India - Israel Relations : News and Updates

Israeli PM’s India visit postponed as he tests COVID–19 positive​

The visit of Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett scheduled for early next week has been postponed after he tested positive for COVID–19, the Israel Embassy announced on Tuesday. In a telephonic conversation with his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Gantz, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh wished for the speedy recovery of Mr. Bennett.

“The visit has been postponed and will be rescheduled. We are working with our Indian partners on another date for the visit as part of the celebrations of 30 years of diplomatic relations between the countries as well as 75 years of India’s Independence. Israel will continue to strengthen its robust friendship and growing partnership with the people of India,” Naor Gilon, Israeli Ambassador to India, said in a statement.

In the midst of a flurry of visits from the West to New Delhi in the backdrop of the Russian offensive in Ukraine, Mr. Bennett was scheduled to arrive on a three–day visit from April 3. Earlier this month on March 5, he made a surprise visit to Moscow and discussed the war on Ukraine with Russian President Vladimir Putin and later spoke to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky over the telephone.

Mr. Gantz who was also scheduled to visit India from March 30-31, informed Mr. Singh that it has been postponed due to “some unavoidable reasons” and new dates will be worked out through diplomatic channels, a Defence Ministry statement said.

Mr. Singh said on social media that in the telephonic conversation with Mr. Gantz, he shared condolences on loss of innocent lives due to terror attacks in Israel. “Terrorism is a global menace which has no place in today’s civilised world,” he said.

“Both the countries look forward to further strengthen the bilateral relations as India–Israel complete 30 years of full diplomatic relations. Defence cooperation is the founding pillar of our strategic partnership. Military and industry cooperation has been on an upward swing,” Mr. Singh said.

Two police officers were killed on Sunday in an attack by two gunmen in the Northern city of Hadera for which the Islamic State claimed responsibility in a statement posted on its Telegram account. The two gunmen were neutralised by Israeli counter–terrorism force.
 

India-Israel Dialogue on UN and Multilateral Issues​

May 24, 2022
India and Israel held the second round of consultations on UN and multilateral issues on 23 May 2022 in Israel.

2. Shri Prakash Gupta, Joint Secretary (UN-Political), Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), led the Indian delegation, which included officials from the Embassy of India in Tel Aviv and the WANA Division, MEA. The Israeli delegation was led by Mr. Haim Waxman, Deputy Director-General, UN & International Organizations Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) of Israel and included senior officials from the Israel MFA.

3. In keeping with their strategic partnership, the two sides had an in-depth exchange of views on multilateral issues and issues of mutual interest including the situation in the middle east and related to UN Peacekeeping operations in the region. The Indian delegation briefed the Israeli side on India’s priorities at the UN Security Council. The two sides agreed to continue their cooperation in the multilateral fora.
 

@vstol Jockey is it true that Israel sold military equipments to pakistan?
Yes, It is true and they have very recently sold very high tech stuff to even China. Typical Jews.
 
What did they sold to China? Did India express our concern to Israel?
Azerbejan used same barak-8 which was a JV between Isreal and India. The loitering drone tech was sold by israel to China thru a so called private operators and who are now under investigation. Can anyone believe such shit?
 
India, Israel adopt 'vision statement' to boost defence cooperation

Marking 30 years of diplomatic ties between the two countries, India and Israel adopted a "vision statement" which will pave the way for strengthening defence cooperation in future.

Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and his Israeli counterpart Benny Gantz on Thursday held bilateral talks in New Delhi. The two leaders discussed defence cooperation and the prevailing global and regional scenario.

Taking to Twitter, Rajnath Singh wrote, "Warm and productive meeting with the Defence Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Gantz in New Delhi. Discussed key issues pertaining to defence cooperation and global & regional scenarios during the bilateral meeting. We place great value on our Strategic Partnership with Israel."

"Glad that both the countries adopted a 'vision statement' which will pave the way for defence cooperation in future. There is a broad consensus between both the countries on further strengthening the bilateral strategic and defence cooperation," he added.

Gantz, who arrived in India on Thursday, received a Tri-Service Guard of Honour in the presence of Rajnath Singh and laid a wreath at National War Memorial in New Delhi.

"I am humbled to begin my visit to India by honouring fallen troops and learning about the legacy of this nation at the National War Memorial. This is a symbolic tribute as we prepare to mark 30 years of flourishing relations and defense ties between our countries," Benny Gantz tweeted.

Israeli Minister Gantz arrived in India yesterday. The visit was meant to take place in March but got cancelled.

Before taking flight for India, Gantz had tweeted, "I am currently taking off for India for a visit that marks 30 years of diplomatic defence ties between Israel and India. During the visit, I will meet with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Defense Minister Rajnath Singh to discuss the expansion of our cooperation."

Earlier in March, Israel's Defence Minister during a call with Rajnath Singh informed him that his proposed visit to India from March 30-31 had been postponed due to some unavoidable reasons.

