India | Japan |
|---|---|
| Diplomatic mission | |
| Embassy of India, Tokyo | Embassy of Japan, New Delhi |
| Envoy | |
| Indian Ambassador to JapanSibi George | Japanese Ambassador to India Ono Keiichi |

Relations between the Republic of India and Japan have traditionally been strong. The people of India and Japan have engaged in cultural exchanges since ancient times. They are guided by common cultural traditions, including the shared heritage ofBuddhism, and share a strong commitment to the ideals of democracy, tolerance, pluralism, and open societies.[1]
India and Japan have a high degree of congruence of political, economic, and strategic interests. They view each other as partners that have responsibility for and are capable of responding to global and regional challenges. India is the largest recipient of Japanese aid, and both countries have a special relationship ofofficial development assistance (ODA).[2] As of 2017, bilateral trade between India and Japan stood at US$17.63 billion.
DuringWorld War II, The United Kingdom, which ruledIndia, was attacked by Japan and fought back to final victory in 1945. The great majority of Indian soldiers fought under British command; some fought on behalf of Japan.[3] Japanese forces committed various atrocities and war crimes on the Burmese Front and in the waters offSouth East India.
Political relations between the two nations have warmed since India's independence in 1947. Japanese companies, such asYamaha,Sony,Toyota, andHonda have manufacturing facilities in India. With the growth of the Indian economy, India is a big market for Japanese firms. Japanese firms were some of the first to invest in India, the most prominent of which isSuzuki, which is in partnership with Indian automobiles companyMaruti Suzuki, the largest car manufacturer in theIndian market, and a subsidiary of the Japanese company.
In December 2006, Indian Prime MinisterManmohan Singh's visit to Japan culminated in the signing of the "Joint Statement Towards Japan-India Strategic and Global Partnership". Japan has helped finance many infrastructure projects in India, most notably theDelhi Metro system. Indian applicants were welcomed in 2006 to theJET Programme, with one slot available in 2006 and increasing to 41 slots in 2007. In 2007, theJapanese Self-Defence Forces and theIndian Navy took part in a joint naval exerciseMalabar 2007 in the Indian Ocean, which also involved the naval forces of Australia, Singapore and the United States. 2007 was declared "India-Japan Friendship Year."[2]
According to a 2013BBC World Service Poll, 42% of Japanese think India's international impact is mainly positive, with 4% considering it negative. In 2014, during Japanese PM Shinzo Abe's visit to India, both countries agreed to update their partnership to "Special Strategic and Global Partnership".[4][5][6]
Hinduism and Shintoism incorporateanimism within their core belief systems. Shintoism is theorised to have evolved frompre-historic shamanistic practices that were also found across North East Asia and may have been the most primitive intrinsic form of spiritual belief system held by humans throughout the world. Chinesedynastic histories mention the importance of designated shamans among early religious practices in Japan but not Korea.[7] Shintoism is often thought of as having derived from the earliest animistic practices of the ancestors of Japan, the earliest type of belief system found across humanity, with strong influences from China and India in latter millennia, and "early shintoism" shares some similarities with other indigenous belief systems found in tribal communities.[8][9]
In my opinion, if all our rich and educated men once go and see Japan, their eyes will be opened.
— Swami Vivekananda, The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 5/Conversations and Dialogues/VI – X Shri Priya Nath Sinha
Though Hinduism is a little-practiced religion in Japan, it has still had a significant, but indirect role in the formation of Japanese culture through Buddhism. Other examples of Hindu influence on Japan include the belief of "six schools" or "six doctrines" as well as use ofYoga andpagodas. Many of the facets of Hindu culture which have influenced Japan have alsoinfluenced Chinese culture. People have written books on the worship of Hindu gods in Japan.[10]
Buddhism has been practised in Japan since its official introduction in 552 CE according to theNihon Shoki[11] fromBaekje,Korea by Buddhist monks.[12][13] Buddhism has had a major influence on the development of Japanese society and remains an influential aspect of the culture to this day.[14] Japanese Buddhism is originally derived from the Chinese cannon, with influences from the Tibetan cannon and Pali cannon.[15][16]



Cultural exchanges betweenIndia andJapan began early in the 6th century with the introduction ofBuddhism to Japan from India. The Indian monkBodhisena arrived in Japan in 736 to spread Buddhism and performed eye-opening of theGreat Buddha built-inTōdai-ji,[2] and would remain in Japan until his death in 760. Buddhism and the intrinsically linkedIndian culture had a great impact onJapanese culture, still felt today, and resulted in a natural sense of amiability between the two nations.[17]
As a result of the link of Buddhism between India and Japan, monks and scholars often embarked on voyages between the two nations.[18] Ancient records from the now-destroyed library atNalanda University in India describe scholars and pupils who attended the school from Japan.[19] One of the most famous Japanese travellers to theIndian subcontinent wasTenjiku Tokubei (1612–1692), whose nickname was derived from theJapanese name for India. Relations between the two nations have continued since then, but direct political exchange began only in theMeiji era (1868–1912), when Japan embarked on the process of modernisation.[20]
In 1899 Tokyo Imperial University set up a chair inSanskrit andPali, with a further chair in Comparative religion being set up in 1903. In this environment, a number of Indian students came to Japan in the early twentieth century, founding theOriental Youngmen's Association in 1900.[21][22]


