INT81
International/
Diplomacy/DefenceRice to skip Manmohan-Bush meet to get n-deal done LeadBy Arun Kumar and Manish ChandWashington/New
York, Sep 25 IANS Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice
will skip the
meeting between
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President George Bush here today as she works the
phone from New
York to get the
India-US civil
nuclear deal done.Rice "just took a look at her schedule" and "felt as though it was for her best to stay up here,"
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told
reporters in New
York Wednesday as the administration kept up its push to win Congressional approval for the deal."The fact that we have had intensive consultations with
Indian officials over the past couple of weeks, nearly constant
communication, I would say, about the civilian
nuclear deal, that she felt as though it was for her best to stay up here," he said.Instead of Rice, Deputy Secretary of
State "John Negroponte, who has been deeply involved in this issue as well," would represent the
State Department at the the White
House meetings between Bush, Manmohan Singh and their top aides.Rice was to join Bush at his "working dinner" with the
Indian leader flying in from New
York for just a few hours to meet the
man with whom had visualised the landmark
nuclear agreement in a joint statement July 18, 2005.US Vice-President Dick Cheney and Undersecretary of
State for Political Affairs William Burns
will be among others present from the American side.From the
Indian side Minister of
State for External Affairs Anand Sharma, National
Security Adviser M.K. Narayanan, Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon, Prime Minister's Special Envoy on the
nuclear deal and
climate change Shyam Saran and India's ambassador to US Ronen Sen
will be attending.Asked if Rice's decision to stay back represented in any way her confidence or lack of confidence, McCormack said: "Oh, no. Please - no, please don't, in any way, interpret it as that. Like I said, this is an issue that she has really been quite seized with over the past month in a very intensive way."As a matter of fact, I know that she was making calls to Capitol Hill from New
York today about this issue. So it should in no way be read as a diminution in her level of effort to try get this passed," he said.The spokesman said the administration was doing
everything to get Congressional approval for this "very important step for American foreign
policy and national security" even as the legislature grapples with the
crisis to save the US
financial system."We're working with the Congress. We take this step by step," McCormack said. "We're going to do
everything we can to
help the Congress in terms of
information, briefings,
phone calls, whatever we need to do so that they can move this forward through both
houses.""I know it's a busy time on the
calendar up there, but this is a very important step for American foreign
policy and national
security," he added.McCormack said Rice had been making calls to lawmakers practically every day to get the
India deal done. "I can't tell you. I'm - it seems like it's almost every other day or every few days she's involved in a
phone call up to the Hill," he said.Asked why was she still making calls though the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee's approval of the
India deal had given it an impetus, he said:"Just - it's good to stay - no, it - just because you have a
phone call doesn't mean there's a problem.""What it means is she wants to stay in close contact with members of Congress, answer any
questions, get their assessment of where we stand in the process," McCormack said adding, "It's just good
politics, I guess you could say, to keep open lines of
communication on this."Asked what was keeping Rice in New
York instead of being in Washington, the offical said: "Look, you make these decisions every day about how to allocate time and effort and
energy."She's dedicating a lot of time and effort and
energy to getting the
India civil
nuclear deal passed, and she made the call that she had other
meetings that she was going to participate in here."And like I said, Deputy Secretary Negroponte is going to be representing the
State Department at the White
House," he said dismissing Rice's decision to stay back as just "rearranging the schedule."--Indo-Asian
News Serviceak/tb789
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