FOREIGN POLICY: New, Strong and Clear Outreach

sorcerer

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After US, focus on Russia as Swaraj heads to Moscow

These meetings will help prepare for the Indo-Russian annual summit to be held in Delhi in the first week of October, said people aware of the matter. They said the upcoming edition of the summit would be significant at a time of rapid geopolitical changes. Significant deals in defence, nuclear energy and energy are expected to be concluded at this meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Vladimir Putin. A key item on the agenda will be expanding investment portfolios as Putin is expected to interact with captains of Indian industry during his trip, said one of the persons, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

A major talking point ahead of the upcoming summit is the S-400 missile defence system which India has committed to purchasing from Russia. At the recently concluded 2+2 Dialogue the US hinted at exemption to India from sanctions against Russia for purchase of the S-400 system. ET has learnt that India and the US will soon hold a meeting to discuss the waiver.

Meanwhile, Festival of India opened at the Kremlin State Palace in Moscow on September 6 at a grand scale that has been described as unprecedented in the past three decades.

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/65747675.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
 

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President Kovind invites Czech defence cos to manufacture in India


Says India’s growth story, Czech Republic’s technology and manufacturing prowess makes the countries ‘natural partners’
Prague, Sept 8

President Ram Nath Kovind on Friday invited Czech Republic's defence companies to invest and manufacture in India, noting that defence was a vital area of cooperation between the two countries.

Addressing the Czech-Indian Business Forum at Prague during his ongoing State visit to Czech Republic, Kovind said that the requirements of India's defence sector, which was opened to private sector recently, were huge.

Eyeing partnerships
Stating that the Indian economy was dynamic and strong, Kovind urged Czech enterprises to explore, initiate and expand their footprint in India.

Indian companies are also keen to establish new business tie-ups and locate themselves in Czech Republic, he added.

“I invite you to partner us in India’s exciting and transformative journey, which is going to usher in a new era to not only India and Czech Republic, but to the entire world,” he said.

He also encouraged existing Czech companies who had invested in India to remain invested in India.

Kovind said that India’s growth story and Czech Republic's technology and manufacturing prowess made the two countries “natural partners”. He highlighted that Indian economy grew 8.2 per cent in the first quarter this fiscal and that India was the fastest growing large economy in the world. India was now the 6th largest economy in the world and poised to become a $5 trillion economy by 2025, he added.

From Bata to Skoda, the story of India-Czech partnership has been defined by popular embrace, sustainable practices and high business confidence.

We encourage Czech enterprises to remain invested in the Indian growth story #PresidentKovind

— President of India (@rashtrapatibhvn) September 7, 2018
‘Step up efforts on bilateral trade’
Kovind said that bilateral trade at $1.07 billion did not reflect the true potential for economic cooperation between the two countries and there was a need to “redouble our efforts” on this front in the coming days.

He expressed hope that the 11th Joint Economic Commission meeting — to be co-chaired by Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu — next month at Prague would throw up new ideas to boost bilateral trade and diversify economic linkages.

Areas of cooperation
Czech Republic's Trade and Industry Minister Marta Novakova said that Czech is committed to strengthening economic cooperation with India. India ranks among Czech Republic's 10 most important non-European business partners, she added.

She said that opportunities of economic cooperation between the two countries are not fully capitalised. “There are large scale areas like energy where more cooperation could be achieved. Besides thermal and hydro, we see possibilities for nuclear energy in India,” Novakova said.

She also said that Czech companies were willing to cooperate in infrastructure and were already working in India in areas like water management.

Novakova also said that the project of creation of Czech industrial cluster in Bengaluru will come up for discussion at the Joint Economic Commission meeting.

Four MoUs signed
Kovind is accompanied by a 50-member strong business delegation from India. The delegation includes members of industry chambers Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the Confederation of Indian Industry, Assocham, PHDCCI and Trade Promotion Council of India.

On Friday, there was a B2B meeting between the business representatives of two sides, leading to signing of four memorandum of understanding in industry and education sectors.

https://www.thehindubusinessline.co...s-to-manufacture-in-india/article24900439.ece
When was the last time any Indian Prez vouched for defence cooperation?
 

