Context:
Despite over US$22 billion in U.S. defence acquisitions since 2002 and several bilateral initiatives, India–U.S. defence technology cooperation has not translated into meaningful technology transfer or defence industrial collaboration.
Core Issue
India–U.S. defence ties have grown politically and strategically, but defence technology transfer and co-development have remained limited.
Why Has Cooperation Lagged?
1. U.S. Export-Control Regime
Strict International Traffic in Arms Regulations limit transfer of critical defence technologies.
2. Divergent Priorities
India wants:
- Technology transfer
- Co-development
- Co-production
- Atmanirbhar Bharat
U.S. wants:
- Strategic partnership
- Market access
- Protection of advanced technologies
3. Commercial and Intellectual Property Issues
Projects are delayed due to differences over:
- Pricing
- Licensing
- Manufacturing rights
- Intellectual property
- Investment
- Production arrangements
Major Initiatives and Status
1. Defence Technology and Trade Initiative, 2012
Aimed to promote co-development and co-production.
Outcome has been limited.
2. Initiative on Critical and Emerging Technologies, 2022
Covers:
- Artificial Intelligence
- Semiconductors
- Quantum technologies
- Space
- Biotechnology
- Telecommunications
- Resilient supply chains
Industrial outcomes remain limited.
3. INDUS-X, 2023
Full Form
- India–United States Defence Acceleration Ecosystem
It links:
- Defence start-ups
- Industry
- Academia
No major co-development project has been delivered yet.
4. GE F-414 Engine Deal
The deal has been delayed due to disagreements over:
- Technology transfer
- Intellectual property
- Investment
- Production arrangements
Way Forward
- Shift from buyer-seller relationship to co-development and co-production.
- Create predictable frameworks for technology transfer.
- Establish clear rules for intellectual property sharing.
- Fast-track flagship projects such as GE F-414 engine.
- Deliver measurable outcomes under iCET and INDUS-X.
- Align defence industrial cooperation with India’s Atmanirbhar Bharat priorities.
Key Takeaway
India–U.S. defence cooperation has strong strategic intent, but credibility will depend on actual technology transfer, industrial collaboration and delivery of flagship projects.




