<p>Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Monday called India vital to ensuring a free and open Indo-Pacific after talks with his counterpart touching on shared concerns about China.</p>.<p>Speaking in New Delhi after meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Kishida laid out plans for billions of dollars in investments in infrastructure and other sectors across the region.</p>.<p>"I have described Japan's plan to develop a free and open Indo-Pacific. To achieve this, India is an indispensable partner," Kishida said.</p>.<p>"Japan will strengthen coordination with the US, Australia, UK, Canada, Europe and elsewhere. Of course, India is indispensable."</p>.<p>India, Japan, the United States and Australia make up the Quad alliance, which positions itself as a bulwark against China's growing assertiveness in the Asia-Pacific region under President Xi Jinping.</p>.<p><strong>Also read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/pm-modi-holds-talks-with-japanese-counterpart-kishida-1201836.html" target="_blank">PM Modi holds talks with Japanese counterpart Kishida</a></strong></p>.<p>India's relations with China nosedived after 20 Indian troops died in clashes with Chinese soldiers in 2020 on their disputed Himalayan frontier.</p>.<p>In December Japan, officially pacifist since 1945, revamped its defence policy after warning that China, with which it has a fraught history, posed the "greatest security challenge ever".</p>.<p>Japan is also boosting military spending and is carrying out more joint exercises with other countries, including India, which has also deepened defence cooperation with Western nations.</p>.<p>In June, Kishida had said Japan would help train 800 maritime security personnel and provide at least $2 billion to other countries to buy patrol boats and build up infrastructure as part of the Free and Open Indo-Pacific (FOIP) strategy.</p>.<p>Kishida said Monday that FOIP's scope would expand to include new areas like climate change, cybersecurity and food security.</p>.<p>It would also direct public and private capital worth $75 billion towards Indo-Pacific infrastructure by 2030.</p>.<p>Kishida's visit came less than a fortnight after Modi hosted his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese for talks that also covered worries about China.</p>.<p>Albanese, who is also forging closer ties with the United States and Britain under the separate so-called AUKUS alliance, is due to host all Quad leaders in May.</p>.<p>The Quad members deny hostile intentions and stress that they are not a military alliance, but China has described the grouping as an attempt to encircle it.</p>.<p>Kishida had been expected to press Modi to take a tougher line on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which India -- a major buyer of Russian arms and oil -- has refused to condemn.</p>.<p>There are fears that China may begin providing military assistance to Russia -- despite denials from Beijing -- and Xi was in Russia for talks with his "old friend" President Vladimir Putin on Monday.</p>.<p>Kishida said that there was a "lack of guiding perspective that is acceptable to all about what the international order should be.</p>.<p>"This was clearly demonstrated by the considerable discrepancies in the attitudes across various countries to Russia's aggression against Ukraine," he said in his speech.</p>.<p>He added that he had invited Modi and the leaders of other countries in the region -- including South Korea, Indonesia and Vietnam -- as well as Brazil to a G7 summit in May.</p>.<p>India currently holds the rotating presidency of the Group of 20, which also includes China and Russia.</p>.<p>G20 meetings in India this year have failed to agree joint common statements on the war because of differences over the year-old Ukraine conflict.</p>.<p>Modi and Kishida also discussed deeper cooperation on clean energy, digital trade and infrastructure.</p>.<p>In March 2022, in his first visit to India, Kishida said Japan would realise 5 trillion yen in public and private investment to India over the next five years.</p>
<p>Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Monday called India vital to ensuring a free and open Indo-Pacific after talks with his counterpart touching on shared concerns about China.</p>.<p>Speaking in New Delhi after meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Kishida laid out plans for billions of dollars in investments in infrastructure and other sectors across the region.</p>.<p>"I have described Japan's plan to develop a free and open Indo-Pacific. To achieve this, India is an indispensable partner," Kishida said.</p>.<p>"Japan will strengthen coordination with the US, Australia, UK, Canada, Europe and elsewhere. Of course, India is indispensable."</p>.<p>India, Japan, the United States and Australia make up the Quad alliance, which positions itself as a bulwark against China's growing assertiveness in the Asia-Pacific region under President Xi Jinping.</p>.<p><strong>Also read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/pm-modi-holds-talks-with-japanese-counterpart-kishida-1201836.html" target="_blank">PM Modi holds talks with Japanese counterpart Kishida</a></strong></p>.<p>India's relations with China nosedived after 20 Indian troops died in clashes with Chinese soldiers in 2020 on their disputed Himalayan frontier.</p>.<p>In December Japan, officially pacifist since 1945, revamped its defence policy after warning that China, with which it has a fraught history, posed the "greatest security challenge ever".</p>.<p>Japan is also boosting military spending and is carrying out more joint exercises with other countries, including India, which has also deepened defence cooperation with Western nations.</p>.<p>In June, Kishida had said Japan would help train 800 maritime security personnel and provide at least $2 billion to other countries to buy patrol boats and build up infrastructure as part of the Free and Open Indo-Pacific (FOIP) strategy.</p>.<p>Kishida said Monday that FOIP's scope would expand to include new areas like climate change, cybersecurity and food security.</p>.<p>It would also direct public and private capital worth $75 billion towards Indo-Pacific infrastructure by 2030.</p>.<p>Kishida's visit came less than a fortnight after Modi hosted his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese for talks that also covered worries about China.</p>.<p>Albanese, who is also forging closer ties with the United States and Britain under the separate so-called AUKUS alliance, is due to host all Quad leaders in May.</p>.<p>The Quad members deny hostile intentions and stress that they are not a military alliance, but China has described the grouping as an attempt to encircle it.</p>.<p>Kishida had been expected to press Modi to take a tougher line on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which India -- a major buyer of Russian arms and oil -- has refused to condemn.</p>.<p>There are fears that China may begin providing military assistance to Russia -- despite denials from Beijing -- and Xi was in Russia for talks with his "old friend" President Vladimir Putin on Monday.</p>.<p>Kishida said that there was a "lack of guiding perspective that is acceptable to all about what the international order should be.</p>.<p>"This was clearly demonstrated by the considerable discrepancies in the attitudes across various countries to Russia's aggression against Ukraine," he said in his speech.</p>.<p>He added that he had invited Modi and the leaders of other countries in the region -- including South Korea, Indonesia and Vietnam -- as well as Brazil to a G7 summit in May.</p>.<p>India currently holds the rotating presidency of the Group of 20, which also includes China and Russia.</p>.<p>G20 meetings in India this year have failed to agree joint common statements on the war because of differences over the year-old Ukraine conflict.</p>.<p>Modi and Kishida also discussed deeper cooperation on clean energy, digital trade and infrastructure.</p>.<p>In March 2022, in his first visit to India, Kishida said Japan would realise 5 trillion yen in public and private investment to India over the next five years.</p>