Chinmoy

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Always. They even sign defence and strategic MoU or agreements.
I am asking about agreements signed during Indian Prez overseas visit. Most of the agreements are done when we have a state visitor.
When was the last time that any Indian Prez talked about increasing military cooperation on his state visit? I can't even remember Dr Kalam discussing it in any of his visit.
 

hit&run

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I am asking about agreements signed during Indian Prez overseas visit. Most of the agreements are done when we have a state visitor.
When was the last time that any Indian Prez talked about increasing military cooperation on his state visit? I can't even remember Dr Kalam discussing it in any of his visit.
I will try to search for you. I am absolutely confident that they all make such pitches on their visits.
 

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For first time, India, Iran, and Afghanistan hold tripartite meeting


India, Iran and Afghanistan held their first tripartite meeting on Tuesday in Kabul during which implementation of the Chabahar port project and a host of other issues including ways to deepen counter-terror cooperation were discussed, officials said.

The Indian delegation was led by Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale while the Iranian team was headed by Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister Hekmat Khalil Karzai chaired the meeting.

"The meeting focused on consolidating economic cooperation, including Chabahar, as well as enhancing cooperation on counter-terrorism, counter-narcotics, and continuing support to the peace and reconciliation process that is led and owned by Afghanistan," the three countries said in a joint-statement.


It said the three sides agreed to hold the next round of consultation at an appropriate time in India next year.

Sources said the possible impact of the US sanctions on the Chabahar port project also figured in the meeting. All the ports in Iran have also come

The port in the Sistan-Balochistan province on Iran's southern coast is being developed by India and Iran are also coming under the US sanctions on Iran.

During the two-plus-two talks here last week with the US, India apprised the American delegation about the strategic importance of Chabahar, particularly for enhancing trade with war-ravaged Afghanistan.

The port is easily accessible from India's western coast and is increasingly seen as a counter to Pakistan's Gwadar Port, which is being developed with Chinese investment and is located at distance of around 80 km from Chabahar.

The first phase of the Chabahar port was inaugurated by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in December.

The Chabahar port is being considered a gateway to golden opportunities for trade by India, Iran and Afghanistan with central Asian countries besides ramping up trade among the three countries in the wake of Pakistan denying transit access to New Delhi.

Under an agreement signed between India and Iran in May 2016, India is to equip and operate two berths in Chabahar Port Phase-I with capital investment of USD 85.21 million and annual revenue expenditure of USD 22.95 million on a 10-year lease.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...d-tripartite-meeting/articleshow/65769447.cms
 
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sorcerer

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Venkaiah Naidu discusses bilateral cooperation in trade and defence with Serbian President

Vice President Venkaiah Naidu on Saturday met Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and held a “fruitful discussion” with him on strengthening cooperation in a number of areas, including trade, defence and IT.

Naidu, who arrived Serbia on Friday, was welcomed by Vucic at the Serbia Palace.

During the visit, the two sides finalised an agreement on cooperation in the field of plant health and plant quarantine and a revised Air Services Agreement.

“These agreements will contribute to further enhancing bilateral economic ties,” Vice President’s office tweeted.

“New impetus to the partnership that is gaining momentum! Vice President @MVenkaiahNaidu & President of Serbia Aleksandar Vucic led delegation-level talks between the two sides where fruitful discussion on food production, agriculture, pharmaceuticals, defence industry, tourism & IT followed,” External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted.

Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu poses for photos with the Indian community on his arrival, at Belgrade, Saturday, Sept 15, 2018. MoS for Finance Shiv Pratap Shukla and Ambassador of India to Serbia Subrata Bhattacharjee and other dignitaries. (PTI Photo)


The two leaders also discussed ways to strengthen economic cooperation and trade to expand the great potential of the partnership between two countries, he said.

Earlier, Naidu was accorded a ceremonial welcome Vucic.

This year India and Serbia are celebrating 70 years of establishment of diplomatic relations.

“I am glad that we will jointly release the postage stamp on two great personalities, Swami Vivekananda and Nikola Tesla,” the vice president said.

Nikola Tesla was a Serbian American inventor and engineer who is best known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current electricity supply system.

Yesterday, Naidu interacted with the Indian community in Belgrade and asked them to be part of India’s growth story.

https://indianexpress.com/article/i...e-and-defence-with-serbian-president-5357954/
 

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Defence deals worth $ 8 bn will be on agenda of the India-Russia talks next month
Sources confirmed to FE that, “Besides the $ 2.2 bn deal for Frigates of Project 1135-6 frigates for the Indian Navy, the $ 5.5 bn S-400 Triumf advanced air defence missile system and the $1-bn Kamov-226 helicopters will be part of the agenda when Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Russian President Vladmir Putin meet in New Delhi, next month.”


https://www.financialexpress.com/in...of-the-india-russia-talks-next-month/1315916/
 

sorcerer

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Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani is visiting India tomorrow

Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani is scheduled to visit India on September 19. During the visit he will hold talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on a number of issues of mutual interest.

