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Despite visa issue, India must keep up with Australia. Both are leading powers in Indian Ocean region

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Harsh V Pant
Harsh V PantApr 29, 2017 | 11:50

Despite visa issue, India must keep up with Australia. Both are leading powers in Indian Ocean region

After making a pitch for an observer status during this year’s Malabar trilateral naval exercises scheduled to be held in July, Australia has indicated that it is keen to have a logistics support agreement with India on the lines of the one concluded with the US. This comes at a time when there is a lot of hue and cry in India about Australia scrapping its skilled visa programme — the employer-sponsored temporary work visas, popularly known as the 457 visa.

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While the Malcolm Turnbull government may have taken a short-sighted approach in its engagement with India by moving ahead with its new visa restrictions, New Delhi would be equally short-sighted if it just focuses on this issue at the expanse of larger issues in regional balance of power.

Transition

The current transition of power in the Asia-Pacific region, underlined by America’s relative decline and China’s growing power has significant implications for most Asian states. Though the uncertainty around the future of international politics, norms and institutions does impinge upon all members of the international society, the Asian states find themselves at the forefront of this transition.

For them the current transition of power is not only an ideological contest over the form and nature of the international political system but is also inextricably linked to their own national security imperatives in a number of ways. India, Japan and Australia are at the centre of this strategic flux in the Indo-Pacific.

The level of strategic convergence between Delhi and Tokyo can be gauged from the fact that India, in 2014, invited the Japanese navy to participate in the annual Malabar exercises with the US navy in the Pacific waters, reviving an earlier practice of joint India-US-Japan trilateral exercises. This was a significant move considering the fact that India had earlier capitulated to China’s reservations when the naval forces of India, US, Australia, Singapore and Japan had conducted joint exercises in the Bay of Bengal in September 2007.

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After China made its displeasure clear, India refused to be a part of these exercises from 2008. With the coming of the Modi government, Japan’s participation in Malabar has been institutionalised. Both Japan and the US have repeatedly expressed their desire to expand the scope of the Malabar exercise.

The vision document, signed by PM Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe in September 2014, called out for “regularisation of bilateral maritime exercises as well as to Japan’s continued participation in India”.

During the seventh round of the trilateral strategic dialogue between the three countries held in Honolulu in June 2015, India agreed to Tokyo’s participation in the 2015 series of Malabar exercises. India and Japan have an institutionalised trilateral strategic dialogue partnership with the United States. Initiated in 2011, maintaining a balance of power in the Asian-Pacific as well as maritime security in Indo-Pacific waters became an important element of this dialogue.

Dialogue

A similar dialogue exists between the US, Japan, and Australia. Under Modi, such security trilateralism in Asia has received not only new momentum but also is being expanded to incorporate other regional powers: in June 2015, India, Australia and Japan held their first ever high-level dialogue in New Delhi. These trilateral initiatives have a serious potential to transform into a ‘quad’ of democracies in the Indo-Pacific region.

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The roots of this potential partnership were laid in late 2004 when navies from the US, India, Japan and Australia collaborated in tsunami relief operations all across the Indian Ocean. Japan has been the most vocal supporter of such an initiative. In 2007, Abe, in his earlier stint as Prime Minister, lobbied for Asia’s democracies to come together.

This was also actively supported by the US. Such an initiative resulted in a five-nation naval exercise in Bay of Bengal in September 2007 codenamed Malabar 07-02. However, perceiving a possible ganging-up of Asia’s democracies, China issued demarches to New Delhi and Canberra, causing this initiative to lose steam, since both Australia and New Delhi felt it unwise to provoke Beijing. However, as China becomes more aggressive in the region, there are signs that India and Australia may be warming up to the idea again.

Assault

India and Australia are wary of China’s assault on maritime security and freedom of navigation in the Indo-Pacific region. These common concerns have strengthened the need for greater maritime cooperation between the two nations and the two have started conducting joint naval combat exercises. During Modi’s visit to Australia, a security framework agreement was signed by the two countries, further underscoring the importance of defence cooperation in the Indian Ocean region.

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Photo: DailyO

India and Australia are leading powers in the Indian Ocean region. The two countries are also at the helm of Indian Ocean Regional Association (IORA), a formal grouping consisting of the Indian Ocean Littoral States. Australia is also a permanent member of Indian Ocean Naval Symposium which brings together the local navies of the Indian Ocean region. However, the extent of their regional cooperation in the Indian Ocean can also be ascertained by their annual trilateral dialogues with countries like Japan and Indonesia.

The need of the hour is to push for greater engagement with such likeminded nations. Australia has been long keen on joining the Malabar exercises along with the US and Japan. India should favourably consider this request as the idea of an Indo-Pacific democratic quad needs resurrection at the earliest.

(Courtesy: Mail Today)

Last updated: April 29, 2017 | 22:00
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