Apparently responding to proliferation hawks in the United States, the Bush administration on Friday said North Korea's nuclear test did not alter its view on the importance of Indo-US civil nuclear deal, which has bipartisan support and remains Washington's top concern.
The nuclear test by North Korea has 'not changed our position at all' on the deal, US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said at a roundtable with Indian journalists.
'North Korea has now fully exited from the Non Proliferation regime,' he pointed out.
As the Senate's approval on the bill giving legislative stamp to the deal is awaited, critics of the agreement in the US have cited Pyongyang's test to caution the Bush administration against making exemption in US law for nuclear commerce with India.
State Department officials have, however, brushed aside any comparison between Pyongyang and New Delhi on the nuclear front citing India's functional democracy and export control systems and the absence of these in North Korea.
Describing the deal as the 'symbolic centre' of strategic ties between India and the US, Burns said: "We hope very much that the Senate will be able to vote on the legislation. We are gratified for the bipartisan support."
The civil nuclear legislation is the 'top legislative priority in the lame duck session of the Senate,' he said, adding that it was in the best interest of the US and India and is the 'symbolic centre in the strategic relationship between the two countries.'
Burns
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