India and US push defense deals amid 'global challenges'
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[November 10, 2023]
NEW DELHI (Reuters) -India and the United States announced
progress on key defence deals and said they would expand their growing
partnership in the face of geopolitical challenges as their top
diplomats and senior ministers met on Friday.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin met Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and Defence
Minister Rajnath Singh in New Delhi as part of their annual "2+2
Dialogue", focused on the Indo-Pacific region. |
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin,
India's Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and Defense Minister
Rajnath Singh leave after participating in a family photo as part of the
so-called "2+2 Dialogue" at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Sushma
Swaraj Bhavan (SSB) in New Delhi, India, November 10, 2023.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/Pool |
The
two countries which were once on opposite sides of the Cold War
are now working on landmark deals including for the U.S. to
supply and manufacture engines for Indian fighter jets.
Indian Defence Secretary Giridhar Aramane said that deal between
the aerospace unit of General Electric and India's state-owned
Hindustan Aeronautics was on track.
"We are finalizing the commercial arrangements and the necessary
legal requirements are being put in place," he told reporters
after the talks.
A more than $3 billion deal for India to buy 31 armed drones
made by General Atomics is also being processed and India is
waiting for the company to get U.S. government clearances for
the next steps, Aramane said.
Washington had offered several infantry combat vehicle systems
and New Delhi has expressed interest, he added without giving
details.
Indian media reports have said the Pentagon has offered the
Stryker family of eight-wheeled armored fighting vehicles
produced by General Dynamic Land Systems and that New Delhi is
interested in jointly manufacturing them in India.
Before the talks, Defense Secretary Austin said it was more
important than ever that the world's two largest democracies
exchange views and find common goals "in the face of urgent
global challenges".
"We're integrating our industrial bases, strengthening our
inter-operability and sharing cutting-edge technology," he said.
India-U.S. relations have steadily grown stronger on several
fronts in the last two decades but New Delhi has also carefully
preserved long-standing relations with Russia, much to the
frustration of the West amid the war in Ukraine.
(Reporting by YP Rajesh and Shivangi Acharya; Editing by Andrew
Heavens)
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