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Posts Tagged ‘Mrs Clinton’

US pessimistic on Iran overtures

breaking news

The US secretary of state has said Washington is still willing to engage with Iran but that political turmoil there means a response is unlikely.

Hillary Clinton told the BBC the US was waiting for Iran to respond but that Tehran "does not have any capacity to make that kind of decision right now".

Barack Obama has made verbal overtures towards Iran, but last week Mrs Clinton warned its time to respond was limited.

The US accuses Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons, a charge Iran denies.

"We haven’t had any response," Mrs Clinton told the BBC’s state department correspondent Kim Ghattas.

"We’ve certainly reached out and made it clear that’s what we’d be willing to do, even now, despite our absolute condemnation of what they’ve done in the [12 June presidential] election and since but I don’t think they have any capacity to make that kind of decision right now."

The Iranian opposition has accused President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of rigging the outcome of the poll, which saw Mr Ahmadinejad returned to office.

Days of streets protests against the results were violently suppressed, drawing widespread condemnation from around the world.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

N Korea calls Clinton ‘pensioner going shopping’

Exchange of insults reflects lack of progress at regional summit over country’s nuclear programme

The stand-off over North Korea’s nuclear programme took a turn for the petty today, with the country’s leadership claiming Hillary Clinton looked like a “primary schoolgirl” or “a pensioner going shopping”, after Clinton compared them to “small children”.

The exchange of jibes reflected the lack of progress at a regional summit being held in Phuket, Thailand.

North Korea, attending the talks, said it had no intention of re-entering six-nation talks on its nuclear programme, because of the “deep-rooted anti-North Korean policy” of the US.

“The six-party talks are over,” the spokesman for the North Korean delegation, Ri Hung Sik, said at the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) security forum.

Clinton said North Korea had “no friends left that will protect them” from international determination that the regime dismantle its nuclear programme.

She called on North Korea to dismantle its weapons programme verifiably and irreversibly or face further isolation and the “unrelenting pressure” of international sanctions. She said the international community was prepared to offer a package of incentives if Pyongyang complied, including the normalisation of diplomatic relations.

A 2007 six-party agreement in which North Korea began dismantling its nuclear complex at Yongbyon in return for fuel oil deliveries broke down in April this year, when North Korea threw out UN inspectors and restarted its weapons programme. It has since raised tensions by conducting an apparent nuclear test (some experts say it could have been a hoax using huge quantities of high explosive) and a series of missile tests.

In an interview on Monday, Clinton said the US should not over-react to North Korean provocation. She told ABC television: “Maybe it’s the mother in me, the experience I’ve had with small children and teenagers and people who are demanding attention: Don’t give it to them.”

Pyongyang’s reaction took three days to come, but the delay did not lessen its evident fury.

“We cannot but regard Mrs Clinton as a funny lady as she likes to utter such rhetoric, unaware of the elementary etiquette in the international community,” a foreign ministry statement said. “Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping.”

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North Korea ‘has no friends left’

Hillary Clinton in Phuket, Thailand - 23 July 2009

North Korea has no friends to protect it from international efforts to end its nuclear programme, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said.

At an Asian regional forum in Thailand she said there was widespread agreement that North Korea could not be allowed to maintain nuclear weapons.

North Korea’s envoy at the meeting said his nation would not re-enter six-party talks on ending its nuclear programme.

A spokesman in Pyongyang added that Mrs Clinton was "not intelligent".

Mrs Clinton said there was widespread concern among the members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) over North Korea’s recent "provocative behaviour".

"Sometimes [Mrs Clinton] looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping"

North Korean spokesman

North Korea dropped out of the six-party talks after the UN censured its long-range missile test in April.

An underground nuclear test and further missile tests followed, provoking new UN Security Council sanctions, allowing for inspections of North Korean vessels suspected of carrying banned arms and tighter financial pressure on the already isolated state.

‘No place to go’

At the Asean forum on the resort island of Phuket, Mrs Clinton said North Korea’s nuclear ambitions threatened regional security and risked triggering an arms race.