Issues pertaining to regional security, trade and India's development work in Afghanistan will also come up for discussions. The two leaders are expected to review the progress made on the infrastructure work being done by the Indian side in Afghanistan.

During his one-day visit to India, India Foundation, an independent research centre, will hold a civic reception in his honour.

https://www.aninews.in/news/nationa...nt-visiting-india-tomorrow201809182049100001/
 

ezsasa

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Venkaiah Naidu discusses bilateral cooperation in trade and defence with Serbian President

Vice President Venkaiah Naidu on Saturday met Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and held a “fruitful discussion” with him on strengthening cooperation in a number of areas, including trade, defence and IT.

Naidu, who arrived Serbia on Friday, was welcomed by Vucic at the Serbia Palace.

During the visit, the two sides finalised an agreement on cooperation in the field of plant health and plant quarantine and a revised Air Services Agreement.

“These agreements will contribute to further enhancing bilateral economic ties,” Vice President’s office tweeted.

“New impetus to the partnership that is gaining momentum! Vice President @MVenkaiahNaidu & President of Serbia Aleksandar Vucic led delegation-level talks between the two sides where fruitful discussion on food production, agriculture, pharmaceuticals, defence industry, tourism & IT followed,” External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted.

Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu poses for photos with the Indian community on his arrival, at Belgrade, Saturday, Sept 15, 2018. MoS for Finance Shiv Pratap Shukla and Ambassador of India to Serbia Subrata Bhattacharjee and other dignitaries. (PTI Photo)


The two leaders also discussed ways to strengthen economic cooperation and trade to expand the great potential of the partnership between two countries, he said.

Earlier, Naidu was accorded a ceremonial welcome Vucic.

This year India and Serbia are celebrating 70 years of establishment of diplomatic relations.

“I am glad that we will jointly release the postage stamp on two great personalities, Swami Vivekananda and Nikola Tesla,” the vice president said.

Nikola Tesla was a Serbian American inventor and engineer who is best known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current electricity supply system.

Yesterday, Naidu interacted with the Indian community in Belgrade and asked them to be part of India’s growth story.

https://indianexpress.com/article/i...e-and-defence-with-serbian-president-5357954/
At any point in time, either EAM/VP or president are always visiting some country or other.

Which is a good thing of course....
 

sorcerer

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India opens sensitive borders to foreign defence attaches for visits
In a sign of opening up to the world, the ministry of defence has proposed to allow defence attaches (military advisors) posted in embassies and high commissions based in New Delhi to visit sensitive border areas.

To begin with, a few military diplomats will be allowed to visit Leh with their spouses. Till date, these defence attaches were not allowed to roam freely and were only permitted to visit select places or approved locations across India.


A senior official, based in South Block, clarified that the decision will apply only to military diplomats belonging to friendly countries. Leh, capital of Ladakh, houses the headquarters of Indian Army's 14 Corps, which oversees the sensitive eastern Ladakh border with China on the Line of Actual Control and Line of Control with Pakistan. 14 Corps looks after Kargil, Dras, Batalik and Siachen, which is the world's highest battlefield.

"These defence attaches will not only visit the 14 Corps headquarters, but also some locations close to the border with China and Pakistan. The ministry of defence and the Army headquarters are working on the proposal, and embassies have been asked to respond to it,"said a senior official. As per the plan, the first batch of nearly 50 defence attaches, with their spouses, will be sent to Leh and its surrounding areas in October.

Officials claim that if it happens, this will be the first time foreign military officers are allowed into the Ladakh sector. The proposal was mooted after several diplomats requested government to allow them to visit far flung areas across India, especially the high altitude areas.

This move is seen as part of a series of government initiatives under "open up" policy. Last month, the Union home ministry lifted the Restricted Area Permit (RAP) from 29 inhabited islands in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, which were prohibited for foreigners. According to the latest notification from MHA, foreigners will also be allowed INTO 11 uninhabited islands for day visits, to be notified by the Andaman and Nicobar Islands administration.

