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India-US ties to be based on tech in future, says Jaishankar

American Consulate opened in Bengaluru
EAM S Jaishankar with US Ambassador to India Eric Garcetti and Karnataka Deputy CM DK Shivakumar during the inauguration of the US Consulate in Bengaluru on Friday. PTI

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India-US relationship in the future will be heavily based on technology, with space and defence sector being two crucial components, said External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar at the opening of the US Consulate in Bengaluru on Friday.

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The Minister said the domain of space was just beginning to open up and there were many more possibilities. He further noted that defence too was a crucial area.

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“In the technology, space and defence sectors, there is a case for stronger US presence and leveraging the capabilities of Bengaluru and Karnataka,” he stated.

The EAM said two decades ago, there were virtually no American weapons in the Indian inventory and little defence collaboration. Today, India flies the US-origin special operation planes such as the C-17, C-130J, Boeing P8I; and the Chinook and Apache helicopters.

He further said education and research would be the driver of India-US relations. “As the new education policy opens vistas, I hope to see collaborative campuses, exchange of students and a stronger American presence in the education sector in this region,” he added.

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“Besides, trusted supply chains will become key to strategic partnerships amid transformation in the industry. I see a great future for India and the US in this area as well,” Jaishankar added.

Jaishankar said absence of an American consulate in Bengaluru was a gap in the relationship between two nations. In 2023, Prime Minister Narendra Modi asserted the need for a consulate in Bengaluru.

The EAM said, “Its formal opening is another sign that we are overcoming the historic hesitations that marked the India-US ties.” Although the Minister did not point it out, the reference stems from the cold war era from 1945-91.

He went on to state that India would open a consulate in Los Angeles soon.

US Ambassador to India Eric Garcetti and Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar also attended the event.

Garcetti said India was now America’s second largest mission in the world.

The US Embassy said the initiative to expand US presence in Bengaluru would broaden and deepen long-standing ties, diplomatic engagement and strategic partnership in Karnataka. Home to nearly 700 US companies and tens of thousands of US citizens, the state is creating jobs for people in both the United States and India.

It is also the centre for rapidly expanding collaboration in space. This was highlighted by the planned launch of jointly developed NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar satellite and a US mission to bring NASA-trained Indian astronauts to the International Space Station.

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