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India, Saudi Arabia To Hold First Joint Naval Drills In Early March

The two countries are moving away from a purely buyer-seller relationship towards a closer strategic partnership.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets H.M. King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Source: PTI)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets H.M. King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Source: PTI)

India and Saudi Arabia will conduct their first-ever joint naval exercises in the first week of March next year, as the two sides agreed to enhance their cooperation in defence and security areas, sources said on Thursday.

An Indian source privy to the development said a preparatory meeting on the proposed drills took place early this month in India and another meeting would take place in December.

Sources said the Gulf Kingdom wants to deepen its maritime cooperation with India in the western Indian Ocean, which constitutes busy and sensitive shipping routes such as the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, the Arabian Sea, the Gulf of Oman, and the Persian Gulf.

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Cooperation On Security Issues Between India, Saudi Progressing Well, Says PM Modi

A series of damaging drone and missile attacks on oil facilities of Saudi Aramco, the country's national petroleum company, in Abqaiq and Khurais in the Persian Gulf on Sept. 14 drove oil prices to their highest level in nearly four months.

The attack had knocked out over half of Saudi Arabia's production as it cut 5.7 million barrels per day or over 5 percent of the world's supply. India had condemned the attacks and reiterated its resolve to oppose terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.

The two sides are moving away from a purely buyer-seller relationship towards a closer strategic partnership, sources said. Some new areas of cooperation between India and Saudi Arabia have been worked out and one of them is the defence industry, they said.

An MoU between Saudi Arabia's General Authority of Military Industries and Department of Defence Production, the Ministry of Defence concerning collaboration in military acquisition, industries, research, development and technology was signed after Prime Minister Narendra Modi's wide ranging talks with powerful Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Tuesday.

GAMI proposed an MoU in August and within a short span of time the two sides worked it, the source said, adding that they are looking for more collaboration in security areas, including counter terrorism. The two sides also signed an agreement in the civil aviation sector.

Saudis feel that there's market enough for 100,000 seats, the source said. As of now 33 percent of civil aviation market between India and Saudi Arabia is occupied by other carriers. The agreement signed between the two countries talked about proportional increase in the number of seats.

The two countries will increase from current 32,000 to 36,000 seats, he said. It will be further increased to 44,000 and finally up to 50,000 per week from both the sides, he added. Thereon, there will be a review of whether there is need for further increase or not after six months. The strategic partnership council, the source said, to be headed by the Indian Prime Minister and the Saudi Crown Prince, will review key issues during a summit every two years while the ministers will meet annually.

India is the fourth country after the U.K., France and China with which Saudi Arabia has signed an agreement on strategic partnership. The council will have two parallel verticals one on political, security, culture and society headed by the foreign ministers of the two sides, and another on economy and investments headed by the commerce minister of India and energy minister of the Kingdom.

India's relations with Saudi Arabia have been on an upswing over the last few years based on burgeoning energy ties. India's bilateral trade with Saudi Arabia was at $27.48 billion in 2017-18, making Saudi Arabia its fourth largest trading partner.

Saudi Arabia last month said that it was looking at investing $100 billion in India in areas of energy, refining, petrochemicals, infrastructure, agriculture, minerals and mining.