An MHA official said 29 inhabited islands in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands have been excluded from the Restricted Area Permit regime, notified under the Foreigners (Restricted Areas) Order, 1963, till December 31, 2022, subject to certain conditions. These islands are: East Island, North Andaman, Smith Island, Curfew Island, Stewart Island, Land Fall Island, Little Andaman, Chowra, Tillang Chong Island, Teressa, Katchal, Nancowry, Kamorta Ayes Island, Middle Andaman, Long Island, Strait Island, North Passage, Baratang, South Andaman, Havelock, Neil Island, Flat Bay, North Sentinel Island, Pulomilo, Great Nicobar, Little Nicobar, Narcondam Island and Interview Island.



https://www.theweek.in/news/india/2...s-to-foreign-defence-attaches-for-visits.html
 

sorcerer

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Ballet with the Bear
This would explain why New Delhi is currently working out the modalities of what will be a vastly symbolic photo-op during President Putin's visit-the gift to Russia of a flight-worthy Indian-built MiG-21 during the 19th Indo-Russian Summit on October 5.


Russian president Vladimir Putin flies into New Delhi in his customised IL-96 jet on October 4 to participate in the 19th instalment of what will be one of the most closely watched Indo-Russian summits. Geopolitical shifts this year have fuelled such uncertainty-India’s perceived tilt towards the US after a recently concluded ‘Two Plus Two’ dialogue in New Delhi last month and the prospect of US sanctions being applied to India if it buys Russian defence equipment. This would explain why New Delhi is currently working out the modalities of what will be a vastly symbolic photo-op during President Putin’s visit-the gift to Russia of a flight-worthy Indian-built MiG-21 during the 19th Indo-Russian Summit on October 5.

The gift will evidently convey what defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman recently called India’s “time-tested relationship with Russia”. Beginning 1964, over 1,200 of these iconic jet fighters were bought from the former Soviet Union after India’s attempts to buy similar missile-armed supersonic aircraft were rebuffed by the US and UK. In a geopolitical quirk, the Russian air force never inherited any of the Soviet air force MiG-21s after the Soviet Union’s break-up in 1991 as they were stationed in the CIS countries. Russia, meanwhile, continued the Soviet Union’s legacy of being India’s largest supplier of military hardware.

This year, India has argued hard with its new-found strategic partner, the United States, about the need to keep its Russian arms pipeline open in the face of CAATSA (Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act), the US sanctions directed against Russian arms firms. India could be the target of secondary sanctions though the US National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) passed this August gives President Donald Trump the power to grant waivers. Meanwhile, in quiet negotiations with Russia between July 2 and 5 this year, Indian ministry of defence (MoD) officials worked out a new financial arrangement to protect the existing defence contracts from US sanctions by paying for arms in rupees rather than dollars.

US officials have warned against the impending sale of the Russian S-400 air defence missile to India, which Sitharaman told media in New Delhi on September 17 was “in the final stage”. India plans to buy four S-400 missile systems for Rs 40,000 crore. Issuing a warning about the S-400 sale on August 29, Randall Schriver, US assistant secretary of state for defense in Asia and Pacific security affairs, refused to rule out sanctions being imposed against India. He said in Washington that the US would have ‘significant concerns’ if India purchased major new platforms and systems from Russia.

- S-400 AIR DEFENCE MISSILE | Four air defence missile systems for Rs 40,000 crore.
- AKULA CLASS SSN | Another refurbished nuclear-powered attack submarine to replace INS Chakra currently in service. Worth over $2 billion
- KRIVAK CLASS FRIGATES | Four 1135.6 Krivak-class frigates worth $2 billion. Two to be built by Russia and two at the Goa Shipyard Ltd
- AK-103 ASSAULT RIFLE G2G deal for licensed production of the Russian rifle in one of the state-owned ordnance factories for the Indian army, police and paramilitary
- KA-226 LIGHT UTILITY HELICOPTERS $1 billion deal to manufacture 200 Kamov helicopters at HAL, Bengaluru
The Arms Pipeline


Earlier, in May, Prime Minister Narendra Modi flew down for an informal summit with President Putin in Sochi to signal just why it calls ties with Russia a ‘Special and Privileged Strategic Relationship’. The MiG-21 opened the door to half a century of arms sales, which continue till date and Russian-origin warplanes, warships, tanks and submarines continue to make up over 60 per cent of India’s arsenal. Washington’s chagrin is understandable. It is already India’s second largest supplier of military hardware, having sold over $15 billion worth of equipment over the past decade, but will not be able to displace Russia from its pole position in the Indian market.

