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User_gary Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Out of nuclear isolation, sees

Ties between India and the US are stronger than they have been in decades. Bilateral trade has surged, doubling since 2004 to more than $43 billion a year. Last year the two countries signed a landmark civil nuclear deal, agreed upon by Mr. Singh and former US President George Bush in 2005, that brought India out of nuclear isolation and symbolized a sea change in the countries' political relationship. Indeed, the US sees a vital role for India in the battle against terrorism in Pakistan and Afghanistan and in a host of other issues from world trade to climate change.

Please explain to me the emboldened parts.
I guess "out of nuclear isolation" means "India was the owner of the nuclear stuffs but now they agreed to share with each other"; but I don't have any idea what "sees" means in this context.
  

Top answer

1-- No. India was being ostracized to a certain extent because of its nuclear program, but now it is not. 2-- The US envisions an important role for India.

  • 1-- No.
  • India was being ostracized to a certain extent because of its nuclear program, but now it is not.
  • 2-- The US envisions an important role for India.
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1 Answers
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1-- No. India was being ostracized to a certain extent because of its nuclear program, but now it is not.

2-- The US envisions an important role for India.

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