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Antony’s Visit to Saudi Arabia: Boosting Defence Ties



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Antony’s Visit to Saudi Arabia: Boosting Defence Ties
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Prasanta Kumar Pradhan

February 21, 2012

The visit of A. K. Antony to Saudi Arabia on February 13-14, 2012 is the first ever visit by an Indian Defence Minister to the Kingdom. The visit was intended to further strengthen the bilateral relationship, the foundation of which was laid by the high level visits by King Abdullah to India in 2006 and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s visit to Saudi Arabia in 2010. Antony was accompanied by a high level defence delegation which included the Defence Secretary, Vice Chief of Army Staff, Deputy Chief of Naval Staff and an Air Vice Marshal, clearly indicating that strengthening defence ties and broadening defence engagement between the two countries was the principal objective of the visit.

Antony’s visit to Riyadh provides a thrust for India’s defence diplomacy in the Gulf region. India has been engaging with other regional countries like Oman, UAE and Qatar by signing defence cooperation agreements and conducting regular exchanges and high level meetings. Though both Saudi Arabia and India are important countries in their respective regions, defence cooperation between the two has not received adequate attention. It is only in recent years that the two countries have begun to conduct joint naval exercises. Indian ships have visited Saudi Arabia on port calls and India has been providing training to some Saudi defence personnel. During his interactions, Antony also suggested an active role for the Saudi Navy in the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium, thus indicating the Indian Navy’s desire to work with the Saudi Navy in future.

During the visit, both countries agreed to set up a joint committee to work out a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on defence cooperation, another MoU on cooperation in the field of hydrography, joint military exercises and high level visits, etc. Importantly, the committee would also explore the possibility of cooperation between the defence industries of the two countries. At present there is no formal defence cooperation agreement signed between India and Saudi Arabia. There is no supply of any weapons and equipment nor are there any joint Research and Development (R&D) projects.

Cooperation between the defence industries for joint R&D and production would certainly be beneficial for both countries. But it would take time to fructify as Saudi Arabia imports arms and weapons of high quality and precision from Western countries like USA, UK, France, etc. Indian arms and weapons may not be preferred by the Saudi security forces, as the weapons procured from West would have technical advantages over their Indian counterparts. Despite that, both countries can focus their energy on specific R&D projects of mutual interest. India’s seriousness has been reflected by Antony’s invitation to Saudi Arabian officials to visit India’s defence production facilities, which is a clear departure from the past. That Saudi Arabia is also keen on cooperating in this regard was reflected in its acceptance of the Indian invitation. The delicate political and security situation in the Middle East, Saudi ambition for a regional leadership role and the available oil wealth are some of the major factors that would drive Saudi interest in this sector in future. Thus, it is wise to engage Saudi Arabia in defence production although cooperation in this arena is certainly going to take time. In the meantime, however, India should continue to focus on strengthening existing areas of cooperation such as joint naval exercises, conducting training programmes, holding joint military exercises, etc.

Saudi interest in signing an MoU on cooperation in hydrography stems from the fact that the 13,500 strong Royal Saudi Naval Forces have to further strengthen their power keeping in view the changing security situation in the region. Cooperation with Indian Naval units and training from India on hydrography would strengthen their knowledge and expertise for navigating in deep waters and thus increasing their capabilities in the region. Several Saudi defence personnel have been undergoing training at the National Institute of Hydrography, Goa, and a formal cooperation agreement would help in further deepening these ties.

During his visit Antony reiterated India’s commitment and readiness for cooperation to fight against piracy in the Indian Ocean and has suggested that both the India and Saudi navies should jointly explore practical cooperation in the high seas against the pirates. In the past, both India and Saudi Arabia have been victims of piracy off Somali coast. The safety and security of the SLOCs is directly linked to the trade and commerce of both countries. Active cooperation between the two powers in the high seas would certainly help in deterring the pirates. Though both countries have deployed ships in the Gulf of Aden to check piracy, operational cooperation between the two navies have not been established.

Similarly, terrorism is an important issue on which cooperation between India and Saudi Arabia is crucial. Collaborating with each other in combating terrorism has become necessary keeping in view the transnational nature of terrorist funding, operation and ideology. Antony discussed the issue of terrorism with his Saudi counterpart Prince Salman and both countries have reiterated their pledge to fight the menace together. India is reportedly helping Saudi Arabia set up a jungle warfare college in the country, which is intended to train Saudi security forces fight against al Qaeda operating in the mountainous terrain along the Saudi-Yemeni border.

