Hindustan Times (East UP)

Locating Quad in geopolitic­al history

- Dhruva Jaishankar is executive director, ORF America The views expressed are personal

For almost six centuries, the leaders of England (and later Great Britain) saw France as their primary strategic challenge. The Anglo-French rivalry was so all-consuming — from the Hundred Years War through the Napoleonic Wars — that it resulted in the consolidat­ion of territory and national identities in both countries, shaped dynastic succession­s, altered religious and linguistic developmen­ts, determined alliances and military involvemen­t, and fuelled colonial competitio­n.

But centuries of rivalry came to an end in 1904, when Britain and France signed a series of agreements, known as the Entente Cordiale. The impetus was the rise of a new European power — Germany — which both France and Britain perceived to be a shared challenge. The Entente Cordiale was not a commitment to each other’s defence. Contradict­ions remained. Later that year, France’s ally, Russia, and Britain’s ally, Japan, were to wage war against each other. Nonetheles­s, Germany was sufficient­ly motivated by the new Anglo-French condominiu­m to attempt to test the Entente. This resulted in a crisis over the status of Morocco, which only brought London and Paris closer.

Understand­ings such as the Entente Cordiale were, in fact, a common feature of internatio­nal relations prior to World War II and the nuclear age. The Cold War infused new thinking that alliances had to be credible and watertight to deter adversarie­s and thereby preserve peace.

Critics argued that this logic was costly, and that it resulted in over-extension, fuelled unnecessar­y conflict, and gave reason for allies to engage in risky behaviour. Debates about internatio­nal security commitment­s — whether in the United States (US) or Europe, or indeed in India or even China — reflect vestiges of these competing worldviews.

But in many respects, we have experience­d a reversion to a pre-alliance era. The motivation­s are different. Democratic­ally elected leaders — or any leadership responsive to its people — will confront difficulti­es in making open-ended security commitment­s to another sovereign State.

Publics are more sensitive to the presence of foreign troops on their soil, including the legal complicati­ons that might arise. Despite nationalis­t impulses, public opinion surveys generally reflect a scepticism of overseas military involvemen­ts and a preference for greater spending on social welfare and services at a time when defence spending is already at historic lows. (According to the World Bank, 2018 marked the lowest year on record for military expenditur­e around the world at 2.18% as a proportion of global Gross Domestic Product.)

The need to adapt to new strategic challenges amid fiscal and political constraint­s is resulting in a return to ententes as an important feature of internatio­nal relations. Successive government­s in the US have now made it clear that the relationsh­ip with a non-ally such as India matters much more than some of its formal treaty alliances. Quad — involving India, the US, Japan, and Australia — is emerging as perhaps the most prominent new entente. But the relationsh­ip between China and Russia is also exhibiting similar features, much as the China-Pakistan relationsh­ip has for decades.

Nonetheles­s, criticism of these new relationsh­ips often continues to raise the bogey of an alliance. For example, some American critics of Quad have implied that this arrangemen­t will somehow contribute to Indian tensions with China and Pakistan, and risks dragging the US into conflicts in the Indian Ocean region. Similarly, Indian critics fear that the US’s free and open Indo-Pacific strategy would entangle India in unnecessar­y competitio­n in the Pacific.

Such criticism is misleading, and perhaps deliberate­ly so. Priorities will continue to differ among Quad countries. This is clearly reflected in the relative importance India has granted to South Asia and the Indian Ocean when it comes to maritime security, foreign assistance, and vaccine diplomacy.

Ententes are also not useless, as some seem to believe. Those who contend that Quad is simply a talk shop have not been paying sufficient attention to its accompanyi­ng activities. Despite last year’s quadrilate­ral Malabar exercises and the recent announceme­nt of new working groups, Quad cooperatio­n on naval interopera­bility, critical technologi­es, and Covid-19 had been manifest previously. Moving forward, arrangemen­ts such as Quad could play a pivotal role in coordinati­ng responses, reducing frictions, and enabling participan­t-States to concentrat­e more on their core competenci­es and geographie­s.

The return of ententes in plain sight (although to little fanfare) reflects the yawning gaps between public opinion, academic scholarshi­p, and actual policy on matters of internatio­nal relations.

A closer examinatio­n of the long history of “strategic partnershi­ps short of mutual defence” would be instructiv­e. For example, the Anglo-French partnershi­p, which became the Triple Entente with the addition of Russia, failed to deter Germany, resulting in the outbreak of World War I. But it contribute­d significan­tly to the victorious outcome for its members (although at great cost, especially to Russia and France). By contrast, it was the seemingly more ironclad Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy, which crumbled.

The parallel suggests that debates about the wisdom of internatio­nal partnershi­ps and commitment­s are unlikely to abate. But a sense of precision and perspectiv­e about the nature of new and emerging strategic arrangemen­ts is sorely needed.

 ??  ?? Those who contend that Quad is a talk shop have not been paying sufficient attention to its accompanyi­ng activities
Those who contend that Quad is a talk shop have not been paying sufficient attention to its accompanyi­ng activities
 ?? Dhruva Jaishankar ??
Dhruva Jaishankar

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