, January 16, 2008

BEIJING: With a controversial nuclear deal with the United States now in limbo, India held out the possibility Tuesday of civilian nuclear cooperation with China.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, on the last day of a visit to China, said the world’s two most populous nations should work together to develop their nuclear energy programmes. “India seeks international cooperation in the field of civilian nuclear energy, including with China,” Singh said, noting such cooperation could help the two countries meet their skyrocketing energy needs.

“The rapid growth of India and China will lead to expanding demand for energy. We have no choice but to widen our options for energy availability and develop viable strategies for energy security,” he said in a speech at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

He did not go into further details. Singh’s visit, the first here by an Indian premier in five years, comes as the two rising Asian giants try to strengthen ties and put their history of animosity behind them.

Singh and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Monday signed a broad agreement pledging tighter economy and other links, which they said would push an often testy relationship to a new level of cooperation.

It included a pledge to make a renewed effort to solve a Himalayan border dispute over which they fought a brief war in 1962.

Highly productive: Later on Tuesday he met President Hu Jintao, who congratulated the Indian premier on a successful visit. “Your visit was short but highly productive. Let me congratulate you on the success of your visit,” Hu said. Singh replied that the “two countries must do everything in their power to strengthen our multifaceted cooperation with new ties of friendship and partnership.”

India has already agreed a deal for the United States to provide nuclear fuel and technology, but that has been on hold - in part because of opposition within Singh’s own administration.

China has expressed reservations over the deal, citing concerns about the proliferation of nuclear materials. In his earlier speech, Singh noted that the two nations had agreed to set a target of 60 billion dollars in bilateral trade in 2010, up from nearly 40 billion dollars last year.

“We should harness our complementarities and synergies in the areas of trade and business,” he said. “India’s growing consumer market, skilled human resources, and software excellence together with China’s own large market, its manufacturing prowess and cost competitiveness provide the platform for exponential growth in our economic ties.” Both sides have issued strong statements on their willingness to eventually solve the border row.

India says China occupies 38,000 square kilometers of its Himalayan territory, while Beijing claims the whole of the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which is 90,000 square kilometers. Nuclear energy cooperation between the two countries could help slow the depletion of world energy resources, said Xu Liping, an international relations expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

“The populations of India and China constitute one-third of humanity. The energy consumption of these two engines is very great, so joint development of nuclear power can help reduce resource consumption,” he said. “This could have a positive significance.” afp

Daily Times

Looks like those nuclear cookies from America didn’t go down Hindustan’s throat too well.

When the Chinese President visited Hindustan, he offered only peace not war. Hindustan should had never rejected China’s nuclear offer back then like it did. While at the same time it arrogantly hopped straight onto America’s lap for nuclear biscuits in return for containing China.

What a clossal mistake that was.