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Obama hails US-India ties 'defining'
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-11-25 03:35 WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama declared Tuesday that US ties with India will be "one of the defining relationships" of the 21st century as he welcomed India's prime minister for the first state visit of his administration.
Obama was quizzed about the tense relationship between India and Pakistan and said it was not the role of the United States to intervene and solve such problems. He said, however, that American should do what it can to ensure that Pakistan and India both feel secure and able to focus on developing their own countries for their own people. On security, Obama said the US and India are natural allies. "We both recognize that our core goal is to achieve peace and security for all peoples in the region, not just one country or the other," he said. The two leaders glossed over a dispute about commitments to reduce greenhouse gases in advance of the next month's climate change summit in Copenhagen, but Obama said they had moved a "step closer" to a successful outcome.
In an elaborate welcoming ceremony earlier Tuesday, Obama showered praise on India and Singh, declaring it was only fitting the Indian leader should be the first state visitor of his administration. Obama said the United States and India share the "bold experiments" of becoming democracies after breaking from rule by a colonial power, and in modern times both have known the pain of international terrorism. "Our nations are two global leaders, driven not to dominate other nations but to build a future of security and prosperity for all nations," Obama said Chilly, damp weather led the White House to move the ceremony indoors, where Singh and Obama stood before photographers and television cameras in the East Room as a Marine band played the national anthems of their countries. Singh said that India and the US are separated by distance but bound by common national values of "democracy, pluralism, rule of law and respect for fundamental human freedoms." The White House was eager to show that, despite what some Indians see as a lack of attention during Obama's first 10 months, it values Singh's country as a key partner in dealing with extremists in South Asia, in settling international trade and global warming pacts and in steering the world economy out of turmoil. Obama's words sought to re-establish the strong feelings of goodwill the countries enjoyed during George W. Bush's presidency. Bush is credited with transforming the relationship after decades of Cold War-era distrust. The symbol of those new ties is a civilian nuclear cooperation accord signed into law last year after years of close communication and tough negotiation. Obama voiced his commitment to the accord, which has raised hackles in Pakistan, India's bitter rival and a country the United States relies on in the fight against extremists along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The two leaders were expected to have a memorandum intended to improve cooperation on energy security, clean energy and climate change, but there were no immediate details.
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