The Asian Age

India calls off $ 500m defence deal with Israel

◗ The announceme­nt of terminatio­n of the deal came a couple of weeks before Israeli PM Netanyahu is due to visit India

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Jerusalem, Jan. 3: India has called off an order to buy Spike anti- tank guided missiles from Israel’s state- owned defence contractor Rafael, the company said on Wednesday.

The deal was worth about $ 500 million and the announceme­nt of its terminatio­n came a couple of weeks before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is due to visit India.

An Indian defence ministry spokesman declined comment on the cancellati­on. Local media reported that Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on was developing a domestic antitank missile the government was keen to support.

“Rafael regrets the decision and remains committed to cooperatin­g with the Indian ministry of defence and to its strategy of continuing to work in India, an important market, as it has for more than two decades, to provide India with the most advanced and innovative systems,” the firm said in a statement.

However, India’s defence ministry said separately it had cleared a plan to buy 131 Barak surface- toair missiles built by Rafael. The 4.6- billionrup­ee ($ 72 million) order follows up an earlier purchase of Barak missiles, meant to protect navy vessels against sea- skimming missiles and aerial threats.

The two countries have grown closer since Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi took office in 2014, widening commercial cooperatio­n beyond their longstandi­ng defence ties.

Modi became the first sitting Indian prime minister to visit Israel last summer, and Netanyahu will fly to India on Jan. 14.

— Reuters

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