The summit will highlight India’s interest in the North-South Corridor, for a shorter route for Indian freight originating in Mumbai and travelling via Iran and Russia, and for training astronauts in Russia’s Star City for India’s first manned spaceflight mission, Gaganyaan, slated for 2021. But defence ties will remain front and centre.

Deals worth over $10 billion will be discussed or decided in the upcoming summit and these have the potential of continuing the Russian arms pipeline for at least two more decades.

Besides the S-400 missiles, which like the 36 Rafale jets that the Indian Air Force (IAF) says it needs to address a steep decline in fighter aircraft, there are likely to be discussions on the lease of another Akula-class nuclear-powered attack submarine for over $2 billion, a $2 billion deal for four Krivak-class frigates, over 200 Ka-226 Light Utility Helicopters, which are to be built by Russian Helicopters in a joint venture with Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL), and, in what is an attractive low-cost option but like the MiG-21 of enormous symbolic value, a government to government deal for the licensed production of over 600,000 AK-103 assault rifles for the Indian Army in an Indian ordnance factory.

Further down the line are orders for two IL-78 aircraft, to be fitted out as Airborne Early Warning and Control Aircraft with Israeli ‘Phalcon’ radars and the possibility of India ordering additional Su-30 jets from Russia to make up for its depleting squadrons and keep the near-idle production lines at HAL busy. The India-Russia military relationship has weathered recent disappointments, such as India pulling out of an 11-year-old joint venture project to build a Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) in April this year. Officials say the agreements for the S-400 missile system, frigates and helicopters are on the anvil and only await clearance by India’s apex decision-making body, the Cabinet Committee on Security.

Russian officials are calling the October 5 summit a ‘litmus test’. “The Russians are deeply suspicious and have concerns over what they see as our increasing closeness to the United States,” says G. Parthasarathy, India’s former high commissioner to Pakistan. That closeness was manifest in a range of trilateral military exercises with the US, hardware sales, and a decision to post an Indian navy attaché to the US Naval Forces Central Command in Bahrain.

Moscow’s concern has also been fuelled by the two agreements that India has signed with the United States over the past two years. The Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) in 2016, which allows for Indian warships and aircraft to refuel in US military bases and vice versa. During the ‘Two Plus Two’ dialogue on September 6, India and the US inked COMCASA or the Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement, which allows Indian military platforms to access US tactical communications and purchase sensitive electronic equipment.

One Russian official says that signing BECA or the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement for geospatial intelligence, a third foundational Indo-US agreement that is in the pipeline, will seriously imperil India’s military relationship with Russia. BECA allows India access to US aeronautical, topography and nautical databanks and to the US’s vast geospatial information bank and grants the US similar data about India. Russia fears capabilities of its frontline equipment being supplied to India could be leaked to the US.

Russia has now insisted India sign similar protocols with them, hence, one of the items on the agenda of the India-Russia summit is believed to be a LEMOA-like logistics supply agreement. It will ease the refuelling and resupply of Indian warships and aircraft when they transit through Russian ports and air bases during military exercises. Signing such agreements with Russia will help the Modi government balance the relationship with Russia and the US, both of which are needed at this critical juncture. Vice Admiral A.K. Singh, former commanding-in-chief, Eastern Naval Command, says it is the rise of China and the technological constraints of its indigenous industry that are forcing India to rely on both the US and Russia. “We are confronted by a rising hegemon, China, that is adding two blue water warships to its navy every month when our scientists cannot even make a decent rifle for our troops. We need Russian weaponry like the S-400 as well as the US as a critical partner for our Indian Ocean strategy of Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA), which will allow us to track all Chinese warships, submarines and merchant ships in real time.”

There is, of course, concern over Russia’s growing proximity to China as an ally against the West, which the Indian military and diplomats believe is a marriage of convenience.
There is a third partner to this Cold War-like scenario-Pakistan, which has recently fallen out of favour with the Trump administration and whom Russia wants to use to reach out to the Taliban in Afghanistan, “to perhaps do to the US what the US tried unsuccessfully to do to it in Syria”, says a government official. Parthasarathy adds, “India would be well advised to keep the Russian connection open and sustainable because we have no differences in interests. Russia has also been a good energy partner. They are now buying big companies like Essar. Russia could step in with oil and gas if India decides to move away from Iranian oil.”

