Japan, India start first joint fighter jet drill

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Around 150 Indian Air Force personnel are taking part in the exercise at the Hyakuri Air Base in Japan's Ibaraki prefecture.

Around 150 Indian Air Force personnel are taking part in the exercise at the Hyakuri Air Base in Japan's Ibaraki prefecture.

PHOTO: INDIAN AIR FORCE/FACEBOOK

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- Japan and India began their first joint fighter jet exercise on Monday near Tokyo as the countries upgrade defence and security ties with an eye on China’s growing military might.

The 11-day joint exercise will involve eight Japanese fighter jets, with India sending four fighters, two transport aircraft and an aerial refuelling tanker, Japan’s Defence Ministry said.

Around 150 Indian Air Force personnel are taking part in the exercise at the Hyakuri Air Base in Ibaraki prefecture, north-east of Tokyo.

The drill was agreed by the two countries during talks between Japanese and Indian defence and foreign ministers in 2019, but was delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Japan and India – along with Australia and the United States – are part of the Quad alliance, a grouping of regional powers that is increasingly concerned about China’s military and economic influence.

Tokyo has held a string of joint military exercises in recent months, as well as overhauling its defence and security strategy and explicitly airing its concerns about China.

In December, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government

committed to doubling defence spending to two percent of gross domestic product

by 2027, and dubbed China the “greatest strategic challenge ever” to Japan’s security.

Last week, Japan

inked a new defence deal with Britain

and agreed to expand its mutual defence treaty with Washington

to attacks in space.

AFP

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