Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

US to deepen nuke ties with India

- Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: The US expects to deepen cooperatio­n with India on nuclear security as an outcome of the Nuclear Security Summit likely to be dominated by concerns about Islamic State and North Korea.

“We really would like to see a even deeper bilateral cooperatio­n with India proceed going forward out of the summit,” White House official Laura Holgate told reporters on Tuesday. India has participat­ed in all the three previous Nuclear Security Summits, starting 2010, and the issue figures prominentl­y and regularly in bilateral interactio­ns and joint statements.

At a separate briefing previewing the summit for reporters, White House officials outlined an agenda that clearly reflected the IS, in the aftermath of the Brussels terror attacks, and North Korea as top concerns. PM Narendra Modi, currently in Belgium, arrives here on Thursday for the two-day summit being attended by 52 nations, and Interpol and European Union.

Modi is likely to have bilateral meetings on the sidelines — pull-asides or formal sit-downs with other leaders – but a schedule has not been announced yet.

He will visit the White House on Thursday, the day he arrives, along with other world leaders for a working dinner hosted by President Ba rack Obama. The two leaders will be together most of the next day, and may get a chance to meet though a formal bilateral doesn’t appear to be on the cards yet. India expects the summit to raise awareness about nuclear terrorism and bolster global cooperatio­n against terrorists and nuclear trafficker­s, according to officials in New Delhi.

The Nuclear Security Summit, a US initiative launched by Obama, has been focussed from the start on preventing nuclear materials from falling into the hands of terrorists and trafficker­s. This year, the focus is largely on IS and North Korea. A “special summit” is scheduled for Friday specifical­ly to discuss the threat from groups such as the IS.

North Korea, the other top concern, will be the topic of discussion at Obama’s first meeting of the summit — a trilateral meeting with counterpar­ts from South Korea and Japan. PAK’S NUKES CAN RAISE SECURITY THREAT; US

As world leaders gather for the Nuclear Security Summit this week, the US has said that Pakistan’s continued deployment of tactical atomic weapons can increase the security threat.

“Our concerns regarding the continuing deployment of battlefiel­d nuclear weapons by Pakistan relate to a reality of the situation. When battlefiel­d nuclear weap- ons are deployed forward, they can represent enhanced nuclear security threat,” said Rose Gottemoell­er, the under secretary of state for arms control and internatio­nal security.

“It is more difficult to sustain positive control over systems that are deployed forward. We found this lesson ourselves out in Europe during the years of the Cold War. And so I do think that it is a reality of the situation,” she said. “Wherever battlefiel­d nuclear weapons exist, they represent particular nuclear securi- ty problems,” Gottemoell­er said ahead of the Nuclear Security Summit being hosted by US on March 31-April 1.

This is not the first time that Gottemoell­er raised such concerns about Pakistan. At a Congressio­nal hearing earlier this month, she had said: “We have been very concerned about Pakistan’s deployment of battlefiel­d nuclear weapons.”

Prime Minister N aw az Sharif has cancelled his trip to Washington for the summit in the wake of the terrorist attack in a Lahore park in which 72 people were killed and scores injured.

Republican presidenti­al front-runner Donald Trump, meanwhile, said nucleararm­ed Pakistan is a “very very vital problem”. AGENCIES

MODI TO ATTEND TWO-DAY NUCLEAR SUMMIT LIKELY TO BE DOINATED BY CONCERNS OVER ISLAMIC STATE

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