Washington, July 23 - Describing it as a 'landmark event', the US has said the end-user monitoring (EUM) arrangement agreed during Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit has brought India into the nuclear non-proliferation mainstream.
'It's a very significant agreement,' State Department Spokesman Robert Wood told reporters Tuesday when asked to explain how the EUM for high-tech defence equipment and technology would work.
'We're very proud and we believe that this agreement between the US and India is important in our overall global non-proliferation efforts, and we believe that this agreement has brought India into the nuclear non-proliferation mainstream.'
'And so it's a landmark event,' Wood said. 'What end-user means is basically making sure that the material, once it's delivered, it does not go to any other party, unless there is some sort of agreement by the United States. I mean that's, in essence, what end-user means.'
Asked how the US would verify the end user and whether it would entail any visits to Indian military bases, the spokesman declined to get into the details.