|
India part of an international agreement on plans to build the world's first thermonuclear reactor in France
Kiran Chaube
Nov. 10, 2006

India is part of the seven nation agreement on the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor project in Brussels in May. The international agreement will build the world's first thermonuclear reactor in France. Japan was a strong contender of the same. France will see first thermonuclear reactor.
Japan will host the reactor but will host a number of ITER-related research facilities. India will also host some facilities in future.
WORLD ARTICLES
India part of an international agreement on plans to build the world's first thermonuclear reactor in France
Kiran Chaube
The international agreement will build the world's first thermonuclear reactor in France. Japan was a strong contender of the same. France will see first thermonuclear reactor. READ MORE>>
Russia and America reach a deal on Russian entry to World Trade Organization
Media Release
Presidents Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush will formally announce on the deal when they meet in mid-November at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Hanoi. READ MORE>>
Bush will face strong protests in Indonesia
Media Release
Indonesia's foreign minister said people are free to demonstrate during U.S President George W. Bush's coming visit. READ MORE>>
A stealth revolution brought the Democrats back in power
Sonia Chopra
They did not speak. They did not protest. Unlike at the time of Vietnam war there was no civil disobedience. The anger was high. People below age of 25 voted 60% more than normal. READ MORE>>
U.S.-funded survey: Afghans losing confidence in their country's direction
Media Release
Afghans are losing confidence in the direction their country is headed even though most feel more prosperous now than under the ousted Taliban regime, a U.S.-funded survey released on Thursday found. READ MORE>>
What will Baker report on Iraq contain? Mubarak warns against hanging Saddam, predicts further bloodbath in Iraq
Alok Sen
The reparations can be very long stretched. The consequence for woeld politics can be ugly for years to come. READ MORE>>
Bush maintains minus-Rumsfeld 'stay the course'
Prithiv Patel
US President Bush set the tone for the future in Iraq. The future is minus-Rumsfeld 'stay the course'. READ MORE>>
India-US nuke deal a history with moderate democrats winning the Senate back
Media Release
This is the best thing that happened for India. India should compete with China and not Pakistan. If China does not need US partnership in nukes, India can also do without the same. READ MORE>>
MORE ARTICLES >>
|