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Military

09 November 2001

Text: Joint Statement of U.S., India on Terrorism, Bilateral Ties

(Statement says both countries have been targeted by terrorists)
(1050)
President Bush and Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee issued a
joint statement in Washington November 9, affirming the commitment of
the U.S. and Indian governments to cooperate in the fight against
terrorism and to strengthen bilateral ties.
"They noted that both countries are targets of terrorism, as seen in
the barbaric attacks on September 11 in the United States and on
October 1 in Kashmir," the statement said. "They agreed that terrorism
threatens not only the security of the United States and India, but
also our efforts to build freedom, democracy and international
security and stability around the world."
Following is the text of the joint statement:
(begin text)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
November 9, 2001
Joint Statement Between the United States of America and the Republic
of India
Since September 11, the people of the United States and India have
been united as never before in the fight against terrorism. In so
doing, they have together reaffirmed the enduring ties between both
nations, and the importance of further transforming the U.S.-India
relationship. In their meeting, President Bush and Prime Minister
Vajpayee discussed ways to accelerate progress towards these goals.
They noted that both countries are targets of terrorism, as seen in
the barbaric attacks on September 11 in the United States and on
October 1 in Kashmir. They agreed that terrorism threatens not only
the security of the United States and India, but also our efforts to
build freedom, democracy and international security and stability
around the world. As leaders of the two largest multi-cultural
democracies, they emphasized that those who equate terrorism with any
religion are as wrong as those who invoke religion to commit, support
or justify terrorist acts.
The two leaders remembered the victims of the many nationalities in
the terrorist attacks on September 11 and agreed that all appropriate
steps should be taken to bring the perpetrators to justice, while
protecting the lives and welfare of the people affected by these
efforts. They noted that both countries are providing humanitarian
assistance to the people of Afghanistan.
They affirmed the current campaign against the Al-Qaida network and
the Taliban in Afghanistan is an important step in a global war
against terrorism and its sponsors everywhere in the world. They
recognized that the international community will have to wage a long
and multi-faceted struggle against terrorism, with patience,
determination and unwavering focus. They emphasized that there is only
one choice and only one outcome: terrorism must be fought and it shall
be defeated.
President Bush and Prime Minister Vajpayee agreed that success in this
endeavor would depend heavily on building international cooperation
and securing the unambiguous commitment of all nations to share
information and intelligence on terrorists and deny them support,
sustenance and safe havens. The two leaders agreed to consult
regularly on the future of Afghanistan. They welcomed the measures
outlined in the UNSCR 1373 and called on all nations to ratify and
implement existing UN Conventions on counter-terrorism. They expressed
support for India's draft Comprehensive Convention on International
Terrorism and urged the resolution of outstanding issues to enable its
adoption by the UNGA.
The leaders of the two countries expressed satisfaction with the
progress made in India-U.S. cooperation on counter-terrorism,
including the Joint Working Group on Counter-Terrorism established in
January 2000. They reaffirmed their personal commitment, and that of
their two countries, to intensify bilateral cooperation as a critical
element in the global effort against terrorism. They also announced
the establishment of a Joint Cyber-Terrorism Initiative.
Prime Minister Vajpayee and President Bush agreed that developments in
Afghanistan have a direct impact on its entire neighborhood. They
emphasized that the Taliban and the Al-Qaida network have turned
Afghanistan into a center of terrorism, extremism, and drug
trafficking and have brought immense suffering to the Afghan people.
They agreed that a peaceful, progressive, and prosperous Afghanistan
requires a broad-based government, representing all ethnic and
religious groups, friendly with all countries in the neighborhood and
beyond, as well as sizeable and sustained international assistance for
Afghanistan's economic reconstruction and development. The two leaders
committed themselves to work together, and in partnership with other
countries and international organizations, to achieve these goals.
President Bush and Prime Minister Vajpayee also affirmed their
commitment to complete the process of qualitatively transforming
U.S.-India relations in pursuit of their many common goals in Asia and
beyond. They agreed that U.S.-India relations draw strength from the
broad political support that exits in both democracies. They expressed
satisfaction at the high level of engagement and progress in bilateral
cooperation over the last ten months. In particular, they reiterated
their support for the wide-ranging bilateral dialogue architecture
established in March 2000. The two leaders agreed that recent lifting
of economic, military and technology restrictions on India provides a
further impetus to bilateral relations. They welcomed the resumption
of the bilateral Defense Policy Group as a step towards increasing
exchanges and technical cooperation in the defense and security areas.
They noted that India's interest in purchasing arms from the United
States would be discussed at the Defense Policy Group meetings in
December 2001. The two leaders agreed to pursue policies to enhance
the mutually beneficial -- and growing -- economic and commercial ties
between their nations. They also agreed to expand the Bilateral
Economic Dialogue and to broaden dialogue and cooperation in the areas
of energy, the environment, health, space, export controls, science
and technology, including biotechnology and information technology.
They agreed that the two sides should discuss ways to stimulate
bilateral high technology commerce. They also agreed that we should
begin a dialogue between the two governments with a view towards
evaluating the processes by which we transfer dual-use and military
items, with a view towards greater transparency and efficiency. In
addition, the United States and India have a mutual interest in space
and have agreed to initiate discussions on civil space cooperation.
The two leaders expressed confidence that enhancing their cooperation
in all these areas will go far towards building a long-term
partnership between the United States and India that will greatly
benefit citizens of both their nations.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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