US, India want more from Pakistan
The United States and India on Tuesday called for Pakistan to do more to stop terrorism and pledged to keep up pressure on Iran over its nuclear program.
However, the two countries remained divided over the future of India's large oil imports from Iran, which the U.S. wants to see drastically reduced to put pressure on Tehran to negotiate over its nuclear program.
"We believe that if international community eases the pressure or wavers in our resolve, Iran will have less incentive to negotiate in good faith, or to take the necessary action to address the international community's concerns about its nuclear program," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a press conference in the Indian capital.
About 9 percent of India's oil imports come from Iran, and though it has reduced those imports recently, it could still face U.S. sanctions next month if Washington determines it has not done enough under a law aimed at pressuring Iran to prove its nuclear program is peaceful.
India's foreign minister, S.M. Krishna, said Iran must live up to its obligations to remain free of nuclear weapons, but said it remains "a key country for our energy needs."
"It remains an important source of oil for us although its share of our imports is declining," he said, adding that discussions on the issue between the U.S. and India would continue.
Clinton and Krishna met Tuesday morning to discuss a wide range of issues, from the future of Afghanistan to plans for easing U.S. companies' entry into India's civil nuclear energy market.
Krishna called for stronger Pakistani action to fight terrorism and bring to justice Pakistan-based militants blamed for the 2008 attack in the Indian financial center of Mumbai. That attack killed 166 people, including six Americans.
Clinton agreed that Islamabad needs to do more to crack down on terrorists on its soil.
Pakistan "needs to make sure that its territory is not used as a launching pad for terrorist attacks anywhere, including inside Pakistan," she said.
The U.S. has shown its own commitment to fighting Pakistan-based terror, she said, by offering a $10 million bounty for extremist Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who has been accused of orchestrating the Mumbai attacks. AP
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