Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

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Iran President to visit Pakistan, stop in India

Indo-Iranian relations have gone down dramatically since Mr. Khatami's visit among much fanfare. right after the visit the US began dating India, and after the consummation of that relationship, the Indo-Iranian relationship took a nose dive. One low mark was when India referred the Iranian nuclear program to the UN to be considered for sanctions.

Additionally the Indians are only showing luke warm support to the IPI pipeline. It was only after China jumped on the Pipeline business that India seems to be showing some renewed interest. The Indian representative finally did find time to attend the IPI negotiations.

The Iranian ambassador has suggested various economic projects for Pakistan including infrastructure development. Perhaps during the visit to Pakistan some of these will become reality. A rail and motorway link to Iran would go a long way in Pakistan's desire to become a trade and communication corridor. Trains running from Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad to Tehran, Mashad and beyond to Europe via Izmir and Istambul would surely become a boom for trade and commerce in Pakistan.

Iran's President to Visit India to Discuss Energy Issues By Steve Herman New Delhi 21 April 2008

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is expected to make a brief visit to India before the end of the month. It will be the first trip to the South Asian nation by an Iranian head of state in five years. Discussions are expected to include a proposed Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline. As VOA Correspondent Steve Herman reports from New Delhi, India's long-standing and friendly ties with Iran put it at odds with U.S. efforts to isolate Tehran over its controversial nuclear program.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (file photo)

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (file photo)

Indian government officials say Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will make a brief stop in New Delhi before the end of April on his way to Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

The first visit by an Iranian president to New Delhi in five years comes amid U.S. efforts to have India and other nations increase pressure on Tehran to halt its suspected nuclear weapons development program.

The diplomatic relationship between Iran and India suffered after 2005, when the government here supported an International Atomic Energy Agency vote finding Iran in non-compliance with its international nuclear obligations.

Research fellow Shebonti Ray Dadwal at India's Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses says ties, however, are improving.

"Over the last few months I think India has again put Iran back on the focus of its diplomatic relations," Dadwal said. "Relations had really, I think, gone down to a large extent. But now it's back on track."

India's national security adviser, M.K. Narayanan, confirmed Sunday that the Iranian leader would visit New Delhi "shortly." India favors diplomatic engagement with Iran, while the United States prefers an approach of isolating the Islamic republic in response to its nuclear ambitions.

M.K. Narayanan M.K. Narayanan  contends that India, as home to the world's second largest Shia Muslim population, should view its relationship with Iran as a domestic issue as much as it is a foreign policy matter.

Narayanan, in comments made to an international strategic forum in New Delhi, flatly rejected India joining any multi-national compact to pressure Iran over the nuclear issue. The national security adviser says India is better situated than any other nation to talk with Iran and New Delhi wants to avoid what he called "conflict diplomacy."

India has another reason for deepening its long-standing relationship with Iran. With a booming economy and a serious shortage of energy, India hopes to tap Iranian natural gas through a planned 2700 kilometer pipeline that would transit Pakistan.

Talks among the three countries' petroleum ministers concerning the multi-billion dollar pipeline project are due to resume Wednesday in Islamabad.

Analyst Shebonti Ray Dadwal says the project, in the works for many years, still faces barriers before any gas would begin flowing through Pakistan to India.

"Officially the big hitch is pricing," Dadwal said. "They (Iran) had promised to sell it at a much lower price. Now they suddenly almost doubled the price. So that is a problem for India and Pakistan. Between India and Pakistan also the transit fee issue has yet to be resolved."

Another hitch, analysts say, is strong U.S. opposition to the project.

Also still pending is a deal for the export of five million tons of liquefied natural gas over 25 years from Iran to India. That contract, estimated to exceed $20 billion also faces a price dispute.

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