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regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

Technology cooperation featured prominently in India-US talks: Foreign Secretary Vinay Kwatra

He said one theme which has run through the visit is the 'exceptional warmth and hospitality' US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden extended to Modi

PTI Washington Published 23.06.23, 10:15 AM
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi offers a toast during a State Dinner with President Joe Biden at the White House in Washington.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi offers a toast during a State Dinner with President Joe Biden at the White House in Washington. PTI

Foreign Secretary Vinay Kwatra has said that technology cooperation featured prominently in the discussion between India and the US and described it as one of the most substantive outcomes of the ongoing state visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Kwatra briefed reporters on the outcomes of the second day of Modi's visit that began here with a grand ceremonial welcome at the South Lawn of the White House.

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It was followed by bilateral discussions, remarks to the press, an address to the joint session of the US Congress and the state dinner where high-profile invited guests included Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani and his wife Nita Ambani, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Alphabet chief Sundar Pichai.

"Very clearly, technology, in particular, advanced technology, across all domains ranging from defence to space and energy is one of the most important substantive outcomes," Kwatra told reporters in a media briefing on Thursday.

"Technology featured in talks, not in a limited way but technology cooperation across the ecosystem. This included technology transfer, services and working together in research among other domains," he added.

Kwatra said one theme which has run through the visit is the "exceptional warmth and hospitality" US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden extended to Modi. "The visit has been extremely rich in form and equally, if not more, rich in substance," he said, describing the trip as "path-breaking." He referred to various deals, including in defence, to highlight the visit's achievements.

“Besides the reference in the US Congress to the challenge of terrorism, the prime minister said that even after the two decades of 9/11 and a decade of 26/11, the problem of terrorism remains a pressing challenge for the global community,” Foreign Kwatra said.

He said Modi was clearly highlighting the need for “the international community to recognise that the people who sponsor terrorism, support terrorism, they continue to pose a serious challenge to the safety and security of our societies and have to be very sternly and firmly dealt with,” Kwatra said.

He said that when Prime Minister Modi and President Joe Biden held their discussions, “all aspects of such global challenges were discussed between the two and how India and US could cooperate to mitigate, address and try and deal with this challenge as comprehensively as possible." "That was also discussed between the two leaders. And going forward, it would be our effort to see how some of those discussions can translate into concrete cooperative decisions between India and the US,” he said.

In his address to the US Congress on Thursday, Modi said: “These ideologies keep taking new identities and forms, but their intentions are the same. Terrorism is an enemy of humanity and there can be no ifs or buts in dealing with it. We must overcome all such forces sponsoring and exporting terror”.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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