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Congress Targets PM Modi Over NSG Meet, Says It Was 'An Embarrassment' To India

Congress Targets PM Modi Over NSG Meet, Says It Was 'An Embarrassment' To India
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives for a meeting with Swiss President Johann Schneider-Ammann in Geneva, Switzerland, June 6, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Denis Balibouse / Reuters
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives for a meeting with Swiss President Johann Schneider-Ammann in Geneva, Switzerland, June 6, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

NEW DELHI -- Terming the developments at the NSG meet in Seoul as an "embarrassment" to India, Congress today said Prime Minister Narendra Modi needs to realise that diplomacy needs "depth and seriousness and not public tamasha".

"We do not know why India showed its desperation and allowed the country to be equated with Pakistan on the issue of NSG membership," party's senior spokesman Anand Sharma said

"It's high time that Prime Minister Narendra Modi realises that diplomacy requires gravitas, depth and seriousness. PM Modi needs to realise diplomacy needs depth not public tamasha," he said.

"The world saw the PM make a spectacle of himself and India. Now India faces embarrassment unnecessarily," Sharma told reporters.

He said the intense lobbying by Modi government was "unnecessary".

Sharma said, "This kind of intense lobbying Prime Minister Modi and his government, we can understand should have done for the UN Security Council membership. When there is no obstacle when it comes to nuclear trade within the NSG countries, it was unnecessary."

The plenary meeting of the 48-member Nuclear Suppliers Group ended today without any decision on India's membership bid as divisions persisted over admitting non-NPT members with China leading the opposition to it.

Ahead of the meeting, India had pushed its case with a number of countries, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi leading the charge.

Modi had also met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Tashkent urging him to take a decision on India's membership on merit while seeking Beijing's support but China persistently opposed India's bid.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.