According to Israeli local media, the meeting in March was scheduled to include talks on improving security relations between India and Israel.

The report added that Tel Aviv has sought to enhance defence ties with New Delhi in recent years, especially in the fields of air and missile defence.

The year 2022 marks 30 years of diplomatic relations between India and Israel.

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar paid an official visit to Israel from 17-21 October 2021. During the visit, Israel signed the instrument of ratification of the International Solar Alliance.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi also met Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on the sidelines of the COP26 Climate Summit in Glasgow on 2 November 2021.

The annual India-Israel Joint Working Group (JWG) on Defence was held in Israel on October 26-27, 2021.
 

Ex-IFS officer Talmiz Ahmad is living in the past. India-Israel ties are at an all-time high​

Ex-IFS officer Talmiz Ahmad's analysis of Israeli-Indian relations is strange at best. PM Modi understood West Asia better than the Indian diplomat.

Thirty years after the establishment of formal diplomatic relations, ten years after the Arab Spring that marginalised the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, five years after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Israel, and two years after The Abraham Accords, the fact that relations between Israel and India have been fundamentally transformed is no longer open to debate. Or is it? Apparently, there is still someone, not just anyone, but a former Indian ambassador to several West Asian countries who thinks that India wants an ‘affair’, and not a serious relationship with Israel.
In his new book West Asia at War: Repression, Resistance and Great Power Games, former IFS officer Talmiz Ahmad quotes from a half-decade-old article by Israeli researcher Dr Oshrit Birvadker to tell his readers that, in fact, nothing substantial has changed in Israel-India relations. Everything is just a fleeting affair.

Until the disintegration of the Soviet bloc, India had a pro-Arab policy and a strong commitment to the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) ethos. In 1992, India and Israel established full diplomatic relations, but India preferred not to disclose the full cooperation between the countries till 2014. India had historically supported virtually all United Nations resolutions favouring Palestinians.

Merely two years before Modi came to power, India co-sponsored and voted in favour of the UNGA Resolution that enabled Palestine to become a ‘Non-Member Observer State’ at the UN. Symbolically, the vote was on 29 November, the same date the UN General Assembly voted 65 years earlier in favour of the partition plan of Mandatory Palestine. A total of 13 states voted against the partition plan, ten of which were Muslim states. India was one of the few non-Muslim countries that voted against Resolution 181.

Our experiences

On the day that Talmiz Ahmad’s article was published in ThePrint, we were at a special event at the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Jerusalem. The Foreign Ministry hosted a delegation of 90 entrepreneurs and investors from India’s JITO Incubation and Innovation Foundation. A number of diplomats, academics and business figures presented a broad picture of Israel-India relations.

The wide spectrum of issues in which India and Israel are cooperating surprised us, even as Israeli writers with a unique interest in India. But not only presentations, deals, and statistics were presented at the event. One of the speakers narrated the experiences of Israeli diplomats when they come to serve at our embassy in New Delhi. The Indian love for Israel cannot be compared to any European country. India’s deep appreciation for the State does not depend on one government or another, it is alive and kicking among the bureaucracy, various influencers and the general public.

Although this was a private delegation of entrepreneurs, which Israel is accustomed to, the Foreign Ministry did everything to embrace it, including having the house chef prepare an elaborate vegetarian buffet that included dishes from the Jain kitchen.

Naor Gilon, Ambassador of Israel to India, Sri Lanka and Bhutan, spoke with the delegation about the tremendous achievements of India and Israel in agricultural cooperation, citing examples of fields that have tripled or quadrupled their yield since adopting Israeli technologies. He told them about how there are more Indian students in Israel than from any other foreign country, most doing advanced degrees in STEM. He also devoted time to the intellectual property challenge in the Make in India programme, which is well known to Israeli Indian entrepreneurs who want to collaborate in business ventures.

Kobi Shoshani, Consul General of Israel in Mumbai, was praised time and again for his proactive role in promoting the JITO delegation’s visit. Along with the formal discourse on the decision to sign a free Indo-Israeli trade agreement, there was also an informal discussion on the chemistry between Indians and Israelis in the fields of diplomacy, science, tourism, agriculture, and of course security.

Siddharth Jain, chairperson of the JITO, told Israeli Foreign Ministry officials about their falling in love with Israel. One can be cynical towards businesspeople, wherever they are, but the members of the Indian delegation spoke wholeheartedly. It was crystal clear, and it remained that way as we toured the Old City of Jerusalem after the event was over.

But our goal is not to convince an Indian diplomat that he is wrong about the sentiment, that his chapter on Israel is shoddy, lazy, and at times exotically of touch with present-day reality, that Narendra Modi’s historic visit to Israel cannot really be compared to the minor visit to the Palestinian Authority—one that has been described as ‘A Strategy of Tokenism’.

