INS Udaygiri, Kavaratti arrive in Ho Chi Minh City to boost India-Vietnam maritime ties
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Indian Naval Ships (INS) Udaygiri and INS Kavaratti arrived at Ho Chi Minh City on Monday, 22 June on an official port call aimed at deepening professional exchanges and reinforcing maritime cooperation between India and Vietnam. The visit, led by Rear Admiral Alok Ananda, YSM, Flag Officer Commanding Eastern Fleet, brings a delegation of 610 officers and sailors — one of the larger naval contingents India has deployed to the region in recent years.
Arrival and Official Welcome
The two warships were received by representatives from Vietnam's military, diplomatic agencies, and Ho Chi Minh City authorities. The Indian Embassy in Hanoi noted on X that 'maritime cooperation is one of the strongest pillars of the Enhanced Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between India and Vietnam.' The port call is designed to facilitate ship-to-ship professional exchanges alongside broader strategic signalling.
Strategic Backdrop: A Partnership Being Reinforced
The naval visit follows the high-profile trip to India in May 2025 by Vietnam President and General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party To Lam, during which both nations reaffirmed that defence and security cooperation would remain a central pillar of their bilateral relationship. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President To Lam had specifically identified the maritime domain as a priority area, calling for enhanced cooperation between the two sides. This comes amid growing strategic convergence in the Indo-Pacific, where both countries share concerns over freedom of navigation and regional stability.
Key Defence and Maritime Frameworks
Both governments commended the effective implementation of the Joint Vision Statement on India-Vietnam Defence Partnership towards 2030, which continues to guide expanding defence ties. The bilateral Maritime Security Dialogue was acknowledged as having 'fostered mutual trust and better understanding of respective concerns,' with both sides underscoring the importance of convening it regularly, according to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA).
Notably, Vietnam has accepted India's invitation to assign an International Liaison Officer at the Information Fusion Centre – Indian Ocean Region (IFC-IOR) in Gurugram — a move that significantly expands real-time Maritime Domain Awareness cooperation. Prime Minister Modi also welcomed Vietnam's decision to join the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI), opening another multilateral channel for maritime engagement.
What This Visit Signals
The deployment of two frontline vessels under a Flag Officer — rather than a routine single-ship call — underscores the elevated priority India assigns to its naval engagement with Southeast Asia. The Eastern Fleet's involvement is particularly significant: it is the primary operational fleet for the Bay of Bengal and broader Indo-Pacific engagements. With Vietnam now plugged into the IFC-IOR network and the IPOI framework, the India-Vietnam maritime architecture is becoming increasingly institutionalised. All eyes will be on the outcomes of the professional exchanges and whether a follow-on Vietnamese naval visit to India is announced before the year ends.