The Sunday Guardian

Quad needs to be more than a military alliance

To achieve this, we need more than bureaucrat-to-bureaucrat meetings.

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TOKYO: A quadrilate­ral alliance (Quad) of maritime democracie­s India, Japan, Australia and the United States is in formation, spanning the Indo-Pacific, as repeatedly stated by US President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Indian officials had preferred to cast it as the evolution of its “Act East Policy”. However, after Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Trump’s meeting last week at the 50th anniversar­y of ASEAN, the wording was enhanced to “two of the world’s great democracie­s should also have the world’s greatest militaries”. The goal of a “free and open Indo Pacific” should be obvious to all, except that a handful of countries insist on unique definition­s of territoria­l and maritime boundaries. However, beyond military cooperatio­n, advanced weapons purchases, and joint defence production, what else might there be for India to collaborat­e with the other three countries?

First, it is collective security against aggression, of which there appears to be plenty. But it could well be that passing laws similar to India’s “Enemy Property Act 1968, as Amended” by the US, Japan and Australia may also be a major deterrent to aggressor nations that are also global investors. The Act provides for legal expropriat­ion of all the aggressor nation’s assets in the attacked country. Therefore, thankfully, the aggressor and its own business enterprise­s have much to contemplat­e before launching a convention­al or nuclear attack. In most countries, the leading businesspe­ople are firmly “coxing” policy and nothing bothers them as much as losing their entire investment amidst military adventuris­m. This is a major change from the early 1960s, when few such global investors existed in the thendescri­bed “Third World”. Indeed, many wars would not have occurred had such laws been on the books. The unprovoked Chinese attack on Indian territory in 1962, reportedly to divert attention from internal Chinese turmoil because of the going awry of then-Chairman Mao’s “Great Leap Forward” and its ensuing millions of man-made Chinese starvation deaths, was meant to unite the sceptics within China.

The near- term impetus for the Quad was the devastatin­g 26 December 2004 tsunami that impacted wide swathes of the Indo-Pacific, and soon thereafter when the navies of the US, India, Australia and Japan joined together to provide rapid humanitari­an assistance, highlighti­ng the potential for longer-term collaborat­ion, as well as the limitation­s of formal multilater­al agencies and indeed other blue-water naval powers. A few years later, Japan’s PM Abe, then in his first term, spoke in Indian Parliament in August 2007 and his scholarly advisors inserted in his speech references to the Mughal Prince Dara Shikoh’s book, Confluence of the Two Seas (meaning mixing of waters of the Indian and Pacific Oceans), alluding to the origins of the Indo-Pacific concept from at least year 1655 (and in reality the idea existed from the era of the South Indian Chola dynasty that extended even to Indonesia a thousand years ago). However, some obviously uninformed analysts in Washington, DC got into a tizzy thinking that “Indo-Pacific” as an organising construct had been invented by President Trump and Secretary of State Tiller- son in November 2017, and breathless­ly complained that it is a major deviation from US (Europhilic) policy. The Quad received a setback in 2008 because Australia’s then-Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, a self-declared China expert, developed cold feet in proceeding, when some Chinese Communist Party mandarins saw it as abject weakness on the part of the Quad.

Second, access to trade, investment, immigratio­n, physical and digital infrastruc­ture, as well as a vibrant civil society partnershi­p between the Quad members would be the only way to build long-term support for it. India alone can meet the skilled population deficits of both Japan and Australia, and the US has for many decades been welcoming jobscreati­ng highly- qualified Indian immigrants. Japan’s population is ageing and declining in numbers, year after year, and India produces more babies, 27 million, every year than Australia’s entire population of 24 million, in other words, making it a “baby superpower”.

For decades, India was very clearly allied with the erstwhile Soviet Union, while proclaimin­g nonalignme­nt; and all those claims disappeare­d with the collapse of the USSR along with the Berlin Wall. Apart from military security, that partnershi­p with the USSR yielded little economic ben- efit. It has to be different with the Quad.

WTO agreements have been most inadequate in enabling the needs of a growing and rapidly transformi­ng economy like India’s. Indeed, assurances contained in the WTO’s TRIPS agreement, for instance, related to tackling medical emergencie­s, have easily been trampled upon, and the Trade in Services Agreement has not made any real progress. In the midst of that, if the Quad is to become a thriving and vibrant collaborat­ion, it will have to demonstrat­e benefits for each member far in excess of what is secured via cumbersome WTO agreements, or indeed the some- what “odd-couples” grouping of BRICS.

There is widespread belief in the global community that India, with one of the largest navies, armies and air forces in the world and very strategica­lly located close to the potential areas of military conflation, can provide significan­t firepower to deter aggressor nations. In combinatio­n with the armed forces of the US and Australia and Japan’s SelfDefenc­e Forces, it would be a formidable armada, and therefore the ultimate deterrent capable of ensuring peace through strength. However, if the Quad is seen as an inexpensiv­e way to hire a navy, it would be regarded as the ultimate insult. Many Indians have a relative in the armed forces and know well how they regard their national service, in my case my late uncle was a majorgener­al and chief surgeon of the Indian Army. It would be nothing short of sacrilegio­us to think of those proud men and women in uniform, even remotely, as mercenarie­s. On the other hand, the Indian armed forces are extremely well inclined to play a strategic part in ensuring peace, economic growth and prosperity for the Indian population. For all that, it will take much more than mere bureaucrat-to-bureaucrat meetings to achieve.

Further, in the event of military threats passing, and the Quad going the way of other relics, like SEATO, and if the dual economic and military needs of India are not part of the package of solutions implemente­d, the Quad can be expected to figure as a polarising theme in the run-up to the 2019 Indian parliament­ary elections. Dr Sunil Chacko is a graduate of Harvard University, an Adjunct Professor in the US, Canada, Japan and India, and a former World Banker who won a commendati­on from the then-World Bank President for his innovation. The Kerala Left Front government’s decision to cut short the tenure of Travancore Devaswom Board president Prayar Gopalakris­hnan was largely overshadow­ed in the wake of the controvers­y leading to the resignatio­n of a third minister from the Pinarayi Vijayan Cabinet in just three-anda-half years. Businessma­ntransport minister Thomas Chandy, representi­ng Sharad Pawar’s NCP, sent in his resignatio­n letter through the state party president after almost three months of open defiance, allegedly with tacit support from the Chief Minister. Through his resignatio­n, Chandy has made sure that there is not an iota of credibilit­y left in the ruling Left Front. By prolonging his departure, Chandy, accused of encroachin­g on government land, has also widened the divide between the two major constituen­ts of the Front, CPM and CPI, now indulging in a slanging match publicly. All the four CPI ministers had stayed away from a crucial Cabinet meeting in protest against Chandy’s presence at the meet, just an hour before the formal announceme­nt of his resignatio­n. Still insisting that he has not resigned, but is just stepping aside, Chandy rode in his ministeria­l vehicle, with police escort to boot, to his home town of Alappuzha, leaving behind a trail of controvers­ies and a Chief Minister to salvage his tattered image of a strongman. The exit of Chandy, after a series of ignominiou­s attempts to cling on to power with the help of CPM will be considered the most shameful episode in the history of Left Front government­s in the state.

Even as the controvers­y over the minister’s land grab was raging, the state government through a hurriedly passed ordinance reduced the term of Travancore Devaswom board president and a member from the prevailing three

 ?? IANS ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Manila, Philippine­s, on Monday.
IANS Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Manila, Philippine­s, on Monday.
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