The Asian Age

Japan, India may ink military pact

Bilateral agreement will allow access to each other’s bases: Tokyo ◗ The Narendra Modi government signed a similar agreement with the United States in 2016

- SANJEEV MIGLANI

Japan hopes to clinch a military logistics pact with India that will allow access to each other’s bases, Tokyo’s envoy said on Monday, in a tightening of security ties seen as designed to balance China’s growing weight in the region.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be visiting Japan this weekend for an annual summit with his counterpar­t Shinzo Abe, and the proposed Acquisitio­n and Cross Servicing Agreement between the two militaries is on the agenda.

Under Mr Modi and Mr Abe, bilateral relations have rapidly expanded and the two countries conduct three- way naval exercises involving the United States in the Indian Ocean and the Pacific.

Japan’s ambassador to India, Kenji Hiramatsu, said it was only natural for the two militaries to have a logistics- sharing agreement because of the large number of manoeuvres they were carrying out each year. “We hope to start formal negotiatio­ns with regard to signing of the ACSA. It is high time we had mutual logistics support,” he said.

Under such a pact, Japanese ships would get access to fuel and servicing at major Indian naval bases including the Andaman and Nicobar islands, which lie near the Malacca Straits through which a large amount of Japan’s but also China’s trade and fuel supplies is shipped.

India’s Navy, which is increasing­ly sending ships further out as a way to counter China’s expanding presence in the Indian Ocean, would get access to Japanese facilities for maintenanc­e.

The Modi government signed a similar agreement with the United States in 2016 ending years of hesitation by previous administra­tions that worried about upsetting China. Beijing has in the past expressed concern about multilater­al and complex exercises, calling them destabilis­ing to the region.

Hiramatsu said Japan and India had a great deal of convergenc­e with respect to freedom of navigation and transparen­cy in the Indio- Pacific region.

 ?? — PTI ?? Police personnel take away supporters of senior separatist leader Mohammad Yasin Malik during a protest march at Kokar Bazar in Srinagar on Tuesday over the death of seven civilians in a blast at an encounter site in Laroo area of Kulgam district of south Kashmir.
— PTI Police personnel take away supporters of senior separatist leader Mohammad Yasin Malik during a protest march at Kokar Bazar in Srinagar on Tuesday over the death of seven civilians in a blast at an encounter site in Laroo area of Kulgam district of south Kashmir.

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