shree835
BANNED
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2010
- Messages
- 3,005
- Reaction score
- -19
- Country
- Location
As the US initiated a range of country-specific measures to give a new thrust to its defence relationship with India, a top Pentagon official has said that America benefits from a strong and capable Indian military.
“In the long run, the United States benefits from an Indian military with all the capabilities it needs to meet its growing regional security responsibilities,” said the outgoing Deputy Secretary of Defence Ashton Carter.
Carter, considered to be architect of the new India-US defence policy along with the National Security Advisor Shivshankar Menon, wrote in an op-ed in the prestigious Foreign Policy magazine.
To step up defence cooperation with India, the US has taken measures, including relaxation in export control measures and offers of exclusive co-development and co-production of hi-tech military hardware.
“Even as we face budget turmoil and political gridlock at home, working toward this goal — quietly, patiently, but ultimately effectively — is what the rebalance is all about,” Carter said as he listed out a series of steps that the Obama Administration has taken in recent months to give a new thrust to the India-US defence relationship.
“We’re adapting the US export control system in order to more easily release sensitive technology to India. Export controls may be one of the more esoteric areas of defence policy, but because they enable US partners’ access to technology that we must otherwise protect, they are also one of the most important,” Carter wrote.
That’s why the decision of Department of Defence (DoD) to change its mindset regarding technology transfer to India from a culture of “presumptive no” to one of “presumptive yes” is so significant, he said.
The Pentagon is taking aggressive action to speed responses by US bidders when the Indian government issues requests for proposals. “Within DoD, we’re streamlining our technology-licensing processes so that US industry can generate faster responses and thereby be more competitive within the Indian system.
“Often, this means we complete anticipatory reviews of projects before they are even officially released. These changes not only lay the groundwork for more sophisticated cooperation, but make us more competitive for every sale,” Carter wrote.
India and US are growing their joint science and technology collaboration. American researchers who seek and find Indian partners in key research areas will receive priority funding for their projects, an incentive previously only offered to the United Kingdom and Australia, he said.
“In addition to maintaining a robust pipeline of defense sales, we’re taking unprecedented steps to identify innovative proposals for defence items that the United States and India can co-produce and, in the true measure of our common goal, co-develop,” Carter said.
US benefits from a capable Indian military: Ashton Carter - The Economic Times
“In the long run, the United States benefits from an Indian military with all the capabilities it needs to meet its growing regional security responsibilities,” said the outgoing Deputy Secretary of Defence Ashton Carter.
Carter, considered to be architect of the new India-US defence policy along with the National Security Advisor Shivshankar Menon, wrote in an op-ed in the prestigious Foreign Policy magazine.
To step up defence cooperation with India, the US has taken measures, including relaxation in export control measures and offers of exclusive co-development and co-production of hi-tech military hardware.
“Even as we face budget turmoil and political gridlock at home, working toward this goal — quietly, patiently, but ultimately effectively — is what the rebalance is all about,” Carter said as he listed out a series of steps that the Obama Administration has taken in recent months to give a new thrust to the India-US defence relationship.
“We’re adapting the US export control system in order to more easily release sensitive technology to India. Export controls may be one of the more esoteric areas of defence policy, but because they enable US partners’ access to technology that we must otherwise protect, they are also one of the most important,” Carter wrote.
That’s why the decision of Department of Defence (DoD) to change its mindset regarding technology transfer to India from a culture of “presumptive no” to one of “presumptive yes” is so significant, he said.
The Pentagon is taking aggressive action to speed responses by US bidders when the Indian government issues requests for proposals. “Within DoD, we’re streamlining our technology-licensing processes so that US industry can generate faster responses and thereby be more competitive within the Indian system.
“Often, this means we complete anticipatory reviews of projects before they are even officially released. These changes not only lay the groundwork for more sophisticated cooperation, but make us more competitive for every sale,” Carter wrote.
India and US are growing their joint science and technology collaboration. American researchers who seek and find Indian partners in key research areas will receive priority funding for their projects, an incentive previously only offered to the United Kingdom and Australia, he said.
“In addition to maintaining a robust pipeline of defense sales, we’re taking unprecedented steps to identify innovative proposals for defence items that the United States and India can co-produce and, in the true measure of our common goal, co-develop,” Carter said.
US benefits from a capable Indian military: Ashton Carter - The Economic Times