Clinton arrives in India
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Clinton arrives in India
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NEW DELHI: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in India on Monday in the shadow of triple bomb blasts in Mumbai.
Indian concerns over the US troop drawdown in Afghanistan and developing US trade links with Asia's second-fastest growing economy will also top the agenda when Clinton meets Indian leaders on Tuesday for a "strategic dialogue."
Her arrival followed the blasts in Mumbai last week that killed 19 people and injured more than 130 in the latest reminder of the region's struggle to crack down on terror attacks.
Clinton will have "extensive conversations" on security cooperation in New Delhi, the US official said, and push Washington's vision for a political and economic solution to the conflict in Afghanistan and "a future in the region that is free of Al-Qaeda."
India is wary of the planned US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, fearing that militants could take advantage of a power vacuum in the war-torn country.
On Wednesday, Clinton will visit the southern city of Chennai which has become a focus for growing US trade and investment.
"The main goal is to push the pace of the strategic dialogue and to focus the agenda on a set of concrete items that are important to take this relationship to the next level," the official said.
A landmark deal between the two countries in 2008 that allowed India to buy nuclear reactors and fuel was meant to lead to major contracts for US firms, but those hopes have been undermined by legal obstacles and uncertainty.
And the US was deeply disappointed in April when its bidders were dropped from the $12-billion competition to provide India with 126 combat aircraft, one of the largest military contracts of recent years.
Clinton's remarks at the strategic dialogue session will partly be aimed at "closing out the remaining obstacles and getting to full implementation" of the nuclear agreement, the US official said.
Ahead of Clinton's trip, Indian government spokesman Vishnu Prakash said that it was "no exaggeration to say that the relationship has got transformed in recent years." He said that in 2010 trade between the two countries increased by 30 percent to nearly $50 billion and that, including goods and services, the US was India's largest business partner. (AFP)
NEW DELHI: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in India on Monday in the shadow of triple bomb blasts in Mumbai.
Indian concerns over the US troop drawdown in Afghanistan and developing US trade links with Asia's second-fastest growing economy will also top the agenda when Clinton meets Indian leaders on Tuesday for a "strategic dialogue."
Her arrival followed the blasts in Mumbai last week that killed 19 people and injured more than 130 in the latest reminder of the region's struggle to crack down on terror attacks.
Clinton will have "extensive conversations" on security cooperation in New Delhi, the US official said, and push Washington's vision for a political and economic solution to the conflict in Afghanistan and "a future in the region that is free of Al-Qaeda."
India is wary of the planned US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, fearing that militants could take advantage of a power vacuum in the war-torn country.
On Wednesday, Clinton will visit the southern city of Chennai which has become a focus for growing US trade and investment.
"The main goal is to push the pace of the strategic dialogue and to focus the agenda on a set of concrete items that are important to take this relationship to the next level," the official said.
A landmark deal between the two countries in 2008 that allowed India to buy nuclear reactors and fuel was meant to lead to major contracts for US firms, but those hopes have been undermined by legal obstacles and uncertainty.
And the US was deeply disappointed in April when its bidders were dropped from the $12-billion competition to provide India with 126 combat aircraft, one of the largest military contracts of recent years.
Clinton's remarks at the strategic dialogue session will partly be aimed at "closing out the remaining obstacles and getting to full implementation" of the nuclear agreement, the US official said.
Ahead of Clinton's trip, Indian government spokesman Vishnu Prakash said that it was "no exaggeration to say that the relationship has got transformed in recent years." He said that in 2010 trade between the two countries increased by 30 percent to nearly $50 billion and that, including goods and services, the US was India's largest business partner. (AFP)
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