NSA Jake Sullivan travels to India for talks with Doval

By Anjali Sharma

 

WASHINGTON – US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on Saturday announced that he is arriving in Delhi on Sunday on a 2 day visit to hold talks with National Security Advisor Ajit Doval on a range of issues such as India partnership from space, defense, and strategic technology cooperation to shared security priorities in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.

Mr. Sullivan will meet External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and other Indian leaders, media reported

The Wjhite House said that he will visit the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, where he will meet with young Indian entrepreneurs and give a speech outlined the significant steps India and the US have taken together to strengthen their innovation alliance under the initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology.

The visit takes place just before President Joe Biden leaves office on January 20, ahead of the inauguration of Mr Donald Trump as the 47th US President.

Mr Jaishankar had visited Washington and had a meeting with Mr Sullivan too.

White House National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby said “This will be Mr. Sullivan’s final trip to the Indo-Pacific region as National Security Advisor. He’s very excited and looking forward to these conversations at this critical time”.

Both sides have acknowledged that the iCET, unveiled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Joe Biden in May 2022, would play a defining role in deepening the strategic partnership between the two countries.

India is confident that there will be continuing in the relationship with the US even after Mr Trump takes over as the new president. New Delhi believes a strong India-US relationship enjoys bipartisan support in Washington.

Mr Sullivan has already mentioned three key buckets for technology partnerships — innovation, production and deployment stressed the need for government support for the private sector.

“There exists bipartisan support for Indian industry in the US and building the ecosystem and supply chain manufacturing is the key to production,” he told the industry leaders, last year.

“The core of iCET is about the idea of India and US being able to support each other and to encourage greater collaboration in the technology ecosystem, jointly innovate and find solutions to challenges,” he said.

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