Guest guest Posted December 4, 2001 Report Share Posted December 4, 2001 INDIA, AMERICA AT MILITARY ALTAR FROM SUJAN DUTTA New Delhi, Dec. 4: India and the US will resume joint military exercises and sign "in the very near future" the general security of military information agreement, defence policy planners of the two countries have decided. The agreement lays down that visiting military officers of both sides should ensure confidentiality of information on military systems and that neither side should reveal to a third country bilateral military information. Delhi's reluctance to sign the pact for almost a decade was one of the impediments to US military sales to India. An immediate consequence of the two-day Indo-US Defence Policy Group meeting that ended here today is Washington's decision to allow seven companies to sell to India equipment that were either frozen or impounded under the post-Pokhran II sanctions. The US has also invited Indian military representatives to briefings on its National Missile Defence System. The policy group, meeting for only the third time since it was formed in 1996, has laid out a roadmap for military-to-military cooperation, put in place inter-services groups and technical committees that will monitor and execute technology sales and transfers, exercises and training programmes. The group is the apex body for bilateral military ties. It is co- chaired by the Indian defence secretary and the US under-secretary for defence policy. A Joint Technical Group that will dwell on military sales and technical cooperation; a Military Cooperation Group that will, among other issues, dwell on the agreement; and Executive Steering Groups of the two armies, navies and air forces will meet separately in the first quarter of next year, ahead of the next policy group sitting in May 2002. "Both delegations reviewed the ongoing defence cooperation between India and the US. They committed themselves to increasing substantially the pace of the high-level policy dialogue, military- to-military exchanges and other joint activities," defence secretary Yogendra Narain and US undersecretary Douglas Feith said in a joint statement. Feith said one of the sessions in the meeting discussed the agreement. The US normally insists on signing the agreement with countries with which it has strategic military ties that govern technology sales and other joint programmes. "We did have a discussion on that understanding. This is an agreement that should be complete in very short order. I expect it to be signed in the very near future," Feith said. The pact will allow India easier access to US military technologies. The information agreement also governs acquisition of military knowhow from private US companies. A reservation that India has so far had in signing the agreement has been on the definition of information that could be called "military". It has been argued that the agreement does not specify the type of military information but makes it obligatory for a signatory country to detail the procedure followed to keep information secure. But in July this year, when Jaswant Singh was defence minister, India had decided to work towards signing the agreement. Sources said the actual signing could take place in the first quarter of next year. "It (the policy group sitting) has been a very useful meeting that has further cemented our defence and strategic relations. We have exchanged views on strategic objectives, reviewed the security situation in the region and have gone into details on steps to counter terrorism. We have reached an amicable solution on acquisition on certain weapon systems,"Narain said. He refused to go public with details of the weapon systems. The joint statement said it had also been decided to establish a separate Security Cooperation Group to manage the defence supply relationship. The US had agreed to hasten the review of India's acquisition priorities — for which licences will be issued to seven US companies — for engines and systems for Light Combat Aircraft, radars, multi-mission maritime aircraft, components for the Advanced Jet Trainer and high performance jet engines. "A new structured dialogue between the US defence department's office of net assessment and its Indian counterpart will develop exchanges between the defence research and analyses communities in both countries," the joint statement said. The policy group decided to go ahead with exercises in accordance with the plan flagged off by the US Pacific Command chief, Admiral Dennis C Blair, last week. These will be in five areas: training for combined humanitarian airlift, combined special operations training, small unit ground/air exercises, naval joint personnel exchange and familiarisation, combined training exercises between US Marines and corresponding Indian forces. "The US-India relationship is one that the US considers important not just in relationship to the immediate war against terrorism — also that — but as a basis for a strategic relationship we want to cement and develop," said Feith. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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