The depth of the military relationship between the two sides is intense. BrahMos Aerospace, the joint venture firm set up by India and Russia 20 years ago to manufacture the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, is working on the next generation, lighter, faster version of the missile that is currently with all three services. “Critical technologies from this missile have been imbibed into other indigenous programmes-rocket boosters for the MR-SAM missile and launch canisters for the Agni missiles,” says Sudhir Mishra, managing director and CEO, BrahMos Aerospace.

Russian assistance has been critical for India to realise the third leg of its nuclear triad of land, air and sea-based deterrents-nuclear-powered submarines armed with ballistic missiles (SSBNs). The first SSBN, the INS Arihant, was operationalised in 2016 and a second, the INS Arighat, was launched last December, with two more being built with Russian design assistance. Russian consultants will likely be on board India’s ambitious project to build six nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) to patrol the Indian Ocean region. The project was approved in 2015 and the submarines are likely to be inducted a decade from now.


Rupee-Rouble trade ::

Signalling New Delhi’s resolve to smoothen the defence relationship in the face of US sanctions, Indian and Russian officials have in the past few months set up a new financial arrangement for India to pay for Russian military purchases in rupees and not in dollars, bypassing the SWIFT transaction route.

A protocol signed between the MoD and Russia’s state arms trading firm, Rosoboronexport, in New Delhi in August, incorporates supplementary agreements into existing defence contracts. The new agreements switching payments to rupees will cover all existing transactions between Rosoboronexport and the MoD, the army, navy, air force, coast guard, Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) and all Indian Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSUs).

The government-owned Syndicate Bank in South Block will pay Russia’s Sberbank at New Delhi’s Connaught Place in roubles as a direct bank transfer. The first tranche of currency, equivalent to $40 million, was transferred in early September to pay for the refit of one of two Indian navy submarines currently in Russia. “The new system abandons the traditional system of Letters of Credit (LC) and going in for bank transfers. We have to now sign supplementary agreements to the original defence contracts to change the terms of payment from LCs to direct bank transfers. Otherwise, the doors have now opened to regular cash transfers in rupees. The dollar will be used only to denominate the price of the rupee and rouble on the day of the payment,” says an Indian official familiar with the developments.

While the US’s efforts appear to be to wean India away from its dependence on Russian platforms, the current state of the Indo-Russian relationship suggests that the Americans will be disappointed. The current trajectory suggests that the relationship is set to continue for the near future, long after the MiG-21 has finally flown into the sunset.

https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/...81001-ballet-with-the-bear-1344295-2018-09-22
 

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After France, India likely to ink pact with Russia for Gaganyaan

NEW DELHI: After an agreement with France, India could ink a pact with Russia for sharing of expertise on ISRO's ambitious human space mission project 'Gaganyaan' during Russian President Vladimir Putin's visit to New Delhi next month, official sources said.

Besides 'Gaganyaan', the two sides are currently engaged in talks to establish ground stations for Glonass, the global positioning system of Russia, and NaVIC, India's home-grown GPS in the other country, the sources added.

The subject to share expertise on 'Gaganyaan' came up during External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's visit to Moscow this month, a source said.


Significantly, India and France signed a memorandum of understanding earlier this month to share French expertise on the human mission project announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Independence Day address this year.

The human mission project envisages sending three Indians to space by 2022.

India's first and - so far - the only astronaut Rakesh Sharma visited the outer space in 1984 on a spacecraft of the erstwhile Soviet Union.

In an MoU signed between India and Russia in May 2015, the Indian Space Research Organisation and ROSCOSMOS, the Russian space agency, had agreed to work on joint activities in areas of mutual interest, including satellite navigation, launch vehicle development, critical technologies for human spaceflight programme.

Russia is one of the three countries - the other two being France and the US - that share robust cooperation in all three strategic sectors of defence, nuclear and space with India.

Indo-Russian space collaboration dates back to four decades. In 2015, the two sides marked the 40th anniversary of the launch of India's first satellite 'Aryabhatt' on a Russian (then USSR) launch vehicle 'Soyuz'.

In 2007, India and Russia signed a framework agreement on cooperation in the peaceful uses of outer space, including satellite launches, Glonass navigation system, remote sensing and other societal applications of outer space

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/65923021.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
 

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India, Egypt decide to boost defence cooperation

NEW DELHI: India and Egypt have decided to ramp up their defence and security ties which will include boosting counter-terror cooperation and carrying out joint exercises by their militaries, officials said.

