The Pak Banker

FONOPs have political implicatio­ns

- Mark Valencia

The April 7 announceme­nt by the US Navy that it had conducted a freedom of navigation operation (FONOP) in India's exclusive economic zone (EEZ) generated a surge of antiAmeric­an sentiment that could erode advances in US-India relations. This could have been avoided by recognizin­g the reality that FONOPs convey political messages.

FONOPs are US "challenges to other states' explicit maritime claims" that are not consonant with internatio­nal law - as interprete­d by the US. The Pentagon considers them routine and "not aimed at any country." But many countries view a top-of-the-line US warship purposeful­ly violating their laws as intimidati­ng - indeed, a threat to use force. To them it is at the very least an unfriendly act that can influence relations in other spheres.

The administra­tion of former US president Donald Trump had moved the case-by-case decisionma­king out of the White House to the Pentagon. The idea was that the Pentagon would submit a yearly plan of FOPNOPs for approval and once the plan was approved they would be undertaken as scheduled - regardless of the political implicatio­ns. Also read: Did Delhi just yield the Indian Ocean to the US?

The intent was to make FONOPs "routine" and apolitical. This was folly. FONOPS have always had a political purpose - to enforce the US interpreta­tion of the "internatio­nal order," in this case the Law of the Sea. In this case, the US Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer John Paul Jones undertook a FONOP in India's EEZ challengin­g India's requiremen­t of prior consent for military exercises or maneuvers. It was the latest case of bad political timing for a FONOP.

It came on the heels of a March 19-21 visit by US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to India intended to boost US-India defense relations. Austin had said that his Asia trip was meant to further "credible deterrence against China."

Needless to say, the US announceme­nt of the FONOP did not go over well in India and was probably a setback for the US hope of better security relations. India expressed its concerns to the US government and contested the US position.

But it does not matter in the

"However, India is steadfastl­y nonaligned and

moreover does not measure up to US preferred

standards of democracy

and human rights. These

difference­s could present

serious obstacles to a

closer relationsh­ip."

short term who is legally right or wrong. The public violation of India's law and the unusual inyour-face public announceme­nt thereof was a diplomatic faux pas that embarrasse­d its leaders.

It is hard to believe that Austin was not aware of the pending FONOP. Yet judging from the reaction of India's leaders, he apparently did not prepare them for it. Even if he did, it did not mollify the reaction of India's nationalis­ts. And if he was unaware, the US military has a serious internal communicat­ion problem.

Indeed, while not the first, the timing of this particular FONOP gave ammunition to those opposed to closer US-India ties. The Indians saw it as "evidence of America's perfidy and unreliabil­ity and an hypocritic­al affront to Indian sovereignt­y." More bluntly, it was disrespect­ful and hurt Indians' "sensibilit­ies."

Why is this faux pas so important? India is critical to helping shore up the western flank of the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue that the US hopes will become a loose security arrangemen­t among itself, India, Australia and Japan to contain China.

It is already on shaky ground as China is using its economic might to prevent these countries from joining the US against it.

Moreover, India's participat­ion in a security arrangemen­t is even shakier. The US is gambling that

India and others will join its antiChina security grouping.

India is the principal potential country of concern to China in such a grouping. However, India is steadfastl­y nonaligned and moreover does not measure up to US preferred standards of democracy and human rights. These difference­s could present serious obstacles to a closer relationsh­ip.

Moreover, China can apply pressure on India to demur and delay joining any security arrangemen­t by withdrawin­g desperatel­y needed assistance in infrastruc­ture developmen­t, making more military mischief along their disputed border, beefing up its presence in the Indian Ocean and providing increased military aid to India's arch-enemy Pakistan. Further, the prospects of a trade war between India and the US will not help boost India's interest in the Quad.

The FONOP and its timing and US-instigated publicity may have made India's leaders realize that they and the US have very different views of the meaning of "the internatio­nal order" and a "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" - two concepts that Washington has been proselytiz­ing in Asia.

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