"The United States and its allies and partners cannot accept a North Korea that tries to maintain nuclear weapons, to launch ballistic missiles or to proliferate nuclear materials," Mrs Clinton said in Phuket.

"And we are committed to the verifiable denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula in a peaceful manner."

North Korean spokesman Ri Hung Sik in Phuket, Thailand - 23 July 2009

"There is no place to go for North Korea; they have no friends left that will protect them from the international community’s efforts to move towards denuclearisation."

Even Burma had said it intended to implement the new UN resolution, she said.

Mrs Clinton outlined benefits for North Korea if it ends its nuclear activity.

"Full normalisation of relations, a permanent peace regime and significant energy and economic assistance are all possible in the context of full and verifiable denuclearisation."

Before she spoke, the spokesman for North Korea’s delegation in Phuket, Ri Hung Sik, attacked Washington’s "deep-rooted hostile policy" and said there would be no return to the six-party talks until US policy changes.

Separately, a spokesman in Pyongyang described Mrs Clinton as a "funny lady" – responding to her comments that North Korea’s behaviour was that of an unruly child.

"Her words suggest that she is by no means intelligent," the spokesman said, quoted by state news agency KCNA.

"Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping. Anyone making misstatements has to pay for them."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

US piles pressure on Burma regime

The flags of nations attending the Asean conference

US officials have had a rare meeting with representatives of Burma’s regime.

Unnamed officials told reporters that efforts to improve ties depended partly on the outcome of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s trial.

The US also pressed Burma to enforce a United Nations resolution imposing an arms embargo on North Korea.

The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been on the diplomatic offensive ahead of a regional meeting now under way in Thailand.

Earlier in her trip to Thailand, she issued warnings about how a nuclear North Korea was unacceptable to the United States, and expressed concerns about the possible transfer of nuclear technology from North Korea to Burma.

The wrong road

Mrs Clinton called for the release of Ms Suu Kyi from many years of detention.

"If she were released, that would open up opportunities… for my country to expand our relationship with Burma, including investments in Burma," Mrs Clinton said.

Hillary Clinton arrives in Phuket (22.7.09)

This point was reinforced in the face-to-face meeting between US and Burmese officials on Wednesday night, US officials said.

They said they had told Burma that "the outcome of the trial of Aung San Suu Kyi would affect our willingness and ability to take positive steps in our bilateral relationship".

Mrs Clinton was not present at the meeting with Burmese officials, and said she did not intend to appear at a possible meeting with North Korean officials either.

She told reporters that the US is convinced that Burma is taking the wrong road by associating with North Korea.

Mrs Clinton also told reporters that North Korea must completely and irreversibly end its nuclear weapons program or face further isolation and "the unrelenting pressure" of international sanctions.

She said there were more positive ways ahead if the North chooses, and she is expected to announce conditions in which the North will be welcomed back into international discussions later on Thursday.

Symbols matter

Meanwhile, Mrs Clinton signed a symbolically important treaty with members of Asean.

The Treaty of Amity and Co-operation binds the US more closely into the regional security architecture – something previous US administrations had fought shy of.

"I want to send a very clear message that the United States is back, that we are fully engaged and committed to our relationships in South East Asia," she said before the signing the treaty in the resort of Phuket.

Mrs Clinton’s predecessor Condoleezza Rice skipped two Asean forums, leading analysts to remark on how China was gaining friends and influencing people in the perceived US absence.

Mrs Clinton also said the Obama administration would soon appoint a permanent ambassador to Asean headquarters in Jakarta.

Asean comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.</p


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US ‘will repel nuclear hopefuls’

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the US is prepared to bolster the defence of its Gulf allies if Iran develops a nuclear weapons programme.

Mrs Clinton said if the US extended a "defence umbrella" over the region, it was unlikely that Iran would be any stronger or safer having a weapon.

She said the US was still offering engagement to Iran but warned that the "nuclear clock was ticking".

She spoke in Thailand where she is attending a regional summit.

Expulsion option

Foreign ministers from the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean), as well as EU and US envoys, are meeting on Wednesday in Thailand.

Mrs Clinton reiterated President Barack Obama’s policy that talks were still an option between Iran and the US, but that "crippling action" could also be considered.