Sureshchandra Bandopadhyay,Manmatha Nath Ghosh andHariprobha Takeda were among the earliest Indians who visited Japan and wrote on their experiences there.[23] As India was then a British colony, Indo-Japanese relations were boosted by theAnglo-Japanese Alliance. However, other emerging movements would strengthen relations between the two nations.Pan-Asian ideals and theIndian independence movement saw India and Japan grow closer, reaching their apogee during theSecond World War. Relations between Britain and Japan had started to deteriorate since the end of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance on 17 August 1923 due to American pressure. ManyIndian independence activists escaped to Japan, including activistRash Behari Bose which furthered Indo-Japanese relations.
Japan started thePacific phase of the Second World War by attacking British, Dutch, and American possessions in Asia. The Japanese eventually aimed to capture theBritish colony of Burma, establishing an alliance with theIndian National Army, an Indian nationalist organisation which adopted the "an enemy of our enemy is our friend" attitude, a legacy that is still controversial today given the war crimes committed by Imperial Japan and its allies.[24]
Since India was a British colony when the Second World War broke out, it was deemed to have entered the war on the side of the Allies. Over 2 million Indians participated in the war; many served in combat against the Japanese who briefly occupied British Burma and reached the Indian border. Some 67,000 Indian soldiers were captured by the Japanese when Singapore surrendered in 1942, many of whom later became part of the Japanese-sponsored Indian National Army (INA). In 1944–45, combined British and Indian forces defeated the Japanese in a series of battles in Burma and the INA disintegrated.[25]

Subhas Chandra Bose, who led theAzad Hind, a nationalist movement which aimed to endBritish rule in India through military means, used Japanese sponsorship to form theAzad Hind Fauj orIndian National Army (INA). The INA was composed mainly of former prisoners of war from theIndian Army who had been captured by the Japanese after thefall of Singapore.[26] Japanese forces included INA units in many battles, most notably at theU Go Offensive atManipur. The offensive culminated in the Battles of Imphal and Kohima where the Japanese forces were pushed back and the INA lost cohesion.
At theInternational Military Tribunal for the Far East, Indian JusticeRadhabinod Pal became famous for delivering a dissenting judgment in favour of Japan. This judgment of Radhabinod Pal is echoed even today by many right-wing groups in Japan, who use it to portray Japan as victim, thereby downplaying Japan's own war crimes.[2][27][28] This became a symbol of the close ties between India and Japan.
On 15 August 1947, Japan was among the first nations to recognise Indian sovereignty after its independence from the United Kingdom. A relatively well-known result of the two nations' was in 1949, when India sent theTokyo Zoo two elephants to cheer the spirits of the defeated Japanese empire.[29][30]
India refused to attend theSan Francisco Peace Conference in 1951 due to its concerns over limitations imposed upon Japanese sovereignty and national independence.[31][32] After the restoration of Japan's sovereignty, Japan and India signed apeace treaty, establishing official diplomatic relations on 28 April 1952, in which India waived all reparation claims against Japan.[31] This treaty was one of the first treaties Japan signed after World War II.[17] Diplomatic, trade, economic, and technical relations between India and Japan were well established. India's iron ore helped Japan's recovery from World War II devastation, and following Japanese Prime MinisterNobusuke Kishi's visit to India in 1957, Japan started providing yen loans to India in 1958, as the first yen loan aid extended by the Japanese government.[17]
In India, there was great admiration for Japan's post-wareconomic reconstruction and subsequent rapid growth.[31] Relations between the two nations were constrained, however, by Cold War politics. Japan, as a result of World War II reconstruction, was a U.S. ally, whereas India pursued a non-aligned foreign policy, often leaning towards the Soviet Union. Since the 1980s, however, efforts were made to strengthen bilateral ties. India's ‘Look East’ policy posited Japan as a key partner.[31] Since 1986, Japan has become India's largest aid donor, and remains so.[17]
Relations between the two nations reached a brief low in 1998 as a result ofPokhran-II, an Indiannuclear weapons test that year. Japan imposed sanctions on India following the test, which included the suspension of all political exchanges and the cutting of economic assistance. These sanctions were lifted three years later. Relations improved exponentially following this period, as bilateral ties between the two nations improved once again,[33] to the point where the Japanese prime minister,Shinzo Abe was to be the chief guest at India's 2014Republic Day parade.[34]
In 2014, the Indian PMNarendra Modi visited Japan. During his tenure as theChief Minister of Gujarat, Modi had maintained good ties with the Japanese PM Shinzo Abe. His 2014 visit further strengthened the ties between the two countries, and resulted in several key agreements, including the establishment of a "Special Strategic Global Partnership".[35][36]
Modi visited Japan for the second time as Prime Minister in November 2016. During the meeting, India and Japan signed the "Agreement for Cooperation in Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy", a landmark civil nuclear agreement, under which Japan supplied nuclear reactors, fuel, and technology to India. India is not a signatory to the non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and is the only non-signatory to receive an exemption from Japan.[37] The two sides also signed agreements on manufacturing skill development in India, cooperation in space, earth sciences, agriculture, forestry and fisheries, transport and urban development.[38]
Yogendra Puranik, popularly known as Yogi, became the first elected India-born City Councillor in Japan, to represent the City Council of Edogawa City in Tokyo. His victory was well received by the mass public and media, not just in India and Japan but across the globe including China.
In August 2000, the Japanese Prime Minister visited India. At this meeting, Japan and India agreed to establish a "Japan-India Global Partnership in the 21st Century." Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee visited Japan in December 2001, where both Prime Ministers issued the "Japan-India Joint Declaration." In April 2005, Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi visited India and signed Joint Statement "Japan-India Partnership in the New Asian Era: Strategic Orientation of Japan-India Global Partnership."
Japan is the 3rd largest investor in the Indian economy with cumulative FDI inflows of $30.27 billion from 2000 to 2019, contributing 7.2% to India's total FDI inflows during the same period. The imports to India from Japan stood at $12.77 billion from 2018 to 2019, making it India's 14th largest import partner.[39]

