India-Japan relations are entering an “execution phase”, moving from broad strategic vision to tangible outcomes, as both countries deepen cooperation against the backdrop of China’s growing assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific, according to a report by India Narrative.
The recent visit of Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi to India marked a significant step in this transition.
Through diversified partnerships with Japan, India is strengthening its strategic autonomy, reducing reliance on any single power, and reinforcing the principles of a free and open Indo-Pacific aimed at deterring coercion, the report said.
Japan’s Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi’s visit to India from January 15 to 17, 2026, underscored the deepening strategic partnership between the two nations amid evolving Indo-Pacific dynamics.
The three-day engagement, featuring high-level dialogues and symbolic gestures, signalled India’s intent to fortify alliances against regional assertiveness, particularly from China.
From New Delhi’s vantage, the visit exemplifies a pragmatic pivot toward resilient economic and security architectures,” the report noted.
During his visit, Motegi held a series of high-level bilateral engagements, beginning with the 18th India-Japan Foreign Ministerial Strategic Dialogue with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on January 16.
The dialogue reviewed progress since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s August 2025 visit to Japan, which resulted in the launch of the “Japan-India Joint Vision for the Next Decade”, covering security, economic resilience, innovation, and cultural cooperation.
“Foreign Minister Motegi engaged in substantive bilateral interactions, commencing with the 18th India-Japan Foreign Ministerial Strategic Dialogue alongside External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on January 16.
Discussions reviewed advancements since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s August 2025 visit to Japan, which birthed the Japan-India Joint Vision for the Next Decade,’ encompassing security, security, economic resilience, innovation, and cultural ties,” the report said.
Among the key outcomes of the dialogue were the launch of an artificial intelligence dialogue mechanism and the creation of a Joint Working Group on critical minerals, with a focus on rare earth elements and strengthening supply chains.
Motegi also paid a courtesy call on Prime Minister Modi, during which the two leaders exchanged views on economic security, artificial intelligence, investments, and people-to-people connectivity.
According to the report, the visit also reinforced coordinated efforts to counter China’s maritime assertiveness in the Indian Ocean and its growing influence over global supply chains.
“The Quad framework — comprising India, Japan, the United States, and Australia — emerges as pivotal, promoting a Free and Open Indo-Pacific (FOIP) predicated on rule-of-law principles. Motegi’s emphasis on economic security dovetails with India’s Atmanirbhar Bharat initiative, mitigating vulnerabilities in semiconductors, batteries, and critical minerals via Japanese technology transfers, such as the Unified Complex Radio Antenna (UNICORN) for defence interoperability,” it said.
Placing the visit in a wider geopolitical context, the report noted that Motegi’s India trip — part of his first overseas tour of 2026 following stops in Israel, Qatar, and the Philippines — highlighted Japan’s proactive diplomacy under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.
“For India, it signals Tokyo’s reliability as a counterweight to Beijing’s assertiveness, including South China Sea militarisation and Indian Ocean forays. The partnership transcends bilateralism, embedding within G20, G4, and UN platforms to advocate reformed global governance,” the report added.
Overall, the report concluded that the evolving India-Japan partnership is increasingly focused on concrete cooperation in security, technology, and economic resilience, even as the Indo-Pacific strategic landscape becomes more contested.
