What the Indo-pacific means for New Delhi
The term forces us to imagine ourselves and our interests in maritime terms. This is not a small takeaway
During the recent visit of the President of Vietnam, Tran Dai Quang, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had spoken of both countries working for “an independent, open and prosperous Indo-pacific region”. The visit of the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, saw a joint strategic vision of India-france cooperation in the Indian Ocean region, and this document refers to India’s central position in the ‘Indo-pacific’, which has emerged as a major plank in our understanding of “acting East”. The terminological change — from ‘looking’ to ‘acting East’— represents an expansion of our focus area far beyond Southeast Asia. The Look East policy now represents a series of overlapping but concentric circles.
Chronologically, it is the middle or the South East Asian/asean circle, which was the first to emerge with the Policy of Look East unveiled by former prime minister Narasimha Rao in Singapore in 1992.
The 25th anniversary of this policy was observed with the presence of the Asean heads of state or government during the Republic Day celebrations.
Rao’s was the classic look east policy — driven at both the bilateral and multilateral level — the former through bilateral relationships with the Asean member countries and the latter by using Asean as a regional organisation of the South East Asian countries. This was originally a trade and economy-driven relationship. although its security and strategic dimensions have steadily expanded. The circle closest to us geographically emerged some years later between 1997 and 2004. In the former years, Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka and Thailand formed BIST-EC (EC stood for economic cooperation). Myanmar joined in a few months later. In 2004, Nepal and Bhutan became part of the grouping, which named itself BIMSTEC. In 2014, a permanent secretariat was established in Dhaka.
If trade, economics and finance were the key drivers behind the India-asean relationship, connectivity is the buzzword in BIMSTEC. India’s Northeast and Myanmar connect the South with South East Asia.
If this physical proximity is converted into real connectivity, the dividends are enormous for a sub-region otherwise wracked by poor infrastructure and insurgent groups. BIMSTEC also evokes narratives of more fundamental unities and continuities, as it comprises countries that surround the Bay of Bengal.
Today, BIMSTEC lacks energy. A late boost came on its 20th anniversary in 2017 when India found that the organisation was better suited to implement a programme of regional cooperation and connectivity rather than SAARC where Pakistan could successfully obstruct initiatives. Much like the