India-Australia Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation

Published By : Admin | July 9, 2026 | 10:55 IST

We, the Prime Ministers of India and Australia, drawn together by our ever closer bilateral ties, united in our determination to strengthen our nations’ strategic partnership and motivated by a common ambition for an open, peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific, hereby commit to this Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation.

We reaffirm the vitality of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP), established in 2020. Since the launch of our CSP, our strategic convergence has accelerated, our economic ties have deepened and the connections between our peoples – the living bridge between our nations – have grown stronger. We note our close engagement, both bilaterally and multilaterally, including with other partners through regional forums such as the Quad and other multilateral institutions, benefits both nations, and contributes to the security and prosperity of our shared region.

We also reflect on the great strides in our partnership fostered by the India-Australia Joint Declaration on Security Cooperation of 2009. We appreciate the enriching contributions to the partnership through various bilateral mechanisms including the Foreign Ministers’ Framework Dialogue (FMFD), the 2+2 Foreign and Defence Ministerial Dialogue and the Defence Ministers’ Dialogue.

We note with concern geostrategic uncertainty, and threats to regional peace and stability. We encourage all parties to work together peacefully and call for the resolution of disputes without the threat or use of force or coercion and in accordance with international law.

We reaffirm our unwavering commitment to an open, peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific region underpinned by: a rules-based architecture based on adherence to international law; respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity; an open, stable and secure maritime domain underpinned by adherence to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) including freedom of navigation and overflight; and effective, inclusive and transparent institutions.

We reaffirm our support for the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), ASEAN and ASEAN-centred regional architecture, and the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) as the premier forums for addressing challenges in these regions.

We recognise that our partnership must evolve to meet changing strategic circumstances, and commit to an acceleration in our advanced, integrated, and top-tier defence and security partnership. We will continue to strengthen strategic exchanges and conduct regular ministerial engagement that reflects the convergence of our strategic interests. We recognise a long-term vision of defence and security collaboration to enhance collective strength. This collaboration will contribute to both countries’ security and make an important contribution to regional peace and security.

We commit to strengthening our comprehensive defence cooperation, deepening strategic dialogue and intensifying cooperation, including by:

a. undertaking to consult on defence-related developments in the Indo-Pacific that affect shared interests;

b. increasing the complexity of our defence exercises, including with partners;

c. accelerating efforts to build interoperability and information sharing between defence forces;

d. expanding aircraft deployments from each other’s territories;

e. deepening connections between defence force personnel, including through exchanges, education and training, and liaison roles; and

f. exploring opportunities to cooperate in recruiting for skilled defence workforces.

We recognise the centrality of the maritime domain to our defence, security and economic interests, and will increase the depth, sophistication and regularity of maritime security cooperation. We will strengthen maritime cooperation through a India-Australia Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap.

We will embrace the growing potential of defence industries on both sides through encouraging integration, industry engagement, and building supply chain resilience. We will deepen collaboration between our defence innovation ecosystems and develop arrangements for advanced defence science and technology collaboration.

We will work to promote the meaningful participation and leadership of women in the prevention of conflicts, the delivery of relief and recovery efforts, and the forging of lasting peace, affirming our commitment to uphold gender equality in peacekeeping operations and to advance the Women, Peace and Security agenda.

We commit to cooperating bilaterally, and with partners, to support regional economic prosperity and resilience. We will develop more diverse and resilient supply chains, critical infrastructure and connectivity, including for critical minerals and clean energy technologies.

We will work together to help shape a technology environment that meets our shared vision for a secure and resilient Indo-Pacific. We will work together to harness the potential of our cyber security and critical and emerging technology cooperation and information sharing mechanisms under the Australia-India Partnership on Cyber, Critical Technologies and Supply Chains (Australia-India PACTS), and bolster cooperation on strategic technologies.

We commit to increase information sharing on terrorist threats in our region, including entities and individuals, and explore opportunities for enhanced collaboration to counter violent extremism and terrorism in sectors, including in:

a. new and emerging technology;

b. financing of terrorism;

c. critical infrastructure and crowded spaces;

d. the maritime domain; and

e. online radicalisation.

We will continue our cooperation under the Migration and Mobility Partnership Arrangement, signed in 2023, which outlines ways to cooperate on the prevention of irregular migration, people smuggling, and trafficking in human beings. We will also continue our cooperation to combat transnational organised crime.

We seek a peaceful world free of nuclear weapons, and to this end reiterate our commitment to non-proliferation and global, complete, non-discriminatory and verifiable nuclear disarmament.

