A senior Iranian official urged New Delhi on Thursday not to drift too close to Washington, emphasising his country's wish to be a major energy supplier to a "friendly" India.
Iran's Interior Minister Mostafa Pour Mohammadi said Tehran was determined to push ahead with plans to pipe gas to India via Pakistan, despite opposition from the United States and an increasing range of sanctions. "We hope that India's national interests will not be influenced from outside," Pour Mohammadi said, adding that he had discussed "the unilateralism of the Americans" with Indian government leaders.
"India is growing fast and needs a lot of energy, and we want to meet the needs of friendly countries," he said. New Delhi is trying to implement a nuclear energy accord with the United States aimed at bringing India - which has not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty - into the global atomic fuel loop for the first time.
The deal requires India, which has nuclear weapons, to allow international monitoring of its facilities. But it has been held up due to opposition from within Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's coalition government. Critics of the deal argue that traditionally non-aligned India may be moving too close to Washington, and that the accord has strings attached - including not doing business with Iran.
The United States and many Western nations claim Iran, which has signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, is seeking nuclear weapons. They also accuse it of being a major sponsor of anti-Israeli and anti-Western Islamic militant groups in the Middle East.
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