"During the UN General Assembly sessions next week, Sushma (Swaraj) and I will join Japanese Foreign Minister Kishida in the first trilateral ministerial meeting to coordinate policies among our three great democracies," US Secretary of State John Kerry, told reporters at a joint news conference along with External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj.
"Kerry and I are also due to meet again in a few days' time with our Japanese counterpart, Foreign Minister Kishida, for the first-ever trilateral meeting of the foreign ministers of our three countries," Swaraj said.
Asked whether the Dialogue was aimed at countering China's growing influence, Swaraj and Kerry said, the Communist giant did not even figure in their bilateral discussions.
"China did not even figure in our conversation," Swaraj said.
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"This is a dialogue to deepen and strengthen our bilateral cooperation, our bilateral ties and this dialogue has not been charted to create wider influence in any part of the world or China," she said.
Kerry, in response to a question, "this meeting has nothing to do with China. We made no mention of China in this conversation."
The first India-US-Japan trilateral meeting was held in December 2011, at the level of joint secretary. Since then officials of the three countries have been meeting twice a year.
From the US perspective, the dialogue is seen as part of what is described as a policy "pivot" toward Asia and for India it is part of its Act East Asia Policy.