The flags of nations attending the Asean conference

Speaking in an interview for Thai television, she said: "If the US extends a defence umbrella over the region, if we do even more to support the military capacity of those in the Gulf, it’s unlikely that Iran will be any stronger or safer because they won’t be able to intimidate and dominate as they apparently believe they can once they have a nuclear weapon."

Western powers fear that Iran is developing nuclear weapons, but it says its nuclear development is only about enriching uranium to the level needed for power.

Iran has not responded to Mr Obama’s offer of engagement.

Mrs Clinton also spoke about concerns over the transfer of nuclear technology from North Korea to Burma.

Asean has a policy of non-interference in members’ affairs, but Burma has provoked widespread censure.

Mrs Clinton condemned Burma’s treatment of jailed pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, saying Asean could consider expelling Burma from the regional grouping.

"It would be an appropriate policy change to consider," she said when asked about the possibility on Thai television, AFP reported.</p


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Burma-N Korea ties ‘of concern’

Burmese Foreign Minister Nyan Win (L) reads documents during the Asean meeting in Phuket

Indonesia’s foreign minister has said Burma’s elections cannot be free and fair unless detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is free.

Hasan Wirayuda was speaking as regional foreign ministers gathered in Thailand for an Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) Regional Forum.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is on her way to the security forum.

Asean has a policy of non-interference in members’ affairs, but Burma has provoked widespread censure.

Indonesia has led Asean concerns about Burma, telling correspondents that the group has become frustrated at the lack of progress on democratic reforms.

Mr Wirayuda said the recent trial of Ms Suu Kyi had dashed hopes of a meaningful election scheduled for next year.

A new human rights body created by Asean, lambasted by regional activists as lacking any enforcement power, was almost scuttled over the weekend when an increasingly assertive Indonesia sought to strengthen its provisions.

Inclusive

"We have been saying to them [Burma] directly that the process must be inclusive for all groups in society … including Aung San Suu Kyi," Mr Wirayuda told The Associated Press in a reference to Burma’s planned poll.

"We should see whether from now until 2010 they develop a credible process leading to truly democratic elections acceptable to the international community," he said.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in India, 20 July

He said the "big test" will be whether the regime’s promised elections next year are truly "multiparty, meaning inclusive in nature, but also whether the process is a democratic one."

He said Asean has been "able to develop a more open, frank discussion" with Burma, while admitting it was hard to see if all the talk made any difference inside the country.

He was speaking after United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon made a fruitless trip to Burma, during which he was not allowed to visit Ms Suu Kyi.

Clinton in Thailand

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said six months ago that the US was reviewing its policy towards Burma as sanctions did not appear to be successful in forcing change.

However, on this, her first trip to an Asean meeting, analysts have noted that there has been no hint of a new policy.

Instead, the talks are expected to focus on finding ways to push North Korea back to the negotiating table.

Six-party talks aimed at ending the North’s nuclear programmes stalled last year, and since then the North has set off nuclear and missile tests amid questions over the leadership as Kim Jong-il’s health has worsened.

Asean leaders have expressed satisfaction that a figure as senior as Mrs Clinton is at last gracing the regional forum with her presence. In recent years, more junior officers have been sent, leaving the delegate from China, a growing influence in the region, to be the key figure at the talks.

Mrs Clinton will meet Thai Prime Minister Abhisist Vejjajiva and the Thai foreign minister in Bangkok before joining the forum in Phuket.

Another challenge at the regional talks will be for Thailand – it has had to cancel regional summits twice since December due to domestic political turmoil. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

US and India agree defence pact

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Delhi (19 July 2009)

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is due to meet Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, as part of her five-day visit to the country.

Indian relations with Pakistan are thought to be high on the agenda, along with education and technology.

The countries are also expected to sign deals on arms sales and the building of US-funded nuclear plants.

Correspondents say the visit aims to show the US is committed to Delhi, and to broaden ties between the countries.

As well as Mr Singh, Mrs Clinton will hold talks with her Indian counterpart, SM Krishna, the head of the ruling Congress Party, Sonia Gandhi, and the leader of the opposition, Lal Krishna Advani.

