During meetings this week, the two sides discussed ways to take their defence relationship forward
Japan and India have broken new ground by discussing
the contours of a defence relationship, which will include joint
development and production of defence equipment.
The
two sides, during meetings here this week, attempted to take forward the
initiative taken during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s Tokyo visit in
May this year, when Japan bent its strict rules prohibiting
international trade in defence equipment by offering to sell India the
ShinMaywa US-2, a highly sophisticated amphibious plane.
The
business end of the conversation on India and Japan joining hands to
produce defence equipment took place during a meeting between National
Security Advisor Shivshankar Menon and visiting Japanese Senior
Vice-Minister of Defence Akinori Eto. The two discussed the existing
defence relationship that primarily involves joint exercises,
innumerable rounds between the Coast Guards and plans for an expanded
second-ever interaction between the navies later this year.
They
also discussed how to take this defence relationship forward to include
transfer of defence equipment and technology. While India has taken the
route of joint development in defence with a few nations, primarily
Russia and Israel, the initiative will be different and unique in the
case with Japan.
This is because in 1967 Japan
voluntarily relinquished international trade in defence equipment under
the “Three Principles on Arms Exports.” These principles are: no exports
of arms to communist countries; no exports of arms to countries under
U.N. sanctions; and, no exports of arms to countries engaged in
international conflicts. Nine years later, Japan added a ban on
arms-related facilities and technologies to the list.
Relaxation
of these norms has been slow in coming and, if it plays its diplomatic
cards right, India could become the second country after the U.S. to
gain from this. Australia and some European countries are already
serenading Japan after it announced some exemptions in overseas transfer
of defence equipment in 2011.
India would like to
test the waters with the US-2 plane. Instead of simply purchasing the
finished product, both sides will be looking at transfer of technology
of some of the parts to Indian companies. The intention is to replicate a
Maruti-Suzuki kind of venture. New Delhi feels the move to provide some
of the inputs from India would benefit both sides because costs are
high in Japan.
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