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Japan lifts ban on HAL and 5 other Indian entities

The following are the list of Banned Indian organization by the Japanese ministry of economic trade and Industry.

I.) Under DRDO,
1. ADE
2. DMRL
3. DRDL
4. RCI

II.) Under DAE
1. BARC
2. HWB (Thal Heavy Water Board)
3. Directorate of Purchase and Stores
4. IGCAR

III.) (Vikram Sarabhai Center under ISRO

IV.) HAL

The ban may have been lifted from DRDO, ISRO and HAL. I suspect the ban on the 4 DAE affiliated organization is still in effect.
 
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TOKYO: Japan today lifted ban on HAL and five other Indian entities, which had been imposed in the aftermath of the 1998 nuclear tests, amid Prime Minister Narendra Modi's assertion that cooperation between the two countries in defence and security will get a "new direction".

The lifting of the ban was announced by Modi at his joint media interaction with Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe here after their talks during which they discussed ways to enhance cooperation in various areas to make it Special Strategic and Global Partnership.

"Japan has decided to remove ban on some entities," he said.

Sources later said the ban had been lifted on six entities, including Hindustan Aeronautics Limited. However, four entities still remain in the banned list.

The removal of the ban will enable these companies to have cooperation with Japanese firms, including transfer of technology.

After the talks, the two sides also signed an MoU in the field of defence, which provides for enhanced exchanges and exercises, including at multilateral level.

The two sides agreed to upgrade from Joint Secretary to Minister level the trilateral dialogue on defence and security which also involves the US.

"The defence MoU shows that we are keen to take our relationship to a new level," Modi said.

"Defence cooperation will get a new direction. It will not be limited to talks and exercises but cooperation in technology and equipment," Modi said.

The Tokyo Declaration said Modi and Abe decided to "intensify and invigorate" exchanges recognising the "special quality" of bilateral engagement imparted by multi-sectoral ministerial and Cabinet-level dialogues, in particular, those between their Foreign Ministers, Defence Ministers and Ministers dealing with finance, economy, trade and energy.

Modi welcomed the recent developments in Japan's policy on transfer of defence equipment and technology and the two Prime Ministers expressed hope that this would usher in a new era of cooperation in defence equipment and technology.

They recognised the enormous future potential for transfer and collaborative projects in defence equipment and technology between the two countries, the declaration said.

They welcomed progress made in discussions in the Joint Working Group on cooperation in US-2 amphibian aircraft and its technology, and directed their officials to accelerate their discussions.

They also directed their officials to launch working-level consultations between the two countries with a view to promoting defence equipment and technology cooperation.

They underlined the importance of the 2 plus 2 dialogue, involving Foreign and Defence Secretaries, for their growing strategic partnership, and decided to seek ways to intensify this dialogue.

The two Prime Ministers reaffirmed the importance of defence relations between India and Japan in their strategic partnership and decided to upgrade and strengthen them, the declaration said.

They welcomed the signing of the Memorandum of Cooperation and Exchanges in the Field of Defence during the visit. In this context, they attached importance to the regularisation of bilateral maritime exercises as well as to Japan's continued participation in India - US Malabar series of exercises.

They also welcomed the existing dialogue mechanism and joint exercises between Indian and Japanese Coast Guards.

The two Prime Ministers recognised their wide-ranging shared interests in security of maritime and cyber domains, and decided to work with each other and with like-minded partners to preserve the integrity and inviolability of these global commons.

They affirmed their shared commitment to maritime security, freedom of navigation and overflight, civil aviation safety, unimpeded lawful commerce, and peaceful settlement of disputes in accordance with international law.

Source:Defence News - Japan lifts ban on HAL and 5 other Indian entities

I'm glad to see such welcoming news , it is indeed true that Japan maintains an adherence to non-nuclear proliferation agenda as seen in past administrations , however, 16 years have passed and new crises have arisen. It is important for Japan to adapt to the ever changing exigencies that are before the greater Asia-Pacific region. I am confident that with the lifting of these bans on HAL , it will be used as pretext for a wider and comprehensive reassessment of the nuclear position Japan once had. Thus said, Modi's visit is a blessing not just to India, but also to Japan.

Thanks @TimeTraveller for this very enlightening article. Also, thank you for posting and starting high quality threads as of late. Good Job !
 
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Those 4 probably are related to the indian military nuke program..my guess.

On Topic : :victory1:
 
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I'm glad to see such welcoming news , it is indeed true that Japan maintains an adherence to non-nuclear proliferation agenda as seen in past administrations , however, 16 years have passed and new crises have arisen. It is important for Japan to adapt to the ever changing exigencies that are before the greater Asia-Pacific region. I am confident that with the lifting of these bans on HAL , it will be used as pretext for a wider and comprehensive reassessment of the nuclear position Japan once had. Thus said, Modi's visit is a blessing not just to India, but also to Japan.