The decisions were taken during talks between defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman and her Egyptian counterpart General Mohamed Ahmed Zaki Mohamed in Cairo.

She was on a two-day visit to Egypt from September 20-22.

Officials said Sitharaman and Mohamed also deliberated on expanding naval cooperation between the two countries and explored possibilities of joint production of defence equipment.

They said both the sides are working towards holding joint exercises between their militaries.


"They reviewed ongoing bilateral cooperation activities and discussed potential opportunities to further deepen ties and exchanges in the defence sphere," the defence ministry said.


It said the ministers decided to explore deeper cooperation in the fields of defence industry including joint production of military equipment.


"Both sides reaffirmed their intent to enhance cooperation in counter-terrorism. Naval cooperation, including cooperation in maritime domain awareness, was identified as an area of potential," it said.


The ministry said India and Egypt would also intensify training interactions between their militaries.


Read more at:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
 

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India, Oman may talk on Duqm port, space agency


India will seek to strengthen its strategic partnership with Oman when defence minister Bader bin Saood Al Busaidi visits Delhi this week, with measures including early operationalisation of Duqm port for its navy and training of Omanese military officers in India, as part of its efforts to push its Indo-Pacific strategy.

The visit will help further Oman’s nascent space programme and expansion of bilateral military exercises, said officials, as Oman is putting in place its space agency and seeking India’s expertise to enhance skills in that sector. The two sides are also looking to put in place a mechanism for ensuring rule of law in the western part of the Indian Ocean region, they said.

The Indian Navy will be able to use the facilities at Duqm port in Oman, thanks to a pact signed between the two countries during the visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Muscat last February, giving India a foothold in its extended neighbourhood.

Among eight agreements that were signed during Modi’s visit was a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the defence ministries of the two countries on the provision of facilities for the visit of Indian military vessels to Duqm port in terms of services and the use of the dry-dock for maintenance. Another MoU was signed between India’s Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses and Oman’s National Defense College.

Located on the south-eastern seaboard of Oman, overlooking the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean, the Duqm port is rapidly transforming maritime landscape in West Asia. According to experts, it has the potential to develop into one of the region’s largest ports in the long run. At the heart of its appeal, they said, is its strategic geopolitical location.

An Indo-Omani joint statement issued at the end of Modi's visit reflected growing maritime cooperation. “The two sides agreed to enhance cooperation to strengthen maritime security in the Gulf and the Indian Ocean regions, vital for the security and prosperity of both countries,” it said.

The port will act as India’s entry point for wider West Asia and Eastern Africa, a welcome development at a time when China has deployed strategic assets in the Indian Ocean Region, experts said.

India’s interest in Duqm port, which is merely at a 40-minute flight distance from Mumbai, has been necessitated by the fact that the Chinese navy has increased its activities in the western part of the Indian Ocean Region besides setting up a military base in Djibouti.

Oman is strategically situated mid-way between India’s western coast and Africa’s eastern coast and has been an old maritime power in the region whose reach stretched from modern-day Pakistan to the eastern part of Africa.

It is India’s oldest defence partner in West Asia and an ally in its anti-piracy campaign. India had supplied rifles to Oman, which in turn had sent support for India’s fleet of Hawk aircraft. It is the only country in West Asia that conducts exercises of all three forces – army, air force and navy – with India.

India is also considering setting up defence production facilities in Oman. The Arab country has given berthing rights to Indian Navy vessels, which have been used for anti-piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...share&utm_campaign=socialsharebutton&from=mdr
 

sorcerer

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Maldives voters throw out China-backed Puppet President Abdulla Yameen


Voters in the Maldives have thrown out the incumbent president, Abdulla Yameen, in an extraordinary rebuke to a leader who jailed political opponents and judges and drew his country closer to China during a tumultuous five-year term.

With more than 80% of the ballots counted on Sunday night, Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, popularly known as Ibu, was ahead by an unassailable 17 points in an election viewed as a referendum on democracy in the Indian Ocean archipelago.

Yameen, 59, is yet to concede but Solih has claimed victory in the capital, Male. “This is a moment of happiness, a moment of hope, a moment of history,” Solih told an audience of journalists and members of his campaign team. “For many of us this has been a difficult journey, a journey that has led to prison cells or exile.

“It’s been a journey that has ended at the ballot box. I must thank all those people who have struggled for this cause.”

