Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
International

At Dinner With Obama, Modi Warns About State Actors Abetting Terrorists

IANS, 01 Apr, 2016 11:38 AM
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi warned global leaders from over 50 nations gathered here to discuss nuclear terrorism that state actors working with nuclear traffickers and terrorists present the greatest risk.
     
    "Terrorism is globally networked. But, we still act only nationally to counter this threat," he said at a working dinner hosted by President Barack Obama on Thursday night to kick off the two-day Nuclear Security Summit.
     
    Obama, who is hosting his fourth and last such summit to discuss how to prevent terrorists and other non-state actors from gaining access to nuclear materials, was flanked by Modi on the right and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the left.
     
    Modi, who has come to the summit meeting in the shadow of Brussels and Lahore terror attacks, from the Belgian capital said, "Brussels shows us how real and immediate is the threat to nuclear security from terrorism.
     
    "Terror has evolved. Terrorists are using 21st century technology. But our responses are rooted in the past," he said asking the leaders to focus on three contemporary features of terrorism.
     
    "First, today's terrorism uses extreme violence as theatre. Second, we are no longer looking for a man in a cave, but we are hunting for a terrorist in a city with a computer or a smart phone.
     
    "And third, State actors working with nuclear traffickers and terrorists present the greatest risk."
     
    In what was seen as an unmistakable reference to Pakistan, Modi also gave a call to drop the notion that terrorism is someone else's problem and that "his" terrorist is not "my" terrorist.
     
     
    "Nuclear security must remain an abiding national priority," Modi told the world leaders. "All states must completely abide by their international obligations."
     
    "Without prevention and prosecution of acts of terrorism there is no deterrence against nuclear terrorism," he said.
     
    "But the reach and supply chains of terrorism are global, genuine cooperation between nation states is not," lamented Modi.
     
    India has long asked Islamabad to take action against Pakistan-based terror groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba(LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), responsible for the Mumbai and Pathankot terror attacks. But the perpetrators of the Mumbai attacks remain unpunished.
     
    On the eve of the summit, India's National Security Advisor Ajit Doval discussed counterterrorism cooperation, including against LeT and JeM, with his US counterpart Susan E. Rice at the White House.
     
    In a meeting with Doval, Secretary of State John Kerry praising "India's record of being a leader, of being responsible," told him "India has a very important role to play with respect to responsible stewardship of nuclear weapons and nuclear materials".
     
    "And it is particularly important right now at a time when we see in the region some choices being made that may accelerate possible arms construction, which we have serious questions about," he had said in another reference to Pakistan.
     
    The US has time and again expressed concern at Pakistan's deployment of weapon-grade nuclear weapons.
     
    "Our concerns regarding the continuing deployment of battlefield nuclear weapons by Pakistan relate to a reality of the situation," Rose Gottemoeller, under secretary of state for arms control and international security, told reporters on the eve of the summit.
     
    "When battlefield nuclear weapons are deployed forward, they can represent an enhanced nuclear security threat," she said.
     
    However, Pakistan Foreign Secretary Aizaz Chaudhary on Thursday claimed that its "modest" nuclear programme was "essentially for its defence and not to threaten anyone".
     
    "Pakistan's nuclear installations are not only secure but the world also acknowledges that they are," he told reporters at the Pakistan embassy here. "India, on the other hand, has an ambitious nuclear programme."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Manitoba Government Plans To Remove Red Lights From Perimeter Highway

    Manitoba Government Plans To Remove Red Lights From Perimeter Highway
    Selinger says work is to start with four intersections south of the city where traffic lights will be removed and replaced with free-flowing interchanges.

    Manitoba Government Plans To Remove Red Lights From Perimeter Highway

    Donald Trump Says He Has An Instinct For Sensing Threats After Paris Attacks

    As the hunt for the perpetrators of the attacks in Paris continues, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said Monday that he is uniquely qualified to be commander-in-chief because he has an "instinct" for sensing threats.

    Donald Trump Says He Has An Instinct For Sensing Threats After Paris Attacks

    Riots Destroy Canadian Mine In Mozambique, Company's Second Project To Face Trouble

    Riots Destroy Canadian Mine In Mozambique, Company's Second Project To Face Trouble
    Police had been preventing access to the site because it was still occupied by rioters.

    Riots Destroy Canadian Mine In Mozambique, Company's Second Project To Face Trouble

    133,000 Indian Students Contribute $3.6 Billion To US Economy

    133,000 Indian Students Contribute $3.6 Billion To US Economy
    With a whopping 29.4 percent increase, a record high of 132,888 Indian students studying in the US in 2014/15 academic year contributed $3.6 billion to the US economy, according to a new report.

    133,000 Indian Students Contribute $3.6 Billion To US Economy

    US-China Rivalry, Deadly Paris Attacks To Grab Attention From Trade At Manila Summit

    US-China Rivalry, Deadly Paris Attacks To Grab Attention From Trade At Manila Summit
    MANILA, Philippines — Tensions with China and the Paris attacks could upstage trade issues at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, being held under extra-heavy security in the Philippine capital this week.

    US-China Rivalry, Deadly Paris Attacks To Grab Attention From Trade At Manila Summit

    Harvard University Evacuates Four Buildings After Bomb Scare

    Harvard University said on Monday it received "unconfirmed" bomb threat which prompted the university to evacuate four buildings on its campus.

    Harvard University Evacuates Four Buildings After Bomb Scare