Guarded optimism in India as Trump and Modi outline plans to deepen
defense partnership
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[February 14, 2025]
By AIJAZ HUSSAIN
SRINAGAR, India (AP) — There was guarded optimism among military experts
in India as Prime Minister Narendra Modi and U.S. President Donald Trump
outlined plans to ramp up sales of defense systems to New Delhi,
including F-35 stealth fighter jets, to deepen the U.S.-India strategic
relationship.
“Defense sector is a big money, and India happens to be one of the top
buyers in the world,” said Lt. Gen. Vinod Bhatia, India’s
director-general for military operations from 2012 to 2014. “As long as
we buy, Trump will be happy but it’s surely going to expand our
conventional deterrence.”
The meeting signaled that “defense diplomacy is the core of diplomacy
these days," Bhatia said.
In a joint statement at the White House, the two leaders announced plans
to sign a new 10-year framework later this year for the U.S.-India Major
Defense Partnership.
Modi and Trump “pledged to elevate military cooperation across all
domains — air, land, sea, space, and cyberspace — through enhanced
training, exercises, and operations, incorporating the latest
technologies,” the statement said.
The leaders also “committed to break new ground to support and sustain
the overseas deployments of the U.S. and Indian militaries in the
Indo-Pacific, including enhanced logistics and intelligence sharing,"
the statement said.
While Indian military experts have long sought to diversify national
defense procurements, analysts say it will take years to reduce New
Delhi’s dependency on Russian arms, even with expanded defense
cooperation with the U.S.
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Raja Mohan, an analyst at the Institute of South Asian Studies in
Singapore, said expansion in defense cooperation would take time.
“What India wants is coproduction and more research and development in
India. It’s a long-term project,” he said.
It is difficult for India to remain dependent on Russia for defense
equipment owing to difficulties obtaining parts and upgrades. However, a
deal with the U.S. for F-35 stealth fighter jets will not fill India's
immediate need for more than 100 aircraft, said Rahul Bedi, an
independent defense analyst based in India.
“They are not going to come tomorrow,” Bedi said. “It’s going to take
several years to start arriving,” he added.
As its geostrategic competition with China has grown manifold in recent
years, India has diversified defense acquisitions from the U.S., Israel
and France while seeking to move toward self-reliance in this sector.
But New Delhi is still far from getting over its dependence on supplies
and spare parts from Russia that makes up to 60% of Indian defense
equipment.
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U.S. Air Force fighter aircraft F-35 takes off to perform on the
fourth day of the Aero India 2025, a biennial event, at Yelahanka
air base in Bengaluru, India, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Aijaz
Rahi)
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With vast borders and protracted border conflicts with neighboring
countries Pakistan and China, India also relies hugely on Moscow for
military upgrades and modernization.
“India faces threats from China and Pakistan, and a threat from
collaborative Pakistan-China. We need technologically capable
systems to counter these threats and one country that can give such
systems is America,” said Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda, who from 2014 to 2016
headed the Indian military’s Northern Command.
China’s rise as a global power also has pushed India closer to the
U.S. and to the Quad, a new Indo-Pacific strategic alliance among
the U.S., India, Australia and Japan.
The growing strategic alliance accuses China of economic coercion
and military maneuvering in the region, upsetting the status quo,
and has ruffled feathers in Beijing, which sees the relationship as
a counterweight against China’s rise.
Indian fears of Chinese territorial expansion are bolstered by the
growing presence of the Chinese navy in the Indian Ocean and
Beijing’s efforts to strengthen ties with not only Pakistan but also
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal.
“The major threat is from China which is outstripping India’s
capability,” Hooda said.
In the early 1990s, about 70% of Indian army weapons, 80% of its air
force systems and 85% of its navy platforms were of Soviet origin.
From 2016 to 2020, Russia accounted for nearly 49% of India’s
defense imports while French and Israeli shares were 18% and 13%,
respectively, according to the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute.
Major Indian purchases from the U.S. included long-range maritime
patrol aircraft, C-130 transport aircraft, missiles and drones.
The defense sales also can potentially offset the trade deficit
between the two countries, Hooda said.
“It’s a win-win for all. America will get more business, and we’ll
get modern weapons,” Hooda said. “It will also help to ease pressure
on the tariff issue and trade deficit.”
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Associated Press writer Ashok Sharma in New Delhi contributed to
this report.
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