The much-awaited approval of the legislation by the United States Congress allowing civilian nuclear trade with India for the first time in 30 years has not given enough reason for some Indian scientists to welcome it without reservation.
While the government response remains cautious but unmistakably positive, the critics' earlier opposition to the deal remains unchanged.
Dr A N Prasad, former chief of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, told rediff.com: "I find that many of the provisions which go beyond the July 18 joint statement and the separation plan still remain intact."
"To sell the version at this stage, the US negotiators are meddling with the language to couch the main areas of concern and are packaging them by characterising some of the issues as legally non-binding. There is an inherent danger in buying such arguments unless they can be explicitly spelt out clause by clause and formally agreed," he added.
He, the Bharatiya Janata Party, Left parties and a group of senior nuclear scientists have begun furiously campaigning against the deal, maintaining that their earlier apprehensions over the deal remain valid even today.
India's official response, however, has been deliberately cautious, though it leaves no one in doubt about the government's firm determination to go ahead with the deal no matter what the Opposition's misgivings and criticism.
As External Affairs Ministry spokesman Navtej Sarna stated on Friday with an uncharacteristic note of enthusiasm: "The enactment of the waiver has wider implications for India's access to international cooperation in civilian nuclear energy and is, therefore, of historic significance."
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has carefully refrained from articulating on
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Coverage: Indo-US Nuclear Tango