In October 2008, Japan signed an agreement with India under which it would provide the latter a low-interest loan worth US$4.5 billion to construct a railway project between Delhi and Mumbai. This is the single largest overseas project being financed by Japan and reflected a growing economic partnership between the two nations. India is also one of the only three countries in the world with whom Japan has a security pact. As of 2022, Japan has been the third-largest investor in India over the previous two decades.[40]
Kenichi Yoshida, a director of Softbridge Solutions Japan, stated in late 2009 that Indian engineers were becoming the backbone of Japan's IT industry and that "it is important for Japanese industry to work together with India". Under the memorandum, any Japanese coming to India for business or work will be straightway granted a three-year visa and similar procedures will be followed by Japan. Other highlights of this visit include the abolition of customs duties on 94 per cent of trade between the two nations over the next decade. As per the Agreement, tariffs will be removed on almost 90 per cent of Japan's exports to India and 97 per cent of India's exports to Japan Trade between the two nations has also steadily been growing.[41]
India and Japan signed an agreement in December 2015 to build abullet train line between Mumbai and Ahmedabad using Japan'sShinkansen technology,[42] with a loan from Japan of £12bn.More than four-fifths of the project's $19bn (£14.4bn) cost will be funded by a 0.1% interest-rate loan from Japan as part of a deepening economic relationship.[43]
In January 2021, India and Japan signed amemorandum of understanding coveringinformation and communications technology with a focus on5G.[44]
On 19 March 2022, during a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi, Japanese Prime MinisterFumio Kishida pledged a 5 trillion yen ($42 billion) investment in India over the next five years.[45]
In July 2023, the countries signed a new memorandum of understanding to develop thesemiconductor industry.[46][47]

India and Japan also have close military ties. They have shared interests in maintaining the security of sea-lanes in the Asia-Pacific and Indian Ocean, and in co-operation for fighting international crime, terrorism, piracy and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.[48] The two nations have frequently held joint military exercises and co-operate on technology.[31] India and Japan concluded a security pact on 22 October 2008.[49][50]
Former Japanese Prime MinisterShinzo Abe is seen by some to have been an "Indophile" and, with rising tensions in territorial disputes with Japan's neighbours, advocated closer security cooperation with India.[51][52]
In July 2014, the Indian Navy participated inExercise Malabar with the Japanese and US navies, reflecting shared perspectives on Indo-Pacific maritime security. India is also negotiating to purchase US-2 amphibious aircraft for the Indian Navy.[53]
In November 2016, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on a three-day visit to Japan signed a deal with his counterpart Shinzo Abe onnuclear energy.[54] The deal took six years to negotiate, delayed in part by the2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster. This is the first time that Japan signed such deal with a non-signatory ofNon-Proliferation Treaty. The deal gives Japan the right to supplynuclear reactors,fuel andtechnology to India. This deal aimed to help India build the six nuclear reactors in southern India, increasing nuclear energy capacity ten-fold by 2032.[55][56][57]