Saudi Arabia is an important country in the region for India in many respects. The 2010 Riyadh Declaration has been termed as ‘a new era of strategic partnership’ between the two countries. Although ties in the fields of trade and commerce remain strong and India and Saudi Arabia are engaged in identifying issues of mutual political concern, cooperation in the defence sphere has been conspicuously absent. Antony’s visit attempts to fill that gap as both countries have decided to take the first big step by agreeing to form a joint committee to work out the future course of action in this regard.

Antony
 
In recent years, Saudis have been getting closer to India by choice and increasing the trade and defense cooperation. But as we know Saudis are not really independent and their Zionist masters must have directed them to do so. In recent years, even US which used to be pro-Pakistan versus India has gone the other way. The Zionists are trying to encircle Pakistan.
 
In recent years, Saudis have been getting closer to India by choice and increasing the trade and defense cooperation. But as we know Saudis are not really independent and their Zionist masters must have directed them to do so. In recent years, even US which used to be pro-Pakistan versus India has gone the other way. The Zionists are trying to encircle Pakistan.

Yes it is all a plot against Pakistan by the Zionists who are actually aliens.
 
In recent years, Saudis have been getting closer to India by choice and increasing the trade and defense cooperation. But as we know Saudis are not really independent and their Zionist masters must have directed them to do so. In recent years, even US which used to be pro-Pakistan versus India has gone the other way. The Zionists are trying to encircle Pakistan.

martians and the villains of other galaxies are culprits.. obi van kanobi and skywalker along with batman from pakistan will come and punish both..
 
In recent years, Saudis have been getting closer to India by choice and increasing the trade and defense cooperation. But as we know Saudis are not really independent and their Zionist masters must have directed them to do so. In recent years, even US which used to be pro-Pakistan versus India has gone the other way. The Zionists are trying to encircle Pakistan.

this thread is only to be used as a slap in the face for all of those pro-Saudi Pakistanis. The more stronger indo-Saudi relations, the more stronger our stance/argument.

Long Live Indo Saudi brotherhood!!


india-saudi-flags.jpg
 
this thread is only to be used as a slap in the face for all of those pro-Saudi Pakistanis. The more stronger indo-Saudi relations, the more stronger our stance/argument.

Long Live Indo Saudi brotherhood!!


india-saudi-flags.jpg

 
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New Delhi seeks upgraded strategic ties with Riyad

By Faheem Al-Hamid

JEDDAH/NEW DELHI – Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will arrive in the Kingdom today on a three-day visit dubbed as an attempt to upgrade bilateral relations.
Singh will be the first Indian Prime Minister to address the Shoura Council, and his visit marks the first of any Indian prime minister for 28 years. Prime Minister Singh will be accompanied on his visit by his ministers of Foreign Affairs and Oil and other senior officials, as well as some 40 Indian businessmen and 35 representatives from the Indian press and media.

Faisal Bin Tarad, the Saudi Ambassador to New Delhi, worked to the final moments with the Indian Prime Minister’s office to ensure all preparations were in place as Okaz and Saudi Gazette conducted its exclusive interview with Manmohan Singh ahead of his departure for Riyadh. The interview, held at the PM’s residence, was the first business of Singh’s day. Singh in the interview said that tackling the common problem of terrorism is among the many areas in which India is seeking Saudi Arabia’s help.

“Both King Abdullah and I reject the notion that any cause justifies wanton violence against innocent people,” the prime minister says. “We are strong allies against the scourge of extremism and terrorism that affects global peace and security.” Singh points out that while India has had healthy ties with the Arab world that go back several millennia, “the relationships have to be constantly nourished and revitalized so that they respond to new realities and aspirations.”
“We have a huge stake in each other’s success,” he says, calling also for “a much greater integration of our economies, higher flow of trade and investment, better connectivity and freer flow of ideas and people.”

He now sees “immense opportunities” for India and Saudi Arabia to promote joint economic development. Dr. Singh says India needs the help of Saudi industry in many areas, especially in the energy sector and including the quest for “renewable sources of energy as a major component of the new energy paradigm that the world sees.” In return, he is offering Saudi Arabia India’s capabilities in important areas like IT, and pharmaceuticals.

Interestingly, Saudi oil flow to India was a mere trickle in 2006 when King Abdullah, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, embarked on his landmark visit to New Delhi to launch his path-breaking “Look East” policy of engaging the powerful emerging economies of Asia in Saudi Arabia’s quest to reduce its dependence on oil through economic diversification. The King’s visit resulted in Saudi Arabia replacing the UAE as India’s number one crude oil resource, with exports jumping from $500 million to $23b in 2008.

