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13256
Mon, 07/21/2008 - 17:51
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http://m.oananews.org//node/13256
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Political drama in India attracts attention in US
Sridhar Krishnaswami Washington, Jul 21 (PTI) As the Manmohan Singh government seeks a trust vote on July 22, the political drama in India is attracting a lot of attention in the US as it willdecide the fate of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal.
"We will be watching it very closely. It is an Indian decision," a former senior official very familiar with Indiaand South Asia told PTI.
But Indian American community leaders are anxiously watching the turn of events stressing that the interest is not on the internal politics of India or of who emerges on the top but in the context of what is good for the country and thepeople.
A senior community leader who played a major role leading up to the passage of the Hyde Act in 2006 said the "entire world is anxiously awaiting" the results of theTuesday's vote in the Lok Sabha.
"True leaders will place national interest above their political ideology and party politics," Ashok Mago, chairmanof the US-INDIA Forum said in an e-mail.
"Indian Americans have no interest in the internal politics of India, they care about the country of their birth and want to see it achieve its rightful place in the world," Mago said, adding that it will be impossible for India to maintain its pace of growth without substantial resources forenergy and nuclear energy will play a crucial role.
It is amazing that communist party of India has no problem if China which does twenty times more business with USA than India; but for India to benefit from India USrelations causes them concern, he said.
"We hope that Tuesday brings India closer to achieving her dreams of becoming a nation where all Indians have better standard of living." Ramesh Kapur, president of the Indian American Security Leadership Council argued that politicians in India -- and for that matter in the United States-- have started politicising issues of national security and nationalinterest.
"... politicians of any party should stay away from national security interests. They can politicise internal issues," said Kapur, who is in the National Finance Board ofthe Democratic National Committee (D.N.C.).
"I believe that the Congress party should have put the foot down earlier and looked at national security instead of political security. Politically they would have been better off at that time than now," he said in a telephoneconversation from Boston, Massachussetts.
Now other things have come up like prices of oil andfood, he added.
Another community leader, Dr Bharat Barai, a specialist in internal medicine in Indiana, shared similar sentiments and said based on the merits of the nuclear dealthe present government should survive the trust vote.
"... the deal is in the best interests of India andIndian people," Barai told PTI over phone.
"We had a very hard time getting the deal approved by the US Congress," Barai, a Trustee of the Federation of IndianAmerican Association of Chicago, said.
"The Indian American community has done a lot of hard work, put in a lot of effort and money to get the deal throughthe US Congress," he said.
"I am speaking on the merits-- the merit being that this nuclear deal is in India's best interests and I think the government should survive on this issue. If they have other issues to settle such as inflation and corruption, they cansettle in a separate way," Barai said.
"We will be watching it very closely. It is an Indian decision," a former senior official very familiar with Indiaand South Asia told PTI.
But Indian American community leaders are anxiously watching the turn of events stressing that the interest is not on the internal politics of India or of who emerges on the top but in the context of what is good for the country and thepeople.
A senior community leader who played a major role leading up to the passage of the Hyde Act in 2006 said the "entire world is anxiously awaiting" the results of theTuesday's vote in the Lok Sabha.
"True leaders will place national interest above their political ideology and party politics," Ashok Mago, chairmanof the US-INDIA Forum said in an e-mail.
"Indian Americans have no interest in the internal politics of India, they care about the country of their birth and want to see it achieve its rightful place in the world," Mago said, adding that it will be impossible for India to maintain its pace of growth without substantial resources forenergy and nuclear energy will play a crucial role.
It is amazing that communist party of India has no problem if China which does twenty times more business with USA than India; but for India to benefit from India USrelations causes them concern, he said.
"We hope that Tuesday brings India closer to achieving her dreams of becoming a nation where all Indians have better standard of living." Ramesh Kapur, president of the Indian American Security Leadership Council argued that politicians in India -- and for that matter in the United States-- have started politicising issues of national security and nationalinterest.
"... politicians of any party should stay away from national security interests. They can politicise internal issues," said Kapur, who is in the National Finance Board ofthe Democratic National Committee (D.N.C.).
"I believe that the Congress party should have put the foot down earlier and looked at national security instead of political security. Politically they would have been better off at that time than now," he said in a telephoneconversation from Boston, Massachussetts.
Now other things have come up like prices of oil andfood, he added.
Another community leader, Dr Bharat Barai, a specialist in internal medicine in Indiana, shared similar sentiments and said based on the merits of the nuclear dealthe present government should survive the trust vote.
"... the deal is in the best interests of India andIndian people," Barai told PTI over phone.
"We had a very hard time getting the deal approved by the US Congress," Barai, a Trustee of the Federation of IndianAmerican Association of Chicago, said.
"The Indian American community has done a lot of hard work, put in a lot of effort and money to get the deal throughthe US Congress," he said.
"I am speaking on the merits-- the merit being that this nuclear deal is in India's best interests and I think the government should survive on this issue. If they have other issues to settle such as inflation and corruption, they cansettle in a separate way," Barai said.