The BBC’s Kim Ghattas, who is travelling with Mrs Clinton, says the secretary of state hopes to come away with tangible agreements on trade between the US and India.

She is particularly keen to open doors to lucrative US deals in arms and civilian nuclear energy, says our correspondent.

India’s relations with neighbouring Pakistan are expected to feature prominently in discussions.

The BBC’s Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says that publicly Mrs Clinton has insisted that what Pakistan and India do is completely up to them.

However, he says that everyone in Delhi is clear that it was pressure from Washington that pushed the countries to hold talks in Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt last week.

Pakistan-India relations dominated Mrs Clinton’s visit to Mumbai, in the wake of attacks on the city last November that left more than 170 people dead.

India blamed Pakistan-based militants for the attack.

Much of the US focus in the region has been on countering militancy in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Climate disagreements

Indian Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh in new Delhi (19 July 2009)

Mrs Clinton spent the first two days of her five-day visit in Mumbai.

Then in Delhi on Sunday, talks focused on climate change, which remains a sensitive subject for developing countries such as India and China, who have so far refused to commit to carbon emissions cuts in a new treaty.

Mrs Clinton also sought to assure India the US would not try to impose conditions that might affect India’s economic growth.

But Indian Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said his government could not accept targets that would limit economic growth.

India argues the US must do more as it has been historically to blame for the emissions.

Mrs Clinton later told reporters she was optimistic a deal on climate change could be reached.

"It’s part of a give-and-take and it’s multilateral, which makes it even more complex," she said, during a tour of an agricultural research facility.

"Until proven otherwise, I’m going to continue to speak out in favour of every country doing its part to deal with the challenge of global climate change."

The key date for climate change is December – when a summit in Copenhagen, Denmark will look to forge a new international treaty that will replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.


Are you in India What do you hope Hillary Clinton’s visit will achieve Send us your comments using the form below.

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Clinton in US-India climate plea

Hillary Clinton in Mumbai, 18 July

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has arrived in Delhi, with climate change set to top her agenda.

Mrs Clinton has sought to allay fears the US will press India on carbon emission cuts but will also argue they do not contradict economic development.

Mrs Clinton is on a five-day visit and spent the first two in Mumbai.

She will meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other officials, with relations with Pakistan also sure to be high on the agenda.

Mistakes

Carbon emissions remain a sensitive subject for developing countries such as India and China, and they have refused to commit to cuts in a new treaty.

They argue that the cuts restrict development and that countries like the US must do more themselves as they have been historically to blame for the emissions.

Car plant near Ahmedabad

Mrs Clinton, however, will argue there is no contradiction between economic development and low carbon emissions.

The BBC’s Kim Ghattas, who is travelling with Mrs Clinton, says the secretary of state accepts that developed countries made the mistakes that led to the current environmental problems, but that countries like India could lead in a different direction.

Our correspondent says the talks in Delhi promise to be spirited, although there is no indication of what outcome is expected.

But she notes that the belief in the travelling US team is that governments are often more willing to take action than publicly agree to proposals or requests.

The key date for climate change is December – when a summit in Copenhagen, Denmark will look to forge a new international treaty that will replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

Another key issue on Mrs Clinton’s agenda in Delhi will be India-Pakistan relations.

The BBC’s Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says that publicly Mrs Clinton has insisted that what Pakistan and India do is completely up to them.

However, he says that everyone in Delhi is clear that it was pressure from Washington that pushed the countries to hold talks in Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt last week.

Pakistan-India relations dominated Mrs Clinton’s visit to Mumbai, in the wake of attacks on the city last November that left more than 170 people dead.

India blamed Pakistan-based militants for the attack.

Much of the US focus in the region has been on countering militancy in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Mrs Clinton will also be looking for other tangible agreements, mostly related to nuclear energy and weapons, deals that would pave the way for more business for American companies.


Are you in India What do you hope Hillary Clinton’s visit will achieve Send us your comments using the form below.

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Clinton seeks goodwill in India

By Jill McGivering
BBC News

Hillary Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives in India shortly at the start of a high-profile visit designed to bolster political and economic ties.

