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Home  » News » Iran not getting military training from India: Rice

Iran not getting military training from India: Rice

By Sridhar Krishnaswami in Washington
April 06, 2006 12:24 IST
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United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has rejected the notion that port calls made by Iranian ships at Kochi amounted to Iran getting military training from India.

Complete Coverage: The Iran Vote and After

Senator Barbara Boxer said at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Wednesday that some lawmakers wanted India to end any such relationship with Iran as a pre-condition for the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal.     

However, Rice said that the Defence News report on a military-to-military relationship between Iran and India was incorrect.

India not training Iranian Navy: US

"There have been Iranian ship port calls in India. The assertion that they train Iranian sailors is not right," Rice said, adding, "Not everything in the Defense News is right."

"The Indians say they do not train Iranian sailors and soldiers. India is not the only country in the world that has relationships with Iran," Rice noted.

Complete Coverage: Indo-US Nuclear Tango

According to Boxer, two Iranian warships were docked in Kochi as part of a training programme under a 3-year-old military cooperation agreement India has with Tehran. "Don't you think it is in the best interest of America when we are going to do this extraordinary special deal to make a condition that they end that relationship," the California Democrat queried.

But Rice maintained the US has made very clear to India its concerns 'about their relationship with Iran, about the pipeline and about their initial vote in the IAEA.'

Nuclear deal won't fuel arms race, says Rice

The Secretary of State's replies did not seem to satisfy Boxer who said that her remarks felt a 'bit hollow' and that the nuclear deal needed 'more checks and balances.' In her remarks, Senator Boxer slammed the Indo-US deal saying that the deal rewards India for not inking the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty.

"One of the great incentives of the NPT is that non-nuclear weapons nations are given access to civil nuclear assistance. By allowing India to receive civil nuclear assistance while it continues production of weapons, India is being rewarded," she said.

Support the Nuclear Deal

Boxer felt that the nuclear deal will give India the capability to expand its arsenal of weapons.

"While US nuclear assistance will only be used for civilian purposes, uranium fuel imports from the US will allow India to dedicate more of its scarce uranium ore for military use," she said.

Boxer also felt that the timing of this deal negatively impacts US policy in Iran. "I understand that there is no comparison between India and Iran, but we still have to be consistent in terms of our policy," she said.

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Sridhar Krishnaswami in Washington
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