[🇮🇳] Ties Between India & UAE

[🇮🇳] Ties Between India & UAE
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Saif

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India, UAE sign $3 billion LNG deal, agree to boost trade and defence ties at leaders' meeting

ADNOC Gas signs 10-year LNG deal with India's HPCL

By Reuters

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UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan walks with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi upon his arrival at the airport in New Delhi, India, January 19, 2026. (Photo: India's Press Information Bureau/Handout via REUTERS)
India signed a $3 billion deal on Monday to buy liquefied natural gas from the United Arab Emirates, making it the UAE's top customer, as the leaders of both countries held talks to strengthen trade and defence ties.


The agreement was signed during a very brief two-hour visit to India by UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan for talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

They pledged to double bilateral trade to $200 billion in six years and form a strategic defence partnership.

Abu Dhabi state firm ADNOC Gas will supply 0.5 million metric tonnes of LNG a year to India's Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL.NS), opens new tab for 10 years, the companies said.

ADNOC Gas said the agreement brings the total value of its contracts with India to over $20 billion.

"India is now the UAE's largest customer and a very important part of ADNOC Gas' LNG strategy," the company said.

The UAE is India's third largest trading partner and Sheikh Mohammed was accompanied by a government delegation that included his defence and foreign ministers.

The two sides signed a letter of intent to work towards forming a strategic defence partnership, India's Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri told reporters.

India's arch-rival neighbour Pakistan signed a mutual defence agreement with Saudi Arabia last year, and last week a Pakistani minister announced the preparation of a three-way draft defence agreement between Pakistan, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, after being close allies for years, have increasingly diverged over regional policy, with their rift exposed in Yemen, and they have also had disagreements over oil output.

Misri, however, said that the signing of the letter of intent with the UAE does not mean that India will get involved in regional conflicts.

"Our involvement on the defence and security front with a country from the region does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that we will get involved in particular ways in the conflicts of the region," he said.​
 
UAE has many strategic vulnerabilities. UAE needs batter education and social many other things. India needs energy. Great partnership. It meets many of partnership criteria like mutual interest, old friendship, historic friendship, people to people contact etc.
 
UAE has many strategic vulnerabilities. UAE needs batter education and social many other things. India needs energy. Great partnership. It meets many of partnership criteria like mutual interest, old friendship, historic friendship, people to people contact etc.
Sadly, you are behaving like a typical bewakuf Hindu.
 

India in talks to sell supersonic BrahMos missile to UAE, sources say

REUTERS

Published :
Jun 22, 2026 22:37
Updated :
Jun 22, 2026 22:39

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The Indian Army's BrahMos missile launcher is displayed during the Republic Day parade in New Delhi, India, Jan 26, 2026. Photo : REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/Files

The Indian government is in talks with the UAE to sell some of its flagship defence systems, including the supersonic cruise missile BrahMos, four Indian sources said, as the Gulf nation steps up arms procurement following the war in West Asia.

The discussions, which have not been previously reported, include the potential sale of India's air defence system Akashteer, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

"UAE has shown interest for a number of our weapon systems including BrahMos and Akashteer. The talks between India and UAE are at initial stages and are progressing fast," said a third source with direct knowledge of the matter.

Indian officials and the UAE foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment.

BrahMos, jointly developed by India and Russia, is among the world's fastest cruise missiles and can be launched from land, sea and air platforms, while Akashteer is a fully automated air defence system developed by India's state-run Bharat Electronics Ltd and the Indian Army.

The UAE is considering buying defence equipment from India and other sources after the Gulf nation was heavily attacked by Iran during the war and as it enhances its ability to respond to emerging threats. It also needs to protect the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial conduit for its energy exports.

Earlier this year, the UAE signed a memorandum of understanding with South Korea to promote defence cooperation that would be worth more than $35 billion.

"A diversified supplier base gives the UAE more strategic autonomy, and closer ties with India have the added benefit of not antagonising the US as the countries remain allies," said Pearl Pandya, South Asia senior analyst at Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, a conflict monitoring group.

According to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), the US was the biggest exporter of arms to West Asia between 2021 and 2025, supplying 54 per cent of imports, followed by Italy at 12 per cent and France at 11 per cent.

Before clinching any BrahMos sale to the UAE, India would require Russia's approval, as the 290-km (180-mile) range missile is jointly developed. One source said this is unlikely to pose a hurdle given Moscow's close ties with Abu Dhabi.

Siemon Wezeman, a senior researcher with SIPRI's arms transfers programme, said both the BrahMos missile and Akashteer system would potentially serve the UAE's needs, even if international competition to sell Gulf states arms was increasing and the UAE had experience with other suppliers.

Tighter Ties Between India, UAE

The UAE already has the US MGM-168 ATACMS ballistic missile, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies, which has a maximum range of 300 km. For air defence, it has the sophisticated US THAAD and Patriot systems.

Akashteer would help knit together information from other devices to combat an air threat, defence experts said.

While India had a track record of reports of arms export deals that did not always bear fruit, Wezeman said upcoming sales to the UAE and other Gulf states were possible.

Closer ties between India and the UAE in recent years have led to a flurry of deals on trade and energy and a pact to jointly develop military hardware.

The talks to sell India's flagship weapons systems is further evidence of changing alignments in the region, and India sees its deepening partnership as a counter to the recent defence pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, according to two Indian government sources.

"The growing ties must also be understood against the backdrop of wider regional geopolitical dynamics, in particular the competition between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi for regional leadership," Pandya said.

"Expanded defence ties between India and the UAE essentially serve as a form of strategic signalling, allowing both countries to showcase the strength and depth of their partnerships," she added.

Last year's four-day war between India and Pakistan, when India used weapons systems including BrahMos for the first time in battle, sparked buyer interest from other countries, two of the Indian sources said.

Since then, India has signed deals to sell the BrahMos to Vietnam and Indonesia. It has also received interest from Thailand, South Africa, Brazil and Chile, the two sources said. The embassies of those countries in New Delhi did not respond to emails seeking comment.

The only previous sale of the BrahMos was to the Philippines in 2022.

India's defence exports surged to over $4 billion in the year ending March 2026, from just $7.26 million in 2013-14, according to the Indian government.

India is also the world's second-largest buyer of arms, accounting for over 8 per cent of global arms imports, according to SIPRI.​
 

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