Ms Clinton is also expected to reassure India that the current US alliance with Pakistan is not at India’s expense.

At present, the US focus is on Pakistan and Afghanistan, and the battle against Taliban insurgents in both countries.

But the Obama administration is keen to address concerns in India that Delhi’s interests are being neglected.

Mrs Clinton’s visit is an important gesture, designed to show that India still matters.

It is partly about business.

The agreement which ended a three-decade ban on the sale of civilian nuclear technology to India was a centrepiece of the last Bush administration.

Now India is expected to name two sites where US companies can build nuclear power plants.

It is business worth billions of dollars.

Mrs Clinton is also likely to press Indian politicians to resume peace talks with Pakistan.

On Thursday, India and Pakistan’s prime ministers met in Egypt and made broad commitments to working together.

These were greeted with cautious optimism but stayed vague in terms of detail.

The relationship was thrown off track by the Mumbai attacks last November.

India wants Pakistan to punish those responsible and take tough action against militant groups.

The US has been working hard behind the scenes to coax both sides back into dialogue.

If tensions along Pakistan’s border with India were reduced, the Pakistani military would be able to focus more fully on the north-west and dealing with its own insurgency there.

India may take some persuading.

Pakistan is now promising to address the concerns about militants – but many in India are sceptical, saying they have heard promises from Pakistan before which resulted in very little change. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Delhi focus

By Kim Ghattas
BBC News, Mumbai

She skipped India on her first trip to Asia in March, but now Hillary Clinton is spending almost four days here, talking to business leaders and women activists in Mumbai and meeting Indian politicians in Delhi.

Hillary Clinton

Before leaving Washington, Mrs Clinton emphasised that the US administration was going to do everything to broaden and deepen Washington’s engagement with India.

It is a message that India is keen to hear – during the first months of the Obama administration, as Washington focused intensely on Pakistan, Afghanistan and the fight against al-Qaeda, India worried that the US would view its policy towards the whole region through that prism.

But the focus of Mrs Clinton’s visit, at least publicly, is very clearly on US-Indian ties.

Two-fold aim

American officials often make a stop in Pakistan when they visit India, but Mrs Clinton will only go to Islamabad in the autumn.

Washington is keen to dispel any doubts about its commitment to ties with Delhi that its early focus on Pakistan and Afghanistan may have given rise to.

For Washington, there is a lot riding on the visit. And in an opinion piece published in the Times of India, Mrs Clinton points out that "the world has a lot riding on our cooperation" as well.

For Mrs Clinton, the aim is two-fold.

First, she wants to convince India that the Obama administration is as keen on close ties with India as George W Bush was. The Bush administration’s 2008 nuclear agreement with India ended a three decade-long ban on nuclear trade with Delhi, so Mrs Clinton will be eager to maintain the momentum.

"Certainly, you will not hear from me or President Obama or our Administration any desire to prevent the continuing development of India – but we also understand the grave threat posed by climate change to coastal countries like India"

Hillary Clinton

But Mrs Clinton is also seeking a variety of tangible results while she is here.

She is hoping to sign an end-of-use monitoring agreement, which would ensure that any arms technology sold to India does not end up in third countries. This is a legal pre-requisite for any US arms sales to India.

Washington is also hoping that India will announce it has reserved two sites for US companies to build nuclear power plants, thus allowing the US to benefit from any lucrative nuclear business deals, deals that were made possible after Washington helped India end its nuclear isolation with last year’s agreement.

Travelling with Mrs Clinton is also the Obama administration’s climate envoy Todd Stern.

The US House of Representatives last month passed a bill which imposes trade restrictions on countries which do not sign up to a carbon emissions cap.

The bill now moves to the Senate, but it is a source of concern for developing countries like India and China, which have refused to commit to emissions cuts unless developed nations present sufficient targets themselves.

Terror commemoration

In an interview with CNN-IBN, Mrs Clinton said that she was looking at "how together we can make the fight against climate change a win-win proposition".

"Certainly, you will not hear from me or President Obama or our administration any desire to prevent the continuing development of India. But we also understand the grave threat posed by climate change to coastal countries like India that will be on the front lines of the devastation likely to be reaped if we do not rein in the increasing temperature that is being recorded."

