India may have quadrilateral military exercises with the United States,
Japan and Australia in the Indian Ocean in the coming years.
The
quadrilateral security dialogue – or ‘quad’ – was a short-lived initiative in
2007 where the assistant secretary-level diplomats from the United States,
Japan, India and Australia met on the sidelines of the ASEAN Regional Forum.
Though initiative died after one meeting – largely due to fears from China over
perceived containment – some have called for its revival amid an even greater
convergence among the Asia-Pacific giants, particularly in the wake of growing
concerns about China’s rise.
Speaking
at The Heritage Foundation, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, on Tuesday,
Kanwal Sibal, who previously served as Indian foreign secretary, expressed
optimism at this convergence, suggesting that there may even be military
exercises between the four countries in the next few years.
“To my
mind, this is a step-by-step process, and I won’t be surprised if at some stage
we also have the quadrilateral exercises in the Indian Ocean,” Sibal, who now
serves as dean of the Center for International Relations and Diplomacy at the
Vivekananda International Foundation, a New Delhi-based think tank, told the
audience.
The four
countries already did exercise together along with Singapore as part of
Exercise MALABAR – which initially began as a bilateral naval exercise between
the United States and India – back in 2007. While expanded exercises with all
four countries have not occurred since then, as Sibal pointed out, there are
already some signs that things are slowly moving in that direction.
Last
month, Japan participated and was made a permanent member of the Malabar
exercises, a move which U.S. officials had been pushing for years (See: “US Official Calls for Permanent
Expansion of Malabar Exercises with India”).
Australia,
meanwhile, has also already publicly expressed interest in joining the United
States, India and Japan in exercises in the Indian Ocean (See: “Australia Wants to Join India,
US and Japan in Naval Exercises: Defense Minister”). In September,
Australia and India also held their first ever bilateral maritime exercise,
AUSINDEX in a significant boost for defense ties (See: “Australia, India to Hold First
Ever Naval Exercise Amid China Concerns”).
Reflecting
on these developments, Sibal said that India’s greater enthusiasm to
participate in such exercises was testament to the changing security
environment.
“Until a
few years ago, it would not have been easy to imagine India to be a part of
quad, or for that matter, even trilateral arrangements between the United
States, Japan and India,” Sibal said.
“But
times have changed, and nature of challenges has changed, and there is now need
for these three or four countries to come together to see how these challenges
can be addressed, not with a view to contain any country, but to ward off the
possibility of peace and security to be disturbed.”
A big
part of this, Sibal said, was China’s worrying assertiveness in the South China
Sea, with policies which he described as “reckless” and a threat to freedom of
navigation and overflight – a concern for India since 55 percent of its trade
passes through those waters.
That
said, Sibal also noted several challenges should the quad continue to take
shape in the coming years. On China, Sibal said that the difficult task for the
four nations would be to continue to maintain strong economic ties with Beijing
for their own benefit while also challenging its assertiveness. China, he
stressed, realizes this and is continuing to roll out new economic initiatives
while also slowly testing Washington’s resolve in the security realm without
triggering an all-out military clash.
“China is
playing a game of brinksmanship, and, unfortunately, succeeding,” he said.
Sibal
emphasized the need for the four countries to try to bring other partners –
particularly the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) which is at the
center of the emerging regional architecture – into the fold.
“The quad
should not allow itself to be put in a position where we are at variance with
the broader thinking in ASEAN because ASEAN is playing a very central role in
terms of Asian security,” he said. By Prashanth Parameswaran
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