India and the US on Monday pledged to boost defense and technology cooperation, and remove long-standing barriers to bilateral strategic trade, following a meeting between the national security advisers of both nations.
US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan is on a two-day visit to the Indian capital, New Delhi, the first by a high-ranking US official since Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi secured a third consecutive term in India’s general election earlier this month.
Sullivan met with his counterpart, Ajit Doval, to discuss progress on the Initiative on Critical Emerging Technologies, which the two nations launched in 2022.
Photo: Reuters
The initiative sets a path for collaboration on semiconductor production and developing artificial intelligence, and was critical in sealing a deal that would allow US-based General Electric to partner with India’s Hindustan Aeronautics to produce jet engines in India.
The two officials on Monday emphasized the need for more collaboration, with a focus on funding innovative research in areas such as semiconductor manufacturing, clean energy and machine learning. They also discussed the possible coproduction of land warfare systems, a joint statement said.
Sullivan also held talks with Modi, in which the two reaffirmed their commitment to bolstering ties between New Delhi and Washington, and he met with Indian Minister of External Affairs Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
Sullivan yesterday was expected to meet with industry and business leaders.
India and the US have grown closer, as both nations eye China’s growing assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific region with caution. Modi was honored with a pomp-filled state visit last year, where he and US President Joe Biden called the India-US relationship among the most consequential in the world, but ties have also been tested after US prosecutors last year accused an Indian government official of orchestrating a plot to murder a Sikh separatist leader in New York.
Sullivan’s visit to New Delhi comes as an Indian national was extradited to the US from the Czech Republic to face charges of murder for hire and conspiracy to commit murder for hire, in relation to the assassination plot, which was foiled by US officials.
The charges were the second accusation of complicity by Indian government officials in attempts to kill Sikh separatist figures living in North America.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in September last year said that there were credible allegations that the Indian government had links to the assassination in that nation of Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
While India rejected Trudeau’s accusations, it has set up an investigation committee to look into the US allegations.
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