IANS | 17 Jun, 2024
US National Security Advisor (NSA) Jake Sullivan began his two-day visit
to India on Monday as both countries take the next steps in strategic
technology and defence cooperation during the third term of the NDA government
led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
"Delighted to welcome US NSA Jake Sullivan in New Delhi today
morning. A comprehensive discussion on a broad range of bilateral, regional and
global issues. Confident that India-US strategic partnership will continue to
advance strongly in our new term," External Affairs Minister (EAM) S.
Jaishankar posted on X after he met Sullivan.
The US NSA then met his Indian counterpart, India's NSA Ajit Doval as
both top security officials, who had met in Italy on the sidelines of the G7
Summit last week, carried on their discussions on a range of strategic,
regional, and bilateral issues, including the Initiative on Critical and
Emerging Technologies (iCET).
Sullivan's visit also establishes once again that India will continue to
walk a tightrope of diplomacy, a hallmark of the Modi government, and engage
with various countries to promote its interests.
The US NSA has arrived in India after attending and addressing the Peace
Summit on Ukraine hosted by Switzerland over the weekend.
India also attended the event but did not associate itself with any
communique or document emerging from the Summit.
Sullivan had visited New Delhi almost around the same time last year,
meeting PM Modi, EAM Jaishankar and NSA Doval as both countries unveiled a
roadmap for cooperation at a stakeholder event organised by the Confederation
of Indian Industry (CII) on advancing India-US iCET partnership just ahead of
Prime Minister Modi's landmark visit to Washington.
Both NSAs have acknowledged that the iCET launched by PM Modi and US
President Joe Biden in January 2023 will play a defining role in deepening the
strategic partnership between the two countries.
"I think if you ask the President, one of the things that he's
proudest of is his efforts to build a stronger relationship between the US and
India. And I do believe, both in the Indo-Pacific and the Indian Ocean and on
key issues like technology, the US and India are working more closely together
than ever before," a senior US administration official said in April, this
year.
"And I would simply say that I think the US-India relationship is
trending substantially in a positive direction and that our level of engagement
across every possible vector -- security, intelligence, technology,
people-to-people -- has excelled," he added.
During his visit to Washington in June 2023, PM Modi had also hailed the
signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on semiconductor supply chain
and innovation partnership as a significant step in the coordination of both
countries' semiconductor incentive programmes.
A few months later, another MoU on 'Enhancing Innovation Ecosystems
through an Innovation Handshake' under the framework of India–US Commercial
Dialogue was signed between the two countries on November 14, 2023, in San
Francisco.
At the same time, the India-US Defence Acceleration Ecosystem (INDUS-X)
continues to facilitate joint defence technology innovation and co-production
of advanced defence technology between the industries of the two countries.
--IANS