Hindustan Times (Delhi)

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

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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

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