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Japan And US To Allow Firms To Directly Share Defence Technology

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by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) June 17, 2007
Japan and the United States have decided to allow private companies to directly exchange information on defence technology in a bid to quicken the pace of joint development, a report said Sunday. The two governments are expected to reach a formal agreement on the matter by the end of the month, following a basic agreement signed in a foreign and defence ministerial meeting in May in Washington, the Nikkei business daily reported, without naming sources.

Under the current framework, information on defence technology can be exchanged between companies only via the governments, with joint consent needed every time data is released to private firms.

The new arrangement would allow, for example, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. and Raytheon Co., a major US defence contractor, to reach a technical assistance agreement that gives each direct access to the other's database, the report said.

The new rule will be used for a development project related to the missile defence system as early as this month, it said.

Japan and the United States are boosting military cooperation amid North Korea's missile and nuclear threats, and as China steps up its military spending.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Russian Arms Dealer Denies Plans To Sell Fighters To Syria And Iran
Le Bourget (RIA Novosti) Jun 19, 2007
Russia's arms export monopoly dismissed on Tuesday reports that it plans to supply fighter jets to Syria and Iran. "Russia has no plans to deliver fighter jets to Syria and Iran," Rosoboronexport CEO Sergei Chemezov told journalists at Le Bourget air show near Paris.







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