Today, Saudi Arabia is India’s fourth largest trading partner with two-way trade of over $25 billion. There are over 500 joint ventures with an estimated investment of over $2 billion.

Saudi Gazette - New Delhi seeks upgraded strategic ties with Riyadh
 
this thread is only to be used as a slap in the face for all of those pro-Saudi Pakistanis. The more stronger indo-Saudi relations, the more stronger our stance/argument.

Long Live Indo Saudi brotherhood!!


india-saudi-flags.jpg
Leave it Desert Fox, When Iran wants ties with India then it is Gud But If S. Arab wants it relations with India then it is Bad? So thats a rational view for you?:cheesy:
 
India, Saudi Arabia; MoD’s review joint Weapons projects


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India and Saudi Arabia will explore the joint development and production of weapons and equipment to control rising imports.



This decision followed Feb. 14 discussions in Riyadh between visiting Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony and Saudi Defense Minister Prince Salman Bin, said sources in the Indian Defence Ministry.



Antony led an official two-day visit to Saudi Arabia Feb. 13-14, heading a defense team that included Defence Secretary Shashi Kant Sharma; Lt. Gen. S.K. Singh, the Army vice chief; and Vice Adm. Satish Soni, the deputy Navy chief


An Indian Defence Ministry official said India and Saudi Arabia have decided to set up a panel to work out the path to defense cooperation.



Salman Bin agreed with Antony’s suggestion that a Saudi delegation visit Indian defense production facilities in the near future, the official said.



Currently, India is studying a Saudi proposal to set up a mountain warfare training school in Saudi Arabia.

India, Saudi Arabia; MoD
 
Growing Saudi-India ties



The agreements that emerged at the end of the two-day visit to the Kingdom this week by Indian Defense Minister A. K. Antony, signal the growing importance of both countries to each other.

India’s thriving economy needs Saudi oil to offset its diminishing liftings from Iran. Likewise, Indian business wants to boost its exports to the Kingdom, not least winning orders as part of the Saudi drive to build major new infrastructure and grow a flourishing nonoil based economic sector. Indian trade with the GCC now tops $130 billion and more than six million Indian citizens live and work in the region, two million of them in the Kingdom. For Saudi Arabia, closer cooperation with New Delhi, particularly in military terms, makes sense in a wider region still beset with instability.

Formalizing closer relations actually reflects a reality of increasing trade links that were given real impetus by the 2006 visit of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah to India, with a large official party, including leading Saud businessmen and investors. They were further boosted with the return visit by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in 2010.

It would, however, be wrong for anyone to imagine that a growing Saudi relationship, even a military one, means that Saudi relations with Pakistan are going to be diminished. It does not have to work that way — and Saudi Arabia certainly does not see it that way. There is no reason therefore why anyone in Pakistan should worry about India’s emergence as a Saudi partner. The Saudi government is friends with both and pursues a very balanced and positive policy toward both. Indeed, Saudi Arabia has long supported increased dialogue between Islamabad and New Delhi and promoted a settlement of their historic differences. If anything, the Kingdom’s drawing closer to India may actually have a positive impact on the relationship between the rival neighbors.

The deal to supply the Indians with more crude from the Kingdom’s two million barrels a day spare capacity comes at a key moment. Saudi Arabia is already India’s largest supplier and because of payment clearing problems, Indian refiners have been cutting their purchases of Iranian crude. Delhi’s attitude to Tehran also hardened last week after Iranians were blamed for a bomb attack in the Indian capital, as well as another in Bangkok. Indeed closer cooperation on terrorism was an issue that was discussed during the Indian defense minister’s stay.

The fine print of the Saudi-Indian defense deal will be worked out in advance of a visit by Defense Minister Prince Salman to New Delhi later in the year. A joint committee is looking at a range of defense cooperation options. These will include defense production and increased training of personnel, which could involve Indian mountain troops training their Saudi counterparts in the Kingdom. However, it is already clear that ground-breaking joint exercises are in the offing. There are also likely to be high-level army, naval and air force exchanges, as well as goodwill visits by ships from both navies. Of especial importance is the scheme to work closely on combating piracy in the Indian Ocean where commercial vessels from both countries have fallen victim to attacks from pirates based in Somalia.

That the Indians are very serious about military cooperation was made clear by the top brass who traveled to the Kingdom with Defense Minister Antony and Defense Secretary Shashi K. Sharma. They included Vice Chief of Army Staff Lt. Gen. S.K. Singh, Deputy Chief of Naval Staff Vice Adm. Satish Soni and Air Vice Marshal M. R. Pawar.

One early sign of the increased cooperation is likely to be in hydrography. The Indian Navy would be working with their Saudi counterparts on nautical chart-making and the hydrographical surveys of key Saudi coastal areas, ports and harbors and sea areas. A substantial expansion of hydrographic training programs is also planned. Indeed, Indian officials have already been helping in the field.

Saudi Arabia’s continued new focus upon Asia, while by no means ignoring its historic relations with Europe and North America, is an inevitable reflection of the slow but steady shift of economic and geopolitical power to the East.

Even though the final details have yet to be worked out, it is clear from the mood music from both sides during this Indian visit, that this has been a highly successful trip which will be leading to a growth in relations, at both a military and commercial level.
 
Leave it Desert Fox, When Iran wants ties with India then it is Gud But If S. Arab wants it relations with India then it is Bad? So thats a rational view for you?

Last i checked Iran isn't our ally, and neither does it claim to be one. So your argument is void.:cheesy:
 
It does not seem likely that Saudis will be able to wean Indians off Iranian oil. Indians will play along with Saudis for the time being until they get a credible deal from US/Saudia that satisfies India's energy needs.

It is just beyond my comprehension that KSA will need India'a help in Defence Industries; India does not have a good track record in Defence Industries and KSA has better relations with nations with advanced defence industries.
 
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah guest of honour on India's Republic Day parade



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by Pratap Chakravarty
New Delhi (AFP) Jan 26, 2006
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah was the guest of honour Thursday at India's annual Republic Day parade, leading a review of elite troops, weapons and folk dancers in the national capital.

Abdullah, flanked by lance-bearing liveried cavalry, was escorted by President Abdul Kalam to New Delhi's Central Vista parade grounds.

The parade is centred on Raj Path, the mall surrounded by government offices and the palace of former British viceroys which is now home to the president.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, his cabinet colleagues and Saudi delegates also attended the parade which wound past a World War II memorial raised in honour of India, a major contributor to the Allied forces.

The celebrations mark India's transition to a republic in 1950 after independence in 1947.

The military displayed its Russian-built T-90 tanks as well as howitzers and models of its nuclear-capable Agni (Fire) ballistic missile which has been tested more than five times since 1993.

India, which budgeted 14 billion dollars for defence in the fiscal year ending March 31 and has emerged as Asia's largest market for Western military hardware, also showed off a model of a French-designed Scorpene submarine due to join its naval fleet by 2011.

Thousands of troops from various services including elite commando units with machine guns guarded the fortified venue to prevent attacks by Kashmir's Islamist guerrillas who had vowed to disrupt the annual celebrations.

The Indian air force, the world's fourth largest, staged flypasts of its frontline Sukhoi-30 interceptor jets and Mirage-2000 multi-role fighter planes.

The technology-starved air force has said it wants to buy 126 fighter planes, with Lockheed Martin, the US maker of the F-16, Sweden's Gripen and Russia's MiG vying for a deal which defence experts say could be worth more than six billion dollars.

Also on parade were colourful floats representing the 29 Indian states, and folk dancers in traditional costumes and elaborate headgear, watched by tens of thousands of people, many of whom walked several miles because of major traffic disruptions.

King Abdullah held talks with premier Singh Wednesday, before attending the Republic Day celebrations. He is currently on a four-day visit to New Delhi, as part of an Asian tour.

Delegations of the two countries signed four pacts on fighting terrorism, investment, taxation and cooperation in sports amid talks between the two leaders, during which they also discussed energy ties.

Meanwhile, Maoist rebels in eastern India and Kashmir's Islamic guerrillas called for a boycott of the anniversary celebrations.

In eastern Bihar and Jharkhand states, Maoist rebels bombed railway tracks and a police station, injuring one policeman and disrupting rail services.

In the Kashmir summer capital Srinagar, security was tight at Bakshi Stadium, site of the celebrations.

Counter-insurgency troops were also out in force across India's seven northeastern states where separatist groups called for a boycott of the event, stepping up attacks in the days ahead of Republic Day.

Since Friday, rebels in the northeast carried out 16 blasts, killing three people and wounding 31, besides damaging six oil and gas facilities and three power plants in Assam state.

Source: Agence France-Presse
 
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