There are other elements to this highest-level engagement too, but the purpose here is to focus on issues at sea highlighted at the meeting and how they impact our own interests and aspirations.
Starting in the reverse order, some analysts have commented that by not referring to our role in the South China Sea (SCS), which had figured in the Modi-Obama statement of 2016, our position has been diminished. This is erroneous. The term “Indo-Pacific” was first coined by then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2008. The Americans soon shied away from it and put out the more convoluted terminology of “Indo-Asia-Pacific”. The term chosen by Ms Clinton is more embracing, covering as it does waters stretching from the Suez Canal to the waters of the western Pacific (which include the SCS).
We should be more than satisfied that the Trump Administration has chosen to restore the original description and, even more important, that it recognises India’s legitimate role in this vast region. India is, in essence, an Indian Ocean Region (IOR) player, but given its size and interests, which includes growing maritime trade, its concerns extend beyond it. So, even though it is not a SCS littoral, it cannot remain excluded from developments that are taking place there. Its inclusion as party to the Indo-Pacific provides exactly that recognition. So, this is fully consistent with our long-term interests, and if some of our own foreign office mandarins have contributed to it, full marks to them.
As for enhancement of maritime security cooperation, while this has increased substantially in the last 15 years, we are still constrained by bureaucratic hurdles, the main ones being our inability to conclude two important bilateral agreements which would facilitate sharing of classified information. These have been discussed threadbare in earlier years but there is a need, on both sides, to take a fresh look, given the strategic convergence that has been spoken of by both leaders.
Cooperation at sea involves not just ships going out together and carrying out exercises over a couple of days, but understanding the whys and the wherefores. This can come about only if there is some degree of synergy of doctrines, and for this to happen information sharing is important. So, while one can be selective and discriminate between what can be shared and what has to be beyond the radar, some compromise seems necessary. In the IOR especially, India has to become a net security provider and that will often require joint operations with the US. This realisation will facilitate actions needed to foster enhanced maritime security cooperation.
To these three elements which figure prominently in the Trump-Modi dialogue, must be added the American clearance for the supply of nearly two dozen Guardian drones for the Indian Navy. While these will, no doubt, enhance the surveillance capabilities of our forces at sea, the fallout will come in what may lie ahead. If these should materialise, as one hopes they will, it is almost certain that they will be followed, sooner rather than later, by weapon-fitted versions. The logic of the strategic relationship, provided it is taken through, will dictate such a step for both parties.
The Indian Navy also has an enquiry ongoing for nearly five dozen fighter aircraft to operate from aircraft carriers at sea and while the choice may, to some extent, be influenced by what the Indian Air Force selects for itself, the options should be wide open. Procurement of major military hardware must always be seen through the prism of geopolitical interests more than just financial cost. The dialogue just concluded gives India an opportunity to make the required course correction.
In sum, we must treat the US focus on maritime security cooperation, which treats both parties on par, as more than just passing remarks. This is the most positive part of the articulation that has been made, quite different to the rhetoric about friendship and democracy. As the Bard wrote, “There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune...” That circumstance may be upon us.
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