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The Hindu Editorial

15 July 2026

India–U.S. Defence Technology Ties — Big Ambitions, Limited Delivery

(Source – The Hindu, Editorial Page no. – 8)

Topic: GS 2 (India–US Relations, Bilateral Agreements, Strategic Partnerships) · GS 3 (Defence Technology, Defence Manufacturing, Atmanirbhar Bharat, Science & Technology)

Context

  • India and the United States have significantly expanded defence cooperation over the past two decades.
  • However, despite ambitious initiatives like DTTI, iCET and INDUS-X, meaningful technology transfer, co-development and co-production remain limited.
  • The recent delay in the GE F414 fighter engine programme once again highlights the gap between strategic intent and industrial outcomes.

Issue in Brief

  • India has emerged as one of the largest buyers of U.S. defence equipment.
  • Yet the partnership has remained procurement-centric rather than technology-centric.
  • Export-control restrictions, intellectual property concerns and differing strategic priorities continue to constrain genuine defence industrial collaboration.

Static Background

  • Defence cooperation accelerated after the India–US Civil Nuclear Agreement (2005–08).
  • Major defence agreements include:
    • LEMOA (2016)
    • COMCASA (2018)
    • BECA (2020)
  • India has purchased over US$22 billion worth of American defence equipment since 2002.
  • Important acquisitions include:
    • Apache helicopters
    • Chinook helicopters
    • C-17 Globemaster
    • C-130J Super Hercules
    • P-8I Maritime Patrol Aircraft
    • M777 Ultra-Light Howitzers

Key Dimensions

GE F414 Fighter Engine Programme

  • Intended to become the flagship example of India-US defence co-production.
  • Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) is negotiating licensed manufacturing for:
    • Tejas Mk-II
    • Future fighter programmes.
  • Negotiations remain delayed because of:
    • Intellectual Property (IP) issues.
    • Technology Transfer (ToT) disagreements.
    • Export-control restrictions.
    • Rising project costs.
  • Estimated engine cost has increased significantly, affecting commercial viability.

Defence Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI)

  • Launched in 2012.
  • Objective:
    • Co-development.
    • Co-production.
    • Technology collaboration.
  • Despite multiple meetings, DTTI has produced very few major defence projects.

Initiative on Critical and Emerging Technologies (iCET)

  • Launched in 2022.
  • Expands cooperation beyond defence into:
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Quantum Computing
    • Semiconductors
    • Biotechnology
    • Telecommunications
    • Defence Innovation
  • GE F414 became the flagship defence project under iCET but remains unresolved.

INDUS-X

  • Launched in 2023.
  • Objective:
    • Connect defence startups.
    • Academia.
    • Private industry.
    • Investors.
  • Focus:
    • Defence innovation ecosystem.
    • Startup collaboration.
  • Major industrial outcomes have yet to emerge.

Other Pending Defence Projects

Several proposed collaborations remain unresolved:

  • Javelin Anti-Tank Guided Missile co-production.
  • General Dynamics Infantry Combat Vehicle.
  • GE engine technology transfer.
  • Indigenous fighter engine cooperation.

Many projects remain under prolonged negotiations without implementation.


MQ-9B Drone Procurement

India agreed to procure 31 MQ-9B SkyGuardian/SeaGuardian drones.

However,

  • largely remains a procurement deal.
  • Expected:
    • Local assembly.
    • Indigenous maintenance ecosystem.
    • Domestic MRO capability.
  • These industrial benefits have yet to materialise.

Technology Transfer Divide

India’s Perspective

India seeks:

  • Indigenous manufacturing.
  • Technology absorption.
  • Intellectual Property access.
  • Long-term defence self-reliance.
  • Reduced import dependence.

Technology partnerships are viewed as an instrument of Atmanirbhar Bharat.


U.S. Perspective

The United States views advanced defence technologies as strategic assets.

Technology transfer remains constrained by:

  • ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations).
  • Export-control laws.
  • National security considerations.
  • Protection of intellectual property.

Consequently, political goodwill often fails to translate into industrial cooperation.


Reciprocal Defence Procurement Agreement (RDPA)

The proposed RDPA aims to:

  • Provide reciprocal access to defence procurement markets.
  • Improve defence trade.
  • Enhance industrial collaboration.

However,

Concerns include:

  • Unequal competition between Indian and U.S. defence firms.
  • Risk to India’s emerging defence manufacturing ecosystem.
  • Limited guarantees of meaningful technology transfer.

Critical Analysis

Strengths

  • India-US defence relationship has expanded substantially.
  • High interoperability through military exercises.
  • Strong maritime cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.
  • Growing collaboration in emerging technologies.
  • Strategic convergence on Indo-Pacific security.
  • Increased private-sector engagement via INDUS-X.

Structural Challenges

  • Procurement dominates over co-development.
  • Technology transfer remains highly restricted.
  • Export-control regulations delay implementation.
  • Intellectual property disputes slow negotiations.
  • Industrial expectations differ significantly.
  • Cost escalation reduces project viability.
  • Defence collaboration remains announcement-heavy but delivery-light.

Way Forward

  • Shift from buyer-seller relationship to genuine co-development.
  • Create predictable technology-transfer frameworks.
  • Encourage joint R&D and shared intellectual property.
  • Expand private-sector participation on both sides.
  • Fast-track implementation of existing initiatives before launching new ones.
  • Promote joint manufacturing for third-country exports.
  • Build long-term industrial partnerships rather than one-time procurement contracts.

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