We commit to continued cooperation with other Indo-Pacific partners, including trilateral cooperation mechanisms and deeper engagement with partners through the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative. We will expand our cooperation with the United States of America and Japan, to build capability and cooperation towards our positive vision for an open, stable, peaceful and prosperous Indo-Pacific region.

We commit to deepen collaboration in Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) to offer rapid, coordinated and sustainable disaster response recognising our shared commitment to regional peace, security, prosperity and resilience. We will strengthen cooperation including through:

a. information sharing and expert exchanges; and

b. joint HADR exercises, including the Quad Indo-Pacific Logistics Network, which supports civilian response to large-scale natural disasters.

We commit to exploring opportunities for sharing of contingency planning, joint response and coordination during disasters and crises, including to support regional and global evacuation operations in third countries.

In the spirit of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, we commit fully to implementing this ambitious agenda to support a peaceful and stable Indo-Pacific region.

 

Explore More
شری رام جنم بھومی مندر دھوجاروہن اتسو کے دوران وزیر اعظم کی تقریر کا متن

Popular Speeches

شری رام جنم بھومی مندر دھوجاروہن اتسو کے دوران وزیر اعظم کی تقریر کا متن
3,000 towels in one week: The made In India souvenir Wimbledon champions can’t leave behind

Media Coverage

3,000 towels in one week: The made In India souvenir Wimbledon champions can’t leave behind
NM on the go

Nm on the go

Always be the first to hear from the PM. Get the App Now!
...
Australia-India Partnership on Cyber, Critical Technologies and Supply Chains (PACTS)
July 09, 2026

Australia and India have built an enduring partnership in cyber and critical technologies underpinned by our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, the 2020 Framework Arrangement on Cyber and Cyber Enabled Critical Technology Cooperation (2020 Framework), and two decades of collaborative research, operational coordination and policy engagement.

Recognising that supply chains, critical technology and cyber security drive economic growth, are central to national security and can be used to shape values and global norms, Australia and India will build on our pre-existing foundations and elevate our bilateral ambition under an ‘Australia-India Partnership on Cyber, Critical Technologies and Supply Chains (PACTS)’, succeeding and replacing the 2020 Framework.

The PACTS aims to support our shared interest in national and regional security, empower our partners with greater digital choices, make critical supply chains more resilient, and strengthen global cyber resilience. Safety, security, resilience, inclusivity for all, and shared democratic values will be built into every stage of our efforts under the partnership, demonstrating our countries’ commitment in being responsible technology leaders. Streamlining these efforts under an overall unifying strategic vision will allow us to pursue targeted activities under five pillars of cooperation.

Pillars for Cooperation

Under each interrelated pillar, India and Australia will identify opportunities and specific projects to support collaboration between the private sector, universities, research institutions and government agencies. This will underpin and extend government-to-government cooperation, increase two-way investment into new technologies, and support the translation of intellectual property into products that deliver economic growth.

Pillar 1: Supply Chain Resilience and Diversification

Australia and India will work towards secure, resilient and trustworthy supply chains to support our growing technical industries, including by promoting security and safety by design and protective regulatory frameworks and deepening rules-based bilateral technology trade and supply chains.

• Develop a bilateral mechanism for collaboration on trusted vendor frameworks.

• Promote India–Australia cooperation, including through the Quad Partnership for Cable Connectivity and Resilience, to support secure, trusted, reliable and resilient undersea cable connectivity across the Indo-Pacific. We will strengthen cooperation to share best practices, enhance information sharing and coordination, and address risks to undersea cable infrastructure, including threats and sabotage.

• Develop collaboration between Australian and Indian Research institutes focused on protecting semi-conductor supply chains; and facilitating co-development and research to bolster their efforts.

• Collaborate on the development of secure critical minerals supply chains, including through coordinated investment, regulatory alignment, and recycling and recovery.

• Promote commercial collaboration and trade diversification between Australian and Indian businesses and strengthen engagement between relevant peak bodies, including aligning existing initiatives to this pillar.

Pillar 2: Critical Technology

Australia and India will work together to strengthen the security, resilience and integrity of priority critical technologies and innovate on new technologies in critical areas such as artificial intelligence (AI), space technologies, telecommunications, biotechnology and advanced materials. We will seek to protect essential digital and physical infrastructure, accelerate innovation and research, and shape interoperable, consensus-driven international standards, to support long-term economic security and regional stability in the Indo-Pacific.

