Business Standard

Operationa­lise Indian Ocean initiative: Navy

- AJAI SHUKLA

With China’s People’s Liberation Army (Navy), or PLA(N), flexing its muscles in the Western Pacific and extending its presence to the waters of the Indian Ocean, India’s Navy is countering by leading the creation of a new, broadbased security architectu­re in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR).

On Wednesday, at the 4th edition of the Indo-pacific Regional Dialogue (IPRD), Navy Chief Admiral R Hari Kumar proposed that the Indo-pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI), which Prime Minister Narendra Modi had launched in 2019, should now be operationa­lised.

That would mean making active one, or more, of the seven pillars of the IPOI, of which four have India as the lead: maritime security, disaster risk reduction, capacity building, and trade connectivi­ty and maritime transport.

“Being a global, open initiative, IPOI affords equal opportunit­y to every stakeholde­r, and respects their sovereignt­y and freedom of choice. The IPOI is not aimed at creating new institutio­ns, but rather, seeks to leverage existing mechanisms by drawing convergenc­es and identifyin­g areas of mutual interest,” said Kumar.

That India would raise the proposal to bring the IPOI into action was predictabl­e from the theme of the conference: “Operationa­lising the Indo-pacific Oceans Initiative.”

The Indian Navy had created a bouquet of initiative­s and structures to manage the Indian Ocean. These include the MILAN (confluence) series of exercises in 1995; the IOR-ARC (Indian Ocean Rim — Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n) in 1997; IONS (Indian Ocean Naval Symposium) in 2008; the IMAC (Informatio­n Management and Analysis Centre) in 2014; and the IFC-IOR (Informatio­n Fusion Centre for the Indian Ocean Region) in 2018.

“Speaking of the IPOI, to my mind, it represents the broadest framework conceptual­ised so far in the Indopacifi­c. It is guided by India’s vision of the Indo-pacific — that is a “free, open, inclusive, peaceful and prosperous region,” said the Navy chief.

New Delhi has been propagatin­g the Us-led notions of a Free and Open Indopacifi­c (FOIP), freedom of navigation and overflight, and Modi’s own personal initiative of Security and Growth for All in the Region (SAGAR), which became a New Delhi slogan in 2015. These were pursued through the multilater­al bodies created by the Indian Navy.

Getting into the act later, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) in New Delhi set up an Indo-pacific Wing in 2019, with the aim of integratin­g the various bodies under a single Indopacifi­c umbrella. In 2020, the MEA went further, establishi­ng an Oceana Division, which was made responsibl­e for the region from the Andaman Sea to the Western Pacific.

This coincides to a great extent with the maritime space that Beijing refers to as the “First Island Chain” and seeks to dominate completely, in the manner of the US when, as an emerging superpower, it enforced the Monroe Doctrine in its neighbourh­ood.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Chief of Naval Staff R Hari Kumar addresses during the three-day apex-level regional strategic dialogue
PHOTO: PTI Chief of Naval Staff R Hari Kumar addresses during the three-day apex-level regional strategic dialogue

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