America had to surrender in front of India's policy, ban was lifted from 3 nuclear centers

The US has lifted sanctions on three Indian companies. US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan had said last week that the US is taking steps to lift long-standing sanctions to prevent nuclear partnerships between India's leading nuclear entity and US companies. This decision came to light on Thursday after his statement.
The US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) has removed three Indian nuclear institutes - Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research (IGCR) and Indian Rare Earths Limited (IREL) - from the banned list.
BIS said that the US and India are committed to advancing peaceful nuclear partnership and collaborative research. It also said that science and technology cooperation has strengthened over the past several years, benefiting both countries and their partner countries around the world.
Promotion to the 2008 Civil Nuclear Deal
The move is expected to boost joint research and development, technology cooperation and energy security efforts between the two countries. The move also signals an attempt to give renewed impetus to the 2008 civil nuclear deal, which was originally conceived by then US President George W Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to promote peaceful nuclear cooperation.
US NSA gave indications during India visit
Speaking at IIT-Delhi during his India visit, Sullivan had said, “The formal paperwork will be completed soon, this will be an opportunity to put some of the controversies of the past to rest and create opportunities for entities that are on the US sanctions lists to come off those lists and collaborate more deeply with the US, our private sector, our scientists and technologists to move forward together on civil nuclear cooperation.”