Before the political discussions in Delhi, Mrs Clinton is spending two days in Mumbai where she will hold meetings with business leaders, women activists and promoters of education initiatives.

The secretary of state is very keen on "people-to-people" diplomacy and usually holds town hall events and meetings with civil society leaders on foreign visits.

Smoke and flames billow out from the Taj Hotel, Mumbai, India, after a terrorist attack, 29 November 2008

Her schedule on this trip is lighter than usual, however, as she tries to fit in several sessions a day of physiotherapy to recover from a broken elbow.

But Mrs Clinton will also be attending a small commemoration ceremony for the Mumbai terror attacks which left more than 170 people dead in November 2008.

Mrs Clinton is staying at the famous, century-old Taj Mahal Palace, the luxurious hotel which was targeted in the attacks and is still being refurbished.

The Indian Express newspaper said that the choice of hotel was a "gesture of solidarity with India against terrorism".

Pakistan admitted the attacks were planned on its soil. And so while India’s ties with Pakistan are not officially on the agenda, the issue cannot be avoided.

The two neighbours have just held rare talks, after the Mumbai attacks sent their ties into the deep freeze.

For Washington, there is a lot riding on that as well – the US is embroiled in a battle against al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, which uses Pakistan as a support base.

Mrs Clinton is likely to push in private for a smoothing of Pakistani-Indian ties and, in her India Times opinion piece, she urged Delhi to join Washington in supporting Pakistan’s fight against radical militants. </p


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Tough task

By Sanjoy Majumder
BBC News, Delhi

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has arrived on a four-day visit to India, a country she knows well and where she is immensely popular.

But her visit comes at a sensitive time in relations between Washington and Delhi, a time when key geopolitical issues hang in the balance.

Mrs Clinton first visited India in 1995 as US first lady, a trip that helped break the ice between two countries on opposite sides of the Cold War fence.

It also paved the way for her husband’s immensely successful visit five years later.

She now returns as a representative of US President Barack Obama and will find that Indians are a bit apprehensive of her new leader.

While former President George W Bush is credited with transforming relations with India – the cornerstone of which was a landmark civilian nuclear agreement – Mr Obama’s regional focus has been entirely on Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Cashing in

But Washington knows it cannot afford to ignore India.

"The world has a lot riding on our co-operation"

Hillary Clinton

In a front-page article in the Times of India newspaper on Friday, Mrs Clinton wrote that close co-operation between India and the United States was vital to tackle global security threats, nuclear proliferation and climate change.

"I hope a new era of stronger co-operation between India and the United States will be one of the signature accomplishments of our new governments," she wrote. "The world has a lot riding on our co-operation."

Key to that close relationship is the economy.

The US is India’s largest trading partner, with investments of close to $10bn (£6bn). But India too is investing heavily in the US economy, its stake valued at some $3.7bn (£2.3bn) last year.

With the civilian nuclear trade agreement in place, the US is hoping to cash in.

During her visit, Mrs Clinton is expected to announce the location of two nuclear power plants that US companies will build.

A recent report by the Confederation of Indian Industry says that India intends to import 24 nuclear reactors in the next 10-15 years, creating "as many as 20,000 new jobs directly and indirectly in the US from nuclear trade".

Delhi is also in the market for some 125 new fighter aircraft to replace ageing Soviet-era planes, and the US is locked in competition with France, Britain and Russia to win the multi-million dollar deal.

Sharp differences

But the Obama administration also needs Delhi’s co-operation on three key global issues which are among its key policy objectives – nuclear non-proliferation, climate change, and a new world trade treaty.

US security officials outside the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai, July 17

India has sharp differences with Washington on all three areas.

Along with China, it has been a key dissenter on trade and climate change talks, refusing, for instance, to agree to emission caps.

India has also refused to sign the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, describing it as discriminatory since it does not press existing nuclear powers to give up their weapons.

Without India on board, the Obama administration knows they will make little headway on any of these issues.

And while President Obama’s new Afghanistan-Pakistan policy forms the cornerstone of his regional approach, Washington is only too aware that without India’s co-operation, any resolution of the situation in those two countries could come apart.

