Jaitley asks Russian defence firms to 'make in India'
22 Jun 2017
Russian companies are better placed than others for joint venture partnerships with Indian companies for defence production and thereby reaping the advantages of `Make In India', defence minister Arun Jaitley said on Wednesday.
''Russian companies, which already have a long experience of working in India and working with India are well placed to take a leading role in this process,'' he said
Jaitley, who is on a three-day visit to Russia, invited Russian firms to join hands with Indian companies through joint ventures and other means to develop and manufacture state-of-the-art military platforms and weapon systems under the "Make in India" framework.
"As India's largest, oldest and most trusted partner in defence hardware and equipment, Russia would have a comparative advantage in partnering with Indian companies for realising the 'Make in India' potential in defence production," said Jaitley, addressing the "Technoprom-2017" conference in Novosibirsk.
Listing out the Modi government's various policy initiatives to boost domestic manufacturing, Jaitley said Russian companies can be ''natural partners'' for Indian companies in creating "a large industrial base and supply chains" through joint ventures and technology partnerships.
"For India, relations with Russia are a key foreign policy priority. Our long standing and wide-ranging cooperation with Russia in the field of military technical cooperation has graduated from a simple buyer-seller relationship to one involving joint R&D and production of advanced defence systems," he said.
On Friday, Jaitley will co-chair the 17th meeting of the inter-governmental commission on military and technical cooperation with Russian General Sergey Shoygu in Moscow to discuss several bilateral military projects.
India and Russia are now working towards finalising deals worth around $10.5 billion, ranging from the acquisition of five S-400 Triumf advanced air defence missile systems, four Grigorivich-class frigates and 200 Kamov-226T light helicopters as well as the lease of a second nuclear-powered submarine by the Indian Navy after INS Chakra.
Jaitley and Russian deputy PM Dmitry Rogozin later co-chaired the first meeting of the bilateral Science Technology Commission, which decided to finalise several cooperation projects in the fields of space, marine technology and deep ocean engineering.