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NUKEWARS
Pakistan media hit out at Delhi's 'double talk'
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) Feb 26, 2010


White House confirms April 12-13 nuclear security summit
Washington (AFP) Feb 26, 2010 - President Barack Obama will host an international summit on nuclear security in Washington on April 12-13, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs confirmed Friday. The summit's goal "is to discuss steps we can collectively take to secure vulnerable nuclear materials and prevent acts of nuclear terrorism," Gibbs said. Obama called for a summit on the issue during an April 2009 speech in Prague, when he pledged to work towards a world without nuclear weapons. The US leader discussed the issue in a video conference he held Friday with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Gibbs said. "The president and his counterparts discussed nonproliferation, Afghanistan, terrorism, current economic and trade issues as well as the upcoming nuclear security summit," Gibbs said. Germany has already said that Merkel will attend the summit and another spokesman, Benjamin Chang, said that the White House "has invited more than 40 countries to attend the summit" though the list of delegates has not been finalized.

Newspapers in Pakistan took aim at India on Friday following the resumption of dialogue between the nuclear-armed neighbours, blaming its arch-rival for not agreeing to revive full peace talks.

India and Pakistan on Thursday held their first official talks since the 2008 Mumbai attacks and agreed to keep in contact but made no progress on their core disputes at talks seen as a key part of US war strategy in Afghanistan.

"Delhi's double talk derails dialogue," thundered the headline in English-language newspaper The News.

"Meaningless talks end in meaningless way," shrieked rival daily The Nation.

Pakistan's most respected newspaper Dawn ran a nuanced editorial, picking through the two countries' turbulent history, apportioning blame and doling out advice to both parties.

"While nothing concrete was officially agreed, the very fact that the sides have met should be considered a good thing," it said.

But the Urdu-language press highlighted India's refusal to resume peace negotiations, which India suspended after Islamist gunmen killed 166 people in Mumbai in November 2008.

India blamed the Mumbai attacks on Pakistan-based militants and said dialogue could only resume if Islamabad took concrete steps to bring those responsible to justice and cracked down on groups operating on its soil.

Top leaders from both countries have met several times since the Mumbai assault during regional conferences, but Thursday's meeting between the senior diplomats marked the first real move towards normalisation.

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