So if the US wants Pakistan to concentrate its efforts on the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban along the Afghan border, it needs to ensure that there is peace between India and Pakistan so that troops from the east can be relocated to the battle in the north-west.

Regional wrangling

For the first time, a major US figure is visiting India without also travelling to Pakistan.

Many in India strongly believe that it was gentle pressure from Washington that persuaded Delhi to restart peace talks with Islamabad, on hold since last year’s Mumbai attacks.

And Pakistan has recently indicated that it may be willing to broker peace between the US and the Taliban, but in exchange wants India to reduce its engagement in Afghanistan.

After the fall of the Taliban in 2001, India quickly re-established diplomatic ties and now operates four missions in Afghanistan, two of them located in Kandahar and Jalalabad, uncomfortably close to the Pakistan border.

Islamabad accuses Delhi of using these missions to foment trouble in Baluchistan and the North West Frontier Province, a charge that India denies.

But there is some suggestion that the US is trying to press India to at least scale down its diplomatic presence, if not close down some of its posts.

Despite her popularity, Mrs Clinton will have her diplomatic skills tested to the fullest in India.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

US offer to Iran ‘not indefinite’

US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is to warn Iran that the US will not extend its offer of engagement "indefinitely".

In a foreign policy speech to be delivered later, Mrs Clinton will say that Iran needs to respond to President Barack Obama’s overtures now.

If it does not, Iran could face more penalties and isolation over its nuclear programme, she will say.

She will say Iran used "deplorable" means to quash post-election protests.

Violent street protests broke out after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected in the 12 June disputed election.

Some 17 people were thought to have died during days of clashes.

"Neither the president nor I have any illusions that direct dialogue with the Islamic Republic will guarantee success."

Hilary Clinton

Mr Obama has talked of engagement with Iran but has not made clear how that might take place.

Shortly after coming to office in January, Mr Obama said: "If countries like Iran are willing to unclench their fists, they will find an extended hand from us".

In her speech in Washington on Wednesday, Ms Clinton will say: "We remain ready to engage with Iran, but the time for action is now.

"The opportunity will not remain open indefinitely."

The US fears Iran’s nuclear programme is a cover to build atomic weapons, a charge Iranian officials deny.

Enriched uranium can be used to make atomic weapons, but can also be used in nuclear power plants.

Mrs Clinton will say the Bush administration policy of isolating Iran did not stop it moving towards developing nuclear weapons.

"Neither the president nor I have any illusions that direct dialogue with the Islamic Republic will guarantee success.

"But we also understand the importance of trying to engage Iran and offering its leaders a clear choice: whether to join the international community as a responsible member or to continue down a path to further isolation."</p


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Clinton plea for N Korea captives

By Kim Ghattas
BBC News, Washington

Journalists Euna Lee (L) and Laura Ling

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said she hopes North Korea will free two jailed American reporters.

Laura Ling and Euna Lee were imprisoned after apparently illegally entering North Korea from China in March.

The were sentenced to 12 years of hard labour for illegal border crossing and an unspecified "grave crime".

The US had so far appealed for their release on humanitarian grounds, but has now also acknowledged possible wrongdoing by the journalists.

‘Very sorry’

This is the first time that Mrs Clinton has appealed for amnesty for Ms Ling and Ms Lee.

She said the two reporters had expressed "great remorse for the incident", adding that "everyone is very sorry that it happened".

The secretary of state had so far dismissed the North Korean charges against the women as baseless.

Her comments came a day after the pair admitted they had broken North Korean law and said they needed help from their government, in a telephone call to Lisa Ling, Laura’s sister.

Mrs Clinton’s comments also coincide with a signal from North Korea that it would release the two journalists if the US made a formal apology.

Han Park, a Korea-born professor at an American university, made the suggestion after a trip to Pyongyang.

He also said North Korea had delayed sending the two journalists to a prison labour camp and was keeping them in a guest house.

Professor Park has in the past acted as a link between North Korea and Washington, in an unofficial capacity.

When asked whether Washington had sent Professor Park to Pyongyang, Secretary Clinton said she had no comment to make.


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