Friday, February 28, 2025 | 07:12 AM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Vital that nations like India have greater stake in Indo-Pacific: Aus deputy HC

Image

Press Trust of India New Delhi

It is vital that countries like India, Indonesia and Vietnam have more say and greater stake in the Indo-Pacific region's institutions and norm-setting, a senior Australian diplomat here said on Wednesday.

"There is no doubt, uncertainty, change, and disruption characterise the region but there are good prospects for countries like Australia and India, and one is the potential for us to work together," Australian Deputy High Commissioner in New Delhi, Rod Hilton, said.

In his address at the Chanakya Chakra forum, themed on 'Towards a Secure and Prosperous Indo-Pacific', Hilton asserted that the region's rules will naturally change with evolving geo-politics.

He also said it was an "exciting time" right across the Indo-Pacific as well as for the Australia-India bilateral relationship. "Our (India-Australia) relationship is in very good shape and on an upward trajectory," Hilton said.

 

On the Indo-Pacific region, he said, power is on the move, "from the North Atlantic, to the Indo-Pacific".

"We are at a point in history where we are transitioning from one international order to another... Military expenditure in the region is on the rise. Already six of the 10 states with the highest military expenditure in the world are in the Indo-Pacific.

"We are also seeing deepening rivalries and sharpening strategic competition over the future of the regional order. As competition has deepened, respect for international law, rules, norms and institutions has been challenged. Some powers are also showing a greater willingness to use power coercively," the Australian diplomat said.

These trends are playing out in the Indian Ocean, Southeast Asia and the Pacific, he said, adding that established institutions, such as the ASEAN and its famed unity, are "under pressure".

"It is easy to conclude that the future of the Indo-Pacific rests in how the US-China dynamic plays out, and it is correct to say that the relationship