India–Japan Relations Amid Global Churn

GS2 – International Relations

Context
  • PM Narendra Modi visited Japan (15th Annual India–Japan Summit with PM Shigeru Ishiba) before proceeding to China (Tianjin) for the SCO Summit.
  • Last annual summit was held in India (2022).
  • At a time of geopolitical turbulence (US tariffs, India–China tensions, East China Sea disputes, global supply chain disruptions), India and Japan reaffirmed the stability and forward-looking nature of their partnership.
Key Outcomes of the Summit
  1. Economic & Investment Cooperation
  • Japanese businesses raised investment target in India to $68 billion.
  • Around 170 MoUs signed with Indian partners.
  • Adoption of a 2035 Vision Statement with 8 priority areas:
    • Economic security
    • Mobility
    • Green technology transition
    • Semiconductor cooperation
    • Supply chain resilience
    • Critical infrastructure security
    • Connectivity
    • Skill & technology partnerships
  • Next-Gen State–Prefecture Partnership → boosting grassroots ties and direct flight connectivity.
  1. Strategic & Security Cooperation
  • Updated 2008 Security Partnership
    • Annual NSA-level dialogue.
    • Stronger engagement on Quad, Indo-Pacific security, UNSC reform.
  • Semiconductors & Rare Earths: Japan to help India manufacture & process chips, crucial amid Chinese restrictions on rare earth exports.
  • Showcased collaboration on High-Speed Rail (“Bullet Train”) project.
  • Joint inspection of a semiconductor factory in Miyagi province.
  1. Regional & Global Issues
  • Joint statement condemned:
    • North Korea’s missile tests & nuclear programme.
    • Cross-border terrorism (including Pahalgam attack) – but without direct mention of Pakistan.
  • Highlighted importance of upcoming Quad Summit in India (despite uncertainty from US domestic politics).
Geopolitical Subtext
  • Visit came after US tariff hikes threatening Indian exports.
  • Modi’s Tokyo stopover was before talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping – signalling Japan’s importance as a strategic partner.
  • Japan too faces:
    • East China Sea tensions with China.
    • Trade disputes with the US (led to cancellation of a delegation visit to Washington).
  • Message: India–Japan ties remain stable & growing despite turbulence in US–China dynamics.
Background

India–Japan Relations:

  • 1952: Official diplomatic relations established.
  • 2000: “Global Partnership” announced.
  • 2006: Upgraded to “Strategic and Global Partnership”.
  • 2014 onwards: Special Strategic and Global Partnership under PM Modi & PM Shinzo Abe.
Key Areas of Cooperation:
  • Economic:
    • Japan: India’s 5th largest investor.
    • Collaboration on Delhi–Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) & high-speed rail.
  • Defence & Security:
    • Malabar Exercise (with US).
    • 2+2 dialogue at Defence & Foreign Minister level.
  • Strategic: Shared vision of a Free, Open and Inclusive Indo-Pacific (FOIP).
  • Technology: Semiconductors, clean energy, green hydrogen.
Quad (India, Japan, US, Australia):
  • Aimed at rules-based Indo-Pacific order.
  • Focus: supply chains, maritime security, critical tech, countering coercive strategies.
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