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FILE-Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives at the Red Fort to address the nation on the occasion of Independence Day in New Delhi, India, Aug. 15, 2015. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das, File)

Third term for Modi likely to see closer defense ties with US as India's rivalry with China grows

Prime Minister Narendra Modi — fresh from declaring victory in India’s election — offered few details on the agenda for his third term

By David Rising And Ashok Sharma
Published - Jun 06, 2024, 11:06 PM ET
Last Updated - Jun 06, 2024, 11:58 PM EDT

NEW DELHI (AP) — Fresh from declaring victory in India's election, Prime Minister Narendra Modi offered few details on the agenda for his third term, but went out of his way to underline he would continue to focus on raising the country's military preparedness and clout. 

That should come as good news to the United States and its other allies, as they focus increasingly on keeping China’s sweeping maritime claims and growingly assertive behavior in the Indo-Pacific region in check.  

“The government will focus on expanding defense production and exports,” Modi told a crowd of supporters at his party's headquarters after election results came in. He spoke of his plan to increase security by lowering India's dependence on arms imports. “We will not stop until the defense sector becomes self sufficient.”  

Defense cooperation with the U.S. has greatly expanded under Modi, particularly through the so-called Quad security grouping that also includes Australia and Japan. 

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