Both India and Japan are committed to a "Free and Open Indo-Pacific", and India has strategically cooperated with Japan through theAct East policy. The strategic partnership between India and Japan is seen as a cornerstone of peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.[58]
In August 2017, the two countries announced the establishment of the Japan-India Coordination Forum (JICF) for Development of the North-Eastern Region, described by India as "a coordination forum to identify priority development areas of cooperation for development" of northeast India. The forum will focus on strategic projects aimed at improving connectivity, roads, electric infrastructure, food processing, disaster management, and promoting organic farming and tourism in northeast India. A Japanese embassy spokesperson stated that thedevelopment of the northeast was a "priority" for India and its Act East Policy and that Japan placed a "special emphasis on cooperation in North East for its geographical importance connecting India to South-East Asia and historical ties".[59] The forum held its first meeting on 3 August 2017.[60]
In May 2023, Japanese Prime MinisterFumio Kishida announced a new Indo-Pacific plan during his visit to India.[61]

Japan and India have strong cultural ties, based mainly onJapanese Buddhism, which remains widely practised through Japan even today. TheJapan–India Association was founded in 1903.[62] The two nations announced 2007, the 50th anniversary year of the Indo-Japan Cultural Agreement, as the Indo-Japan Friendship and Tourism-Promotion Year, holding cultural events in both the countries.[63][64] One such cultural event is the annual Namaste India Festival, which started in Japan over twenty years ago and is now the largest festival of its kind in the world.[65][66] At the 2016 festival, representatives from Onagawa town performed, as a sign of appreciation for the support the town received from the Indian Government during the Great East Japan Earthquake.[67] The Indian National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) team had been dispatched in Onagawa for its first overseas mission and conducted search and rescue operations for missing people.[67]
Starting 3 July 2014, Japan has been issuing multiple entry visas for the short term stay of Indian nationals.[68]
Centuries of cultural exchanges between the two countries created many parallels in their folklore. Modern popular culture based upon this folklore, such as works of fantasy fiction inmanga andanime, sometimes bear references to common deities (deva), demons (asura) and philosophical concepts. The Indian goddessSaraswati for example, is known asBenzaiten in Japan.Brahma, known as 'Bonten', andYama, known as 'Enma', are also part of the traditional Japanese Buddhist pantheon. In addition to the common Buddhist influence on the two societies,Shintoism, being an animist religion, is similar to the animist strands ofHinduism, in contrast to the religions present in the rest of the world, which are monotheistic.Sanskrit, a classical language used in Buddhism and Hinduism, is still used by some ancient Chinese priests who immigrated to Japan, and theSiddhaṃ script is still written to this day, despite having passed out of usage in India. It is also thought that the distinctivetorii gateways at temples in Japan, may be related to thetorana gateways used in Indian temples.
An increase in cultural exchange occurred during the mid-late 20th century throughAsian cinema, withIndian cinema andJapanese cinema both experiencing a "golden age" during the 1950s and 1960s. Indian films bySatyajit Ray,Guru Dutt[69] were influential in Japan, while Japanese films byAkira Kurosawa,[70]Yasujirō Ozu andTakashi Shimizu have likewise been influential in India.
Osamu Tezuka wrote a biographical mangaBuddha from 1972 to 1983. On 10 April 2006, a Japanese delegation proposed to raise funds and provide other support for rebuilding the world-famous ancient Nalanda University, an ancient Buddhist centre of learning in Bihar, into a major international institution of education.[71]
India and Japan also have a strong relationship through Japanese media. One of the first Indian animated films,Ramayana: The Legend of Prince Rama, was co-produced and animated by Japan. Many Japanese anime TV shows are dubbed intoHindi,Tamil andTelugu and aired in India. In February 2005,Doraemon became the first anime to be introduced in India,[citation needed] which currently airs onDisney Channel. More than thirtyDoraemon feature films have been dubbed and telecasted, making it the most number of movies from a particular anime series to be aired in India. Other popular anime in India include thePokémon series,Crayon Shin-Chan,Dragon Ball Z, andNinja Hattori-kun. Anime films are also distributed in Indian theatres.[72]
Tamil movies are popular in Japan, withRajnikanth being the most popular Indian actor in the country. His movieMuthu was a huge commercial blockbuster in Japan and earned lots of acclaim from the Japanese audience. Other Indian movies such asMagadheera,3 Idiots,Enthiran,English Vinglish andBaahubali: The Beginning were successful in Japan too.[73]Bollywood has become more popular among the Japanese people in recent decades,[74][75] and the Indian yogi and pacifistDhalsim is one of the most popular characters in the Japanese video game seriesStreet Fighter.[76]
Oriental Youngmen's Association.
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