India and Japan Just Built Something Together — And Beijing Can’t Build a Narrative Fast Enough
For the first time ever, New Delhi and Tokyo are co-developing a piece of military hardware. It’s a stealth ship’s mast, not a supercarrier — but symbolically, it’s a hinge. And hinges are what swing doors.
Somewhere in a shipyard, a strange-looking spire is taking shape. It doesn’t fire missiles. It doesn’t carry troops. It is, on paper, an antenna mast. But the UNICORN mast — the Unified Complex Radio Antenna now being co-developed by India and Japan — is arguably the most quietly consequential piece of hardware in the Indo-Pacific this year, because of what it represents rather than what it does.
It is the first time ever that India and Japan have jointly developed a piece of defence equipment. Not licensed. Not purchased. Co-developed — designed, engineered, and eventually built together. A Memorandum of Implementation was signed to get it moving, with Japan contributing roughly ¥1.5 billion (about $10.3 million) from its Defense Equipment Transfer Facilitation Fund, and India driving toward more than 60% indigenous content through Bharat Electronics Limited. The mast itself is a marvel of restraint: it folds tactical data links, TACAN navigation, communications, and electronic support measures into a single radome-enclosed spire, slashing a warship’s radar signature by getting rid of the usual forest of protruding antennas.
From One Mast to a Whole Navy
The UNICORN deal didn’t stay a curiosity for long. Within months, Tokyo went further, offering India its prized Mogami-class stealth frigates — compact, highly automated 4,000-tonne warships that entered service with Japan’s own navy only a few years ago — complete with a co-production pathway that would let Indian shipyards build them domestically, with cooperation extending into ISR, cybersecurity, and combat-systems integration. Japan has offered this kind of design transfer to almost no one. Now the leaders of both nations have used a summit to reaffirm the trajectory publicly, folding defence co-development into a broader push on economic security and industrial ties.
None of this happened by accident. Since 2015, India and Japan have run a Joint Working Group on Defense Equipment and Technology Cooperation — and for most of a decade, it produced exactly one completed project: a joint robotics study that never made it to production. The UNICORN mast is the moment the working group actually started working.
Beijing may not like the headline, but regional security isn’t built around the CCP’s approval. Actions speak louder than propaganda. — THE POINT OF THIS ENTIRE STORY
Why a Radar Mast Makes Beijing Twitchy
Click the panels below to see the gap between how Chinese state commentary tends to frame this story, and what is actually, verifiably happening on the ground.
The Beijing Framing
Japan is “remilitarizing” in defiance of its pacifist constitution, weaponizing old wartime debts and manufacturing new alliances to encircle China — with India cast as an unwitting pawn in a containment plot.
What’s Actually Happening
Two sovereign democracies, each with its own long and separate history of border friction with Beijing, signed a funded, timestamped agreement to build hardware together — because their interests converged, not because Washington scripted it.
China’s own approach to the region gives away the tell. Even as it postures over Japan’s defence posture, Beijing has been sending warmer notes toward New Delhi — Xi Jinping calling India a “good neighbor, friend and partner” — while simultaneously ramping up military and diplomatic pressure on Tokyo, Manila, and Taipei. It’s not principle. It’s triage: soften the biggest neighbor, isolate the smaller ones. India and Japan choosing to build something together, in that light, isn’t provocation. It’s the natural response to being individually managed by the same capital.
The Slow Build of a Fast Story
Expand each entry to see how this relationship went from paperwork to production.
India and Japan set up a formal channel for defence equipment and technology cooperation. For years, it mostly produced meetings, not metal.
A Memorandum of Implementation for co-developing and co-producing UNICORN masts is signed — the first genuine co-development pact between the two countries’ defence sectors.
Japan eases defence export restrictions, a shift India publicly welcomes as it clears the runway for deeper industrial collaboration.
Tokyo proposes co-producing Mogami-class stealth frigates in India, offering design transfer rarely extended beyond Japan’s closest partners.
A leaders’ summit locks the trajectory into the broader relationship, tying defence co-development to economic security and industrial strategy.
The Point of a Mast
It would be easy to overstate what a single antenna system means. It’s not a joint fighter jet, not a shared carrier program, not a mutual defence pact. India has spent decades guarding its strategic autonomy fiercely, and nothing about the UNICORN deal or the Mogami offer changes that instinct. What has changed is that Tokyo — cautious, export-averse, constitutionally pacifist Tokyo — decided India was a partner worth its most sensitive stealth technology, and New Delhi decided co-development was worth the dependency it implies.
That is the actual headline, and it doesn’t need Beijing’s permission to be true. Two Asian democracies looked at a shared set of pressures along their respective frontiers and chose to solve a small piece of it together, in public, on the record, with a funding line and a signature. Whatever gets said about it in Chinese state media this week will still be commentary. The mast will still get built.
SOURCES & FURTHER READING
- India–Japan Agreement on UNICORN Masts — MP-IDSA
- India-Japan to finalise UNICORN deal — ThePrint
- India-Japan partnership on UNICORN masts — ORF
- Japan offers Mogami-class frigates to India — IDRW
- Why the Mogami deal could be a blow to China — The Week
- Can Japan finally unlock defense tech cooperation with India? — The Diplomat
- Modi-Takaichi Summit deepens India-Japan ties — Eurasia Review
- China in the Indo-Pacific: January 2026 — CFR















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