The United States on Friday said the bill on the civil nuclear deal approved by the Senate was within the parameters of the agreement between the two governments and the 'very few' problem areas remaining will be removed to make the final legislation 'acceptable.'
The 'historic' agreement can be implemented after consensus of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and India's deal, which can all happen within months, US Ambassador David C Mulford told reporters in New Delhi soon after the 100-member Senate passed the bill with a 85-12 vote.
He said the conference for reconciliation of the two bills -- one of the House of Representatives passed in July and another of the Senate -- will take place in the first week of the next month before the final legislation goes to President George W Bush for his signature.
"The two bills are now visible. The challenge of the conference committee will be to rationalise the two bills into a single bill," Mulford said.
"So we know what is in the legislation. Our view is that the agreement achieved in the legislation clearly falls within the parameters of the original agreement between the two countries, first in July last year, the preliminary agreement, and the final agreement in March this year. It meets all those tests and conditions," he said.
India has maintained that the legislation on the civil nuclear agreement should be within the parameters of the agreement reached between the two governments failing which it would not be acceptable to it.
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Coverage: Indo-US Nuclear Deal