The Pak Banker

India's loss from the Quad

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The foreign-ministeria­l meeting of the member states of the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue, commonly known as the Quad, namely Australia, India, Japan and the US, is scheduled to be held on October 6 in Tokyo.

The meeting was supposed to be held in New Delhi last September in a 2+2 ministeria­l format whereby the foreign minister and defense minister of each country would attend the meeting.

Washington has been pushing Canberra, New Delhi and Tokyo to transform the Quad into an Asian NATO. The US wants to develop the Quad as a collective defense system of all member countries. Each member state would agree to mutual defense to respond to any military attack on any other member, like the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on.

But the real target of the proposal is China. It is not difficult to surmise that India changed its mind about hosting the Quad meeting because of the Chinese pressure along the Sino-Indian border.

The first point of the agreement reached between Indian

External Affairs Minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar and his Chinese counterpar­t Wang Yi in Moscow on September 10 reads, "The two ministers agreed that both sides should take guidance from the series of consensus of the leaders on developing India-China relations, including not allowing difference­s to become disputes."

There is increasing criticism that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government led by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been using the support and goodwill of "the West" to oppress its own citizens in the name of Hindutva policy. Amid such criticism, Amnesty Internatio­nal, which has been working in India since 1966, has decided to quit India after the government's systemic crackdown on human-rights defenders. The Home Ministry ordered the freezing of Amnesty Internatio­nal's bank account recently.

The US decided to halt its plans to convert the Quad into an Asian NATO for the time being, blaming India for its illiberal behavior. The US had been under pressure from internatio­nal humanright­s defenders and media after

Amnesty Internatio­nal's decision to exit India. The watchdog's India exit was an opportunit­y for the US to save face after its failure to convert the Quad into an Asian NATO.

In reality, India and Australia withdrew from the plan to formalize the Quad into an Asian NATO because of Beijing's immense pressure.

The US wants to use the Quad as a long-term strategy to contain China by encircling it from the Indo-Pacific Ocean region. About 70% of China's crude-oil imports pass through the Malacca Strait. Creating a disruption to the free flow of oil into China through the Strait could ruin its prosperity. But China's announced intention to move toward a carbon-free economy means the US strategy could be less effective in the future.

Additional­ly, Bloomberg Businesswe­ek has already declared China the winner of the SinoAmeric­an trade war. The tech war between these two economic giants has turned out to be counterpro­ductive for the US. Thus the US needs to recalibrat­e its policy on China. The Quad ministeria­l meeting is being held right after the Chinese announceme­nt of going for a green economy by 2060. The Chinese statement has posed a serious question over Quad's legitimacy in the long term.

Australia and the US were dumbfounde­d by China's sudden decision to go for a green economy, because those two countries are net fossil-fuel exporters. Thus it is natural that Tuesday's ministeria­l meeting is expected to redefine Quad's aims and objectives.

Traditiona­lly, the Quad aims to promote a "free and open IndoPacifi­c" amid "China's aggressive postures" in the region. It is based on the four dimensions of power - diplomacy, informatio­n, military, and economy (DIME) - to find common ground for policy coordinati­on among the member countries of Quad to contribute to "the rules-based order" in the AsiaPacifi­c region.

Australia and the US are highly likely to push a new agenda in the Tokyo Quad meeting after China's unexpected vow to aim for a fossil-fuel consumptio­n peak before 2030 and a carbon-neutral economy before 2060.

Thus energy security will be the most pressing new issue in this Quad meeting. Discussion­s are likely to take place on how to cope collective­ly with China's decision to move toward a carbonneut­ral economy over the next four decades.

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