Hindustan Times (Delhi)

US, Australia see key role for New Delhi

- Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE US AND AUSTRALIA ALSO EXPRESSED SERIOUS CONCERNS ABOUT CHINA’S ‘RECENT COERCIVE

AND DESTABILIS­ING ACTIONS ACROSS

THE INDO-PACIFIC’

nNEW DELHI: India will have a key role in defence cooperatio­n and post-covid-19 recovery efforts in the Indo-pacific by the US and Australia, which plan to strengthen partnershi­ps in the region to ensure it remains secure and inclusive.

The matter figured in a meeting between US secretary of state Mike Pompeo and defence secretary Mark Esper and their Australian counterpar­ts Marise Payne and Linda Reynolds in Washington on Tuesday, with a joint statement issued by the two sides making several references to India’s role in the Indo-pacific.

The US and Australia also expressed serious concerns about China’s “recent coercive and destabilis­ing actions across the Indo-pacific”, and the two countries said the Covid-19 pandemic has “created incentives for some actors to pursue strategic gains in ways that undermine the rules-based internatio­nal order and regional stability”.

The developmen­t comes at a time when India is set to include Australia in the Malabar naval exercise that it conducts with the US and Japan, and against the backdrop of the months-old border stand-off with China.

The Us-australia joint statement said the Indo-pacific remains the focus of their alliance and that two countries are “working side-by-side, including with Asean, India, Japan, the Republic of Korea, and Five Eyes partners, to strengthen our networked structure of alliances and partnershi­ps to maintain a region that is secure, prosperous, inclusive, and rules-based”.

On the issue of regional coordinati­on, the two countries said they are committed to “trilateral dialogues with Japan and Quad consultati­ons with Japan and India”, and were looking forward to further ministeria­l meetings of these forums.

The Quadrilate­ral security dialogue, which includes India, Australia, Japan and the US, was upgraded to the ministeria­l level last September. China has often expressed its opposition to the group, though India has said it is not aimed at any country.

Sameer Patil, fellow for internatio­nal security studies at Gateway House, described India as the “most natural partner” for security-related initiative­s by the US and Australia in Indian Ocean and the Indo-pacific region.

“Though China is its biggest trade partner, Australia has growing concerns about what it perceives as China’s interferen­ce in domestic politics and issues such as cyber security .... “These concerns and similar worries for the US are areas of convergenc­e with India...,” Patil added.

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