Thanks @TimeTraveller for this very enlightening article. Also, thank you for posting and starting high quality threads as of late. Good Job !

The lifting of Ban on HAL & DRDO might be to facilitate the join production of US-2 in India by HAL and thereafter maintenance.
 
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The lifting of Ban on HAL & DRDO might be to facilitate the join production of US-2 in India by HAL and thereafter maintenance.

Definitely. The lifting of said bans will allow technology transfer from Japan to India, as well as vice versa. This is just the beginning, too. There are 4 more entities still placed on ban, but that should be removed.
 
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The following are the list of Banned Indian organization by the Japanese ministry of economic trade and Industry.

I.) Under DRDO,
1. ADE
2. DMRL
3. DRDL
4. RCI

II.) Under DAE
1. BARC
2. HWB (Thal Heavy Water Board)
3. Directorate of Purchase and Stores
4. IGCAR

III.) (Vikram Sarabhai Center under ISRO

IV.) HAL

The ban may have been lifted from DRDO, ISRO and HAL. I suspect the ban on the 4 DAE affiliated organization is still in effect.


That is so. The DAE entities are still sanctioned. They are tied into the Nuclear Deal, when they will come out.

India's quest for tech was two-pronged. One was the Defense sector and the other the Nuclear Power sector.
And core Engg. tech is being sought in the Nuclear sector, not fission/fusion tech; but Turbine Tech. Just as Japan gave crucial Machining Tech for manufacturing components of the Tarapur Plant (TAPS 1) in the 1960s.
 
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That is so. The DAE entities are still sanctioned. They are tied into the Nuclear Deal, when they will come out.

India's quest for tech was two-pronged. One was the Defense sector and the other the Nuclear Power sector.
And core Engg. tech is being sought in the Nuclear sector, not fission/fusion tech; but Turbine Tech. Just as Japan gave crucial Machining Tech for manufacturing components of the Tarapur Plant (TAPS 1) in the 1960s.

Well said and very analytic of you @Capt.Popeye ! It was this ban that prevented the nuclear deal, as you can see there is some diplomatic red tape needing to be clipped. And it is being clipped. It is important for Indian citizens to see that we are doing what we can to remove the barriers , a show of confidence on our part and our resolution to increase relations and partnerships with India.
 
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Well said and very analytic of you @Capt.Popeye ! It was this ban that prevented the nuclear deal, as you can see there is some diplomatic red tape needing to be clipped. And it is being clipped. It is important for Indian citizens to see that we are doing what we can to remove the barriers , a show of confidence on our part and our resolution to increase relations and partnerships with India.

I suspect the ban is another negotiation card for the nuclear deal negotiations and it is unlikely Japan will lift the ban easily. The real road block in the deal is the nuclear liability bill in India which makes the suppliers liable too for any nuclear accident in India if the root cause shows faulty instruments. I have heard Japanese are very tough negotiators.
 
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Well said and very analytic of you @Capt.Popeye ! It was this ban that prevented the nuclear deal, as you can see there is some diplomatic red tape needing to be clipped. And it is being clipped. It is important for Indian citizens to see that we are doing what we can to remove the barriers , a show of confidence on our part and our resolution to increase relations and partnerships with India.

Ah Nihonjin-san; The ban did not prevent the Nuclear Deal! It is the Nuclear Deal which will lift the ban!

I think I need to explain to my fellow-country-men how sensitive anything connected to Atomic Energy is in Nippon. The dark memories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are indelibly ingrained into the psyche of Japanese people and the after-effects of the radiation can still be seen there in living people; let alone the hundreds of thousands who are gone.
Nihonjin-san, I had a Senior Colleague in a Japanese Orgn who with his wife were residents of Hiroshima of that time; of her family, she was the sole survivor. Speaking of that time was extremely difficult and sensitive for her. Her husband had become more matter of fact. I can understand and sympathise with that kind of feelings. Going to see the memorial in Hiroshima is a heart-rending experience for anyone.
Nihonjin-san; apart from Hiroshima, there is (or was) another City in the world that remembers the tragedy of Hiroshima .........Kolkata in India where a huge silent procession is taken out through the main area called Dharmatolla in memory of the victims.

Now; the Defence part was easy enough since Japan under Abe-san has changed majorly the attitude towards Military Forces.
Nuclear will take more time; and we must be sensitive to the Japanese attitude on this. But as I said earlier what India is seeking is Engg Tech to fabricate/manufacture parts for Nuclear Power Plants not Bombs. (India does not need that, least of all from Japan)
So it will come through soon enough.

IIRC, in the 1960s firms called Toyo Engg and NEC were among the Japanese Corps that gave DAE some Engg know-how, which was more basic than the Turbine-Tech that India is seeking now.

Let's wait.
 
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The chai walla has done a good job while having japanese chai

628x471.jpg
 
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rumor is india is interested in many of japnese wepon sytems including helicopter carriers, LPDs , destroyers , subs , and fifth gen fighter
 
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