• Leverage global efforts to advance international standards and benchmarks for trustworthy, safe and secure AI by developing consensus driven, multistakeholder frameworks grounded in democratic values. This includes supporting initiatives between Indian and Australian academic institutions and private sectors, which capture the benefits for our citizens, equip AI researchers, practitioners, policy makers, and professionals with knowledge and skills to drive harmonised principles and best practice in developing and deploying AI technologies safely; share approaches on securing access to compute, large language models, AI, and AI related infrastructure.

• Refocus and accelerate Australia-India research, innovation, and investment partnerships to target priorities including advanced materials, telecommunications, and biotechnology, including by readjusting established programmes within existing settings to fund research projects that deliver tangible benefits bilaterally and for the broader Indo-Pacific.

• Explore collaboration on fostering joint commercial and government-led space sector initiatives drawing on the rapid growth of both space sectors and maturing space partnership.

Pillar 3: Cybersecurity

Australia and India will work together to bolster the safety and security of the cyber and digital domain. This includes countering cybercrime, deterring malicious cyber activity, exchanging knowledge and experiences related to cyber and technology security norms, and protecting critical national infrastructure.

• Work to establish a consolidated and rationalised bilateral mechanism in cyber and ICT fields to streamline capacity building initiatives, regional and multilateral cooperation opportunities, while ensuring policy coherence, and avoiding duplication across multiple working channels.

• Strengthen cooperation in UN mandated cyber related processes and enhance dialogue on data governance architecture and international cooperation in addressing cybersecurity in the field of telecommunications.

• Increase opportunities for access and enhanced trade and investment between Australian and Indian businesses on cybersecurity and technology ventures.

• Facilitate practical joint workshops to bring together the Australian and Indian government agencies and other stakeholders in the field of cyber security.

• Create a cyber tech skill incubator hub for growth and exchange of critical skills.

Pillar 4: Digital Resilience

Australia and India will seek to deliver trusted and scalable technology solutions to support digitalising economies across the Indo-Pacific. We will work together to create solutions that address development challenges by identifying specific projects that strengthen regional capabilities.

• Support new partnership exchanges with countries in the Indo-Pacific on India’s Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) principles.

• Scale and diffuse affordable DPI solutions to the Indo-Pacific, including in areas such as clean and renewable energy, resilient critical infrastructure, connectivity, digital transformation, health, social protection, skills development, education, and research.

• Promote Indian and Australian expertise on digital resilience by scaling robust DPI use cases across the Indo-Pacific region and facilitate Indo-Pacific pilot projects focusing on foundational digital solutions through various capacity building initiatives, including joint projects to build locally adaptable digital ecosystems.

Pillar 5: Defence Research Collaboration

Australia and India will work together to leverage defence research partnerships to advance a shared understanding of multi-domain defence challenges and capabilities. We will build on past joint research, design future projects in accordance with our shared interests and increase exchanges between our defence science organisations under the Implementing Arrangement concerning cooperation in Defence Science and Technology to the Memorandum of Understanding on Defence Cooperation.

• Strengthen our dialogue on defence science and technology priorities through the Defence Ministers’ Dialogue, Defence Policy Talks, and Joint Working Group on Defence Industry, Research, and Materiel.

• Build institutional connections between Australia's Defence Science and Technology Group and India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation and regularise working level exchanges to accelerate research cooperation.

• Facilitate deeper ties between respective defence innovation and start-up ecosystems, including business-to-business engagement.

• Focus collaboration on innovative maritime science and technology capabilities (including maritime surveillance, advanced materials) for defence applications.

Architecture and Governance

Bilateral Oversight

The Partnership will be chaired at a senior level by the Australian Deputy Secretary International and Security Group, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet and the Indian Deputy National Security Advisor. The Chairs will set the priority areas and identify opportunities for mutually beneficial cooperation, across cyber and critical technologies.

Senior Officials Meeting (annual): Responsible Senior Officials will coordinate under each pillar and will report to Chairs and review priorities, stocktake progress to date, assess new and emerging risks to the cyber and critical technology landscape, and work towards mutual identification of specific projects under each pillar of cooperation

 

 PillarIndian LeadAustralian Lead

1

Supply chain resilience

National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS)

Coordinated by the Office of the Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology

2

Critical technology

National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS)

The Office of the Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology

3

Cybersecurity

Cyber Diplomacy Division, Ministry of External Affairs

The Office of the Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology

4

Digital resilience

Oceania Division, Ministry of External Affairs

The Office of the Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology

5

Defence research and collaboration

Ministry of Defence

Department of Defence