India-Israel relations now
Our goal is to examine how it came about that a man without a diplomatic background like Prime Minister Modi, understood West Asia better than a veteran Indian diplomat for whom WANA (Western Asia-North Africa) was a second home.

It is paradoxical that a politician who has been shunned by the West for more than a decade understood better than his diplomats that he could come to visit Israel, show open affection for its right-wing prime minister, violate a long tradition of anti-Israel votes in international institutions—and still not be published by Gulf states and Saudi Arabia for it. Not one Indian worker was going to be deported from Dubai or Bahrain because the Indian prime minister had decided to show his love for the Jewish state, no sudden UN resolution was to be suggested vis-a-vis Kashmir.

Today, we are in the era of alliances such as the I2U2 West Asian Quad in the Middle East and it is clear that Israel’s relations with the Gulf states, including Saudi Arabia, whose relations with Israel remain intentionally unofficial as of yet, are better than the Sunni bloc’s relations with the Palestinians, which are at an all-time low. Relations between Israel and Egypt are also perhaps the best since the signing of the Camp David Accords in 1979. Even a delegation from Pakistan was seen here, with PTV newscaster Ahmad Qureishi giving an interview to Kan 11 national television, praising David Ben-Gurion as a state builder. It seems to have gotten him suspended back home, but he retaliated by giving Kan 11 another Zoom interview, declaring that he has no remorse.

But Narendra Modi dramatically changed India’s policy toward Israel when the tip of the iceberg of the Sunni-Israeli alliance was much smaller than what we are witnessing now.

Manifestation of a mindset
On a broader level, Talmiz Ahmad is not only an individual, but a manifestation of a mindset: Inherent suspicion of the Western world, unconditional forgiveness of the failures and crimes of secular dictatorships in the Middle East, demonisation of Israel and the Jews as those who magically control American policy and power projection, and a willful blindness to the established admiration in the Arab world for Israel’s achievements, even at the price of aligning with some of the most destructive and retrograde forces in the entire Muslim world.

Ahmad cannot point to a single prominent cooperation India has with the Palestinian authority, its businessmen or universities, for the good of Indian citizens. What will Indian diplomacy have to show from decades more of alliance with the Palestinians that can compare to what was accomplished with Israel in 2022 alone? Perhaps Mr Ahmad should also do a comparative analysis of any texts about India across the border in Pakistan Studies classes to any text taught about Jews and Israel in Palestinian schools, and tell the readers which is more shockingly violent. Is that the future he envisions?

When outdated ideologies of the most impractical kind combine with nasty prejudices to shape a diplomat’s worldview, he has no real chance of doing his professional job and dispense wise and actionable advice to the political echelon.

After reading the strange analysis of Israeli-Indian relations, we were curious and turned to Dr Oshrit Birvadker to check if she still thinks Israel-India relations are just an affair. “No”, she said immediately. Her article was published before The Abraham Accords, which at last removed any lingering Indian dilemma of having to choose sides between Israel and the Arab world. Sardonically, she drew our attention to the fact that even her name was misspelt by Talmiz Ahmad.

Maybe in this book, this is actually a blessing.

Lev Aran is a former coordinator of the Israel-India Parliamentary Friendship League and an Israel-based freelance columnist and journalist. Yeshaya Rosenman is a freelance journalist and student of Indian Studies and Islamic Studies at Hebrew University. Views are personal.
 
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IIT Madras, Israel government join hands to establish ‘India – Israel Center of Water Technology’​

As per the agreement, the MoHUA will collaborate with MASHAV, Israel's Agency for International Development Cooperation, to establish this new centre, which will be located at IIT Madras campus.

The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras has joined hands with the government of Israel to establish an ‘India – Israel Center of Water Technology’ (CoWT) in Water Resources Management and Water Technologies at IIT Madras campus.

A letter of Intent was signed at New Delhi on May 9 by Manoj Joshi, Secretary, Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA), Government of India, Prof. V. Kamakoti, Director, IIT Madras and Naor Gilon, Ambassador of Israel to India. This letter was signed in presence of S. Jaishankar and Eli Cohen, Hon’ble External Affairs Ministers of India and Israel, respectively, in the presence of Prof. T. Pradeep, Institute Professor, IIT Madras.


As per the agreement, the MoHUA will collaborate with MASHAV, Israel’s Agency for International Development Cooperation, to establish this new centre, which will be located at IIT Madras campus.

The main aim of this centre will be to ensure the implementation of Israel’s best technologies being practised in a tailor-made context for the Indian requirements and work on sustainable management solutions for the Indian water sector.

Through this centre, the two experts of two countries will work towards the mutual exchange of technology, scientific information, literature, and hold discussions and consultations on various issues in the area with experts from both the countries to address problems in drinking water and sewerage management and to develop new areas of intervention.