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Singh assures China, Pakistan on its US ties
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-07-21 09:19

WASHINGTON - Close India-U.S. ties will not come at the expense of Pakistan or China, the Indian prime minister said on Wednesday at the end of a Washington visit in which he won strong American endorsement of India as a rising power.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh addresses a luncheon at the National Press Club in Washington July 20, 2005.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh addresses a luncheon at the National Press Club in Washington July 20, 2005. [Reuters]
But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh warned Pakistan that the budding peace process between the nuclear-armed South Asian rivals would falter unless Islamabad curbed attacks on India from Pakistani territory.

"I am convinced that an improvement in our relations with the United States will also improve the chances of improving our relations both with Pakistan and China," Singh told reporters.

"I don't think either Pakistan or China has to worry," he said, adding that New Delhi has worked to resolve friction with Beijing and with Islamabad, including border disputes.

In a warning to Pakistan, however, Singh pointed to what he said were "disturbing" incursions into India by Muslim militants fighting New Delhi's rule in Indian Kashmir, including a suicide bomb attack on Wednesday in Srinagar.

"If acts of terrorism are not under control, that certainly affects my ability to push forward the process of normalizing relations with Pakistan," he said.

Singh will go home having won a significant concession from President Bush, who on Monday unveiled plans to change U.S. law and work with allies to adjust international rules to allow nuclear technology trade with India.


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