Transparency Maldives, a local monitoring group, said its early results had shown Solih was the victor “by a decisive margin”. “We call on all stakeholders to maintain an environment conducive for a peaceful transfer of power,” the group said.

A spokesman for Yameen declined to say if the strongman leader would be making any public statements in the next hours.

Analysts had said Yameen was in a tough contest to win a second term against an opposition of disparate parties united by the goal of removing him from office. But few were willing to predict his downfall given his control of the country’s election commission, its supreme court and the public broadcaster.

Since his election in 2013, the former civil servant has introduced criminal defamation laws, imprisoned or exiled his key political opponents and, in February, gutted the supreme court by arresting two of its five judges.

The US and EU had both threatened sanctions against Yameen and members of his government if they were seen to be interfering in Sunday’s poll.

Monitors said a record number of people voted on Sunday, with lines snaking around the blocks of many polling booths and the voting deadline extended by three hours to accommodate the demand.

The result puts Solih, 54, on track to be sworn in as the Maldives’ fourth president since it transitioned to democracy in 2008 after decades of monarchical and authoritarian rule.

A mild-mannered stalwart of the Maldivian democratic movement, Solih was among the MPs who tried – and were denied the right – to register the country’s first independent political party in 2003.

He is known for his cool temperament and is considered palatable to parties across the country’s polarised political spectrum.

“It is crucial to note that as a lawmaker Ibu has enjoyed cross-party appeal more than any other,” said Azim Zahir, a Maldivian researcher based in western Australia.

Should Solih become president, he will face challenges in keeping his disparate coalition together and in striking a balance between India, the country’s traditional patron and protector, and China, which has the wealth and willingness to fund the small country’s development

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...rs-throw-out-china-backed-strongman-president
 

Kshatriya87

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India, Oman may talk on Duqm port, space agency


India will seek to strengthen its strategic partnership with Oman when defence minister Bader bin Saood Al Busaidi visits Delhi this week, with measures including early operationalisation of Duqm port for its navy and training of Omanese military officers in India, as part of its efforts to push its Indo-Pacific strategy.

The visit will help further Oman’s nascent space programme and expansion of bilateral military exercises, said officials, as Oman is putting in place its space agency and seeking India’s expertise to enhance skills in that sector. The two sides are also looking to put in place a mechanism for ensuring rule of law in the western part of the Indian Ocean region, they said.

The Indian Navy will be able to use the facilities at Duqm port in Oman, thanks to a pact signed between the two countries during the visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Muscat last February, giving India a foothold in its extended neighbourhood.

Among eight agreements that were signed during Modi’s visit was a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the defence ministries of the two countries on the provision of facilities for the visit of Indian military vessels to Duqm port in terms of services and the use of the dry-dock for maintenance. Another MoU was signed between India’s Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses and Oman’s National Defense College.

Located on the south-eastern seaboard of Oman, overlooking the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean, the Duqm port is rapidly transforming maritime landscape in West Asia. According to experts, it has the potential to develop into one of the region’s largest ports in the long run. At the heart of its appeal, they said, is its strategic geopolitical location.

An Indo-Omani joint statement issued at the end of Modi's visit reflected growing maritime cooperation. “The two sides agreed to enhance cooperation to strengthen maritime security in the Gulf and the Indian Ocean regions, vital for the security and prosperity of both countries,” it said.

The port will act as India’s entry point for wider West Asia and Eastern Africa, a welcome development at a time when China has deployed strategic assets in the Indian Ocean Region, experts said.

India’s interest in Duqm port, which is merely at a 40-minute flight distance from Mumbai, has been necessitated by the fact that the Chinese navy has increased its activities in the western part of the Indian Ocean Region besides setting up a military base in Djibouti.

Oman is strategically situated mid-way between India’s western coast and Africa’s eastern coast and has been an old maritime power in the region whose reach stretched from modern-day Pakistan to the eastern part of Africa.

It is India’s oldest defence partner in West Asia and an ally in its anti-piracy campaign. India had supplied rifles to Oman, which in turn had sent support for India’s fleet of Hawk aircraft. It is the only country in West Asia that conducts exercises of all three forces – army, air force and navy – with India.

India is also considering setting up defence production facilities in Oman. The Arab country has given berthing rights to Indian Navy vessels, which have been used for anti-piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...share&utm_campaign=socialsharebutton&from=mdr
We already had docking rights there since years. This is just a further nudge to the same agreement.
 

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