Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
India

India Joins Group That Controls Global Missile Technology Sale

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Jun, 2016 01:15 PM
    Days after the setback at the Nuclear Suppliers Group due to China's opposition, India on Monday became the 35th member of a global anti-proliferation bloc, the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR). This will not only ensure access to high-end missile technology but also enable the country to sell indigenous BrahMos missiles internationally.
     
    The grouping said India's membership would "strengthen the international efforts to prevent proliferation of delivery systems of ballistic missiles or unmanned aircraft capable of delivering weapons of mass destruction".
     
    The MTCR membership is seen as a step forward in India’s recognition as a legitimate nuclear power after it conducted atomic tests in 1998.
     
    India had applied in 2008 for the membership of the elite club of countries set up in 1987 that controls exports in missile technology and unmanned delivery systems of atomic or other weapons of mass destruction.
     
    The club places restrictions on its members exporting missile and missile-related technology, particularly on those capable of carrying a payload of at least 500 kg to a distance of at least 300 km. These include both cruise missiles and larger drones.
     
    India’s long wait to join the MTCR actually ended in Washington D.C. earlier in June during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s US trip when a deadline for members of the grouping to object to India's admission expired on June 6.
     
    None of the group’s 34 members raised any objections, paving the way for India’s smooth entry into the bloc of which China is still not a member.
     
    China along with other nations like South Africa, Norway, Brazil, Austria, New Zealand, Ireland and Turkey last week blocked India’s entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) -- one of the four multilateral export control regimes.
     
    Since India's civil nuclear deal with the US, New Delhi has been wanting to join all of the regimes, including the Australia Group and Wassenaar Arrangement since 2008 as part of the India-US civil nuclear cooperation agreement.
     
     
    The MTCR membership gives India access to restricted high-end technologies for developing its cryogenic rocket engines in order to further its space exploration.
     
    India will now also be able to acquire from the US armed Predator drones -- America’s hot favourite in its war on terror in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
     
    India can now also explore the sale of BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, jointly developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Russia.
     
    Both countries have been hoping to sell the missile to third countries which would now be possible after India’s MTCR membership, making it a significant arms exporter for the first time. India is already in talks with Vietnam to sell BrahMos with a flight range of 290-300km and payload of 200-300 kg.
     
    The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry welcomed the development that will "facilitate access to niche technologies to (the country's) industry in sensitive sectors like defence, aerospace and nuclear".
     
    "This inclusion also augurs well with India's position as an important player in the world order and fitting an emerging economic superpower," Ficci Secretary General Didar Singh said. 
     
    "As Indian industry, we have opportunity to rise to the occasion and put in place checks and balances compliant with the obligations that this regime entails." 
     
     
    Italy in 2015 had blocked India’s entry over the issue of two Italian marines accused of killing two Indian fishermen in 2012 off the Kerala coast. The Supreme Court of India recently allowed the second marine, Salvatore Girone, also to return home in Rome on May 29, pending trial against them.
     
    “India would like to thank each of the 34 MTCR Partners for their support for the membership," Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesman Vikas Swarup said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Why Arvind Kejriwal wants to meet Narendra Modi

    Why Arvind Kejriwal wants to meet Narendra Modi
    AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal was Friday stopped while going to meet Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, shortly after he alleged widespread corruption and unemployment in the state

    Why Arvind Kejriwal wants to meet Narendra Modi

    Manmohan Singh: He ended with where he began

    Manmohan Singh: He ended with where he began
    Having travelled far and wide during his two terms as prime minister and having earned more praise as an economist-statesman overseas than within his country, the forum that marked his entry to the high table of global geopolitics should have an added significance.

    Manmohan Singh: He ended with where he began

    Punjab's Rs 65,000-crore investment: Is it for real?

    Punjab's Rs 65,000-crore investment: Is it for real?
    In the last three months, Sukhbir Singh Badal has been preening over the success of last December's "Progressive Punjab Investors' Summit", claiming that the creme-de-la-creme of Indian industry had promised to invest nearly Rs.67,000-crore (Rs.670 billion/$11 billion) in the state.

    Punjab's Rs 65,000-crore investment: Is it for real?

    Police arrest 14 AAP members, AAP alleges bias

    Police arrest 14 AAP members, AAP alleges bias
    Police have arrested 14 AAP members on charges of rioting outside the BJP office here and said Thursday they were looking two key AAP leaders. The AAP accused the police of bias.

    Police arrest 14 AAP members, AAP alleges bias

    'Indian EVMs the envy of many countries'

    'Indian EVMs the envy of many countries'
    Our EVMs have been described glowingly, interestingly enough also by many high courts in judgments while examining petitions in the years gone by. It is, as I have often stated, an efficient and tamper-proof machine

    'Indian EVMs the envy of many countries'

    AAP, BJP supporters clash on Delhi, Lucknow streets

    AAP, BJP supporters clash on Delhi, Lucknow streets
    Protests by AAP workers outside the BJP offices in the national and Uttar Pradesh capitals against party chief Arvind Kejriwal's detention in Gujarat snowballed into a pitched battle between members of both parties.

    AAP, BJP supporters clash on Delhi, Lucknow streets