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India News Updated Jul 9, 2026

India-Australia Unveil Top-Tier Defence Partnership in Joint Declaration

India and Australia have committed to an advanced, integrated, and top-tier defence partnership through a new joint declaration. The agreement, unveiled during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Australia, focuses on deepening maritime security, defence industry collaboration, and counter-terrorism efforts. Both nations also pledged to enhance interoperability between their armed forces and expand cooperation under the Quad framework. The declaration reaffirms their shared vision for an open, peaceful, and stable Indo-Pacific region.

India, Australia joint declaration commits to 'advanced, integrated and top-tier' defence partnership

Melbourne, July 9

India and Australia on Thursday unveiled the Australia-India Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation, committing to accelerate their defence and security partnership and deepen cooperation across maritime security, defence industries, critical technologies, counter-terrorism and regional stability in the Indo-Pacific.

The declaration which was issued during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Australia, reaffirmed the two countries' Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP) and outlined an ambitious roadmap for closer strategic coordination amid an increasingly uncertain geopolitical environment.

"We... commit to this Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation," the two Prime Ministers said, adding that they were "motivated by a common ambition for an open, peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific."

Noting growing regional security challenges, the declaration stated, "We note with concern geostrategic uncertainty, and threats to regional peace and stability. We encourage all parties to work together peacefully and call for the resolution of disputes without the threat or use of force or coercion and in accordance with international law."

The two leaders reaffirmed their commitment to "an open, peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific" underpinned by international law, respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, freedom of navigation and overflight under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), and effective regional institutions.

The declaration said the two countries "commit to an acceleration in our advanced, integrated, and top-tier defence and security partnership," recognising "a long-term vision of defence and security collaboration to enhance collective strength."

As part of the expanded defence agenda, India and Australia agreed to undertake consultations on defence-related developments in the Indo-Pacific, increase the complexity of defence exercises, accelerate interoperability and information sharing between their armed forces, expand aircraft deployments from each other's territories, deepen personnel exchanges, education and training, and explore cooperation in recruiting skilled defence workforces.

Recognising the strategic importance of the maritime domain, the two sides also agreed to strengthen maritime cooperation through an India-Australia Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap.

The declaration further committed both countries to deepen collaboration between their defence industries, strengthen supply chain resilience, and expand cooperation in defence innovation, advanced science and technology.

On regional security, India and Australia pledged to increase information sharing on terrorist threats, terrorist entities and individuals, while enhancing cooperation to counter violent extremism, terrorism financing, online radicalisation, threats to critical infrastructure and maritime security.

The two countries also committed to strengthening cooperation on cyber security, critical and emerging technologies under the Australia-India Partnership on Cyber, Critical Technologies and Supply Chains (Australia-India PACTS), while promoting resilient supply chains, critical minerals and clean energy technologies.

The declaration reaffirmed cooperation under the 2023 Migration and Mobility Partnership Arrangement to combat irregular migration, people smuggling, human trafficking and transnational organised crime.

India and Australia also pledged to deepen collaboration in Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR), including through information sharing, expert exchanges, joint exercises and coordination during disasters and evacuation operations in third countries.

The declaration further said the two countries would expand cooperation with the United States and Japan, including through the Quad and the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative, to advance "our positive vision for an open, stable, peaceful and prosperous Indo-Pacific region."

Concluding the declaration, the two Prime Ministers said, "In the spirit of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, we commit fully to implementing this ambitious agenda to support a peaceful and stable Indo-Pacific region."

— ANI

Reader Comments

James A

Interesting development. As someone from Australia, I'm glad to see our countries working together more closely. The focus on maritime security and counter-terrorism makes sense given the challenges we both face. Hope this translates into real action on the ground.

Vikram M

Great to see India strengthening its global partnerships. The Quad is becoming more relevant by the day. But I hope we're not just talking about it—let's see actual joint exercises and tech sharing happen. Need to move beyond declarations. 🤔

Sarah B

While the defence partnership sounds promising, I worry about the focus on 'counter-terrorism' being used as a blanket term. We need clear definitions and safeguards to ensure it's not misused against peaceful dissent. But overall, regional stability is definitely needed.

Rohit P

Excellent news! The collaboration on critical technologies and supply chains is a masterstroke. We need to reduce dependence on certain countries for defence equipment. Make in India for the world, yaar! 👍

Kavya N

This is a well-articulated partnership covering everything from maritime security to HADR. The emphasis on UNCLOS and freedom of navigation is crucial given the South China Sea situation. But I hope we also focus on climate change and pandemic response—security isn't just military. 🕊️

Nathan C

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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