India, Japan Forge Stronger Ties on AI, Chips & Security in Key Dialogue

The recent India-Japan Foreign Ministers' dialogue reinforced their Special Strategic and Global Partnership, aligning with the 10th anniversary of Japan's Free and Open Indo-Pacific strategy. Key outcomes include the launch of a private-sector dialogue on economic security targeting semiconductors, critical minerals, and clean energy. The ministers also reinvigorated cooperation within the Quad framework and on projects like the Act East Forum for connectivity. These steps collectively aim to de-risk supply chains and promote an open, inclusive regional architecture.

Key Points: India-Japan Strategic Partnership: AI, Security & Economic Ties

  • Launched economic security dialogue
  • Focus on semiconductors & AI
  • Reaffirmed Quad cooperation
  • Enhanced connectivity in India's Northeast
  • 75th diplomatic anniversary in 2027
2 min read

India, Japan bolster strategic and economic ties

India and Japan bolster strategic ties, launching economic security dialogues on semiconductors, AI, and clean energy while reaffirming Quad cooperation.

"These steps aim to de-risk global dependencies, ensuring stable flows of rare earths for batteries and chips essential to both economies - India Narrative"

New Delhi, Jan 23

The India-Japan Foreign Ministers' dialogue in New Delhi this month reflects the strengthening of the "Special Strategic and Global Partnership" between two Indo-Pacific heavyweights navigating geopolitical flux.

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and his Japanese counterpart, Toshimitsu Motegi, reaffirmed the 'Japan-India Joint Vision for the Next Decade' unveiled during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's August 2025 visit to Japan.

This timely parley coincides with the 10th anniversary of Japan's Free and Open Indo-Pacific (FOIP) strategy, positioning India as its indispensable ally, while laying groundwork for the 75th anniversary of diplomatic relations in 2027, according to an article in India Narrative.

The ministers greenlit the "Japan-India Private-Sector Dialogue on Economic Security" for launch in the first quarter of 2026, zeroing in on five priority domains: semiconductors, critical minerals, information and communication technology (ICT), clean energy, and pharmaceuticals. These steps aim to de-risk global dependencies, ensuring stable flows of rare earths for batteries and chips essential to both economies, the article points out.

In artificial intelligence, the Japan-India AI Cooperation Initiative (JAI) received fresh impetus with the establishment of a dedicated "Japan-India AI Strategic Dialogue" to hammer out tangible collaborations.

Regionally, the two countries recommitted to Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) mechanisms - encompassing Japan, India, Australia, and the United States - to uphold FOIP principles, while pledging closer coordination on North Korea's nuclear and missile provocations. They also resolved to invigorate the Japan-India Act East Forum for enhanced connectivity in India's Northeast, institute a novel policy dialogue framework on South Asia, and align on global governance reforms at the World Trade Organization (WTO) and United Nations Security Council (UNSC).

By reaffirming Quad cooperation, the ministers underscored shared priorities in maritime domain awareness, secure sea lines of communication, and resilient infrastructure, ensuring an inclusive regional architecture that invites rather than excludes partners like ASEAN nations, the article added.

Economic security initiatives directly buttress FOIP's prosperity pillar, promoting transparent supply chains and innovation ecosystems that counteract opaque financing models. The Act East Forum's revival promises Japanese technical and financial assistance for rail, digital, and energy links in India's Northeast, fostering cross-border connectivity with Southeast Asia and diluting adversarial influences via Myanmar.

Collectively, these measures project a vision of openness, where freedom of navigation, fair trade, and ethical technology standards prevail over zero-sum dominance, the article added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see focus on the Northeast through the Act East Forum. Better connectivity can bring real development to our eastern states. Hope this translates into jobs and infrastructure on the ground, not just policy papers.
R
Rohit P
Strategic partnerships are fine, but what about the trade deficit with Japan? We import so much more than we export. These dialogues must ensure a more balanced economic relationship that benefits Indian SMEs too.
S
Sarah B
The AI cooperation initiative is promising. Combining Japan's robotics expertise with India's software talent could create some world-leading solutions. Hope they focus on ethical AI frameworks from the start.
V
Vikram M
Strong India-Japan ties are a cornerstone of stability in the Indo-Pacific. The Quad is important, but this bilateral relationship is just as crucial. Good to see progress on critical minerals and pharma supply chains.
K
Karthik V
While the strategic talk is good, I hope the "de-risking" doesn't mean we are just replacing one dependency with another. India must build its own capacity in chip design and manufacturing, not just be an assembly line.

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