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President Donald Trump repeatedly used the term ‘Indo-Pacific’ during his 12-day Asian Tour, including in his speech at the APEC meeting held at Danang in Vietnam last week.
A few days later, senior officials from Australia, India, Japan and the US, meeting on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit in the Philippines, agreed that a “free, open, prosperous and inclusive Indo-Pacific region serves the long-term interests of all countries in the region and of the world at large.”
The ‘Quad’, as it has come to be called, had a short-lived existence in 2007-2008 when Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd pulled his country out after China, which perceived the Quad as an attempt to counter its rise, and lodged a formal protest with all four countries.
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Now, in view of increasing Chinese political donations and China’s growing influence on its universities, Australia appears to have had a change of heart.
In this era of strategic uncertainty, the only certainty is that China’s rise is unlikely to be entirely peaceful.
China’s brazen violation of international norms in recent years, particularly its construction of military facilities on reclaimed islands in the South China Sea, and its growing military and economic power, pose a strategic challenge to the countries in the Indo-Pacific region, including India, the United States and its allies and strategic partners.
China has discarded Deng Xiaoping’s 24-character strategy to “hide our capacity and bide our time”. It has also stopped using the phrase “peaceful rise” while referring to its military and economic growth.
China’s economic growth, now slowing, has been fairly uneven and non-inclusive. There is a deep sense of resentment against the leadership of the Communist Party for the denial of basic freedoms and rampant corruption.
David Shambaugh, a well-known China scholar, is the latest to have jumped onto the ‘China-may-implode’ bandwagon. The sudden collapse of Chinese stock markets in 2015-16 may have provided the first glimpse of impending inward collapse.
Also, given its recent belligerence, China could behave irresponsibly somewhere in the Indo-Pacific. It could decide to intervene militarily in the South China Sea, or to occupy the Senkaku/ Diaoyu islands or to use force to resolve territorial and boundary disputes.
Both contingencies have a low probability of occurrence, but will be high-impact events with widespread ramifications if either of them comes to pass. The US, which is the leading provider of security in the Indo-Pacific, and India, will need strong partners to deal with the fallout and to manage the consequences.
Though it will be a gradual and long-drawn process, a cooperative security framework may eventually emerge from the discussions now being initiated by the leaders of the Quad.
Together with the US and its other strategic partners, India must take the lead in working towards the establishment of an architecture to ensure peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific and for the security of the global commons – air space, space, cyber space and the sea-lanes of communication to enable the freedom of navigation and the free flow of trade.
Its record in UN peacekeeping operations has belied expectations. China took over five years to join the international anti-piracy operations off the Horn of Africa. Even now, the PLA Navy limits its activities to escorting its own merchant ships and does not coordinate operations with the other navies.
Cooperative security does not necessarily require a formal military alliance – it entails the sharing of intelligence; joint counter-terrorism and counter-proliferation efforts; upholding the rules and norms governing maritime trade; providing help to the littoral states to meet their security needs; helping to counter piracy, arms smuggling and narcotics trafficking; and, undertaking joint humanitarian and disaster relief (HADR) operations in the region.
Two rapid reaction-cum-air assault divisions – backed by air support, air lift and sea transportation and logistics resources for 30 days each – will be required by 2025-30. It will then be apparent to potential adversaries that India will not hesitate to intervene in conjunction with its strategic partners if its vital national interests are threatened in its area of strategic interest.
(The writer is Distinguished Fellow, Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA), New Delhi.)
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Published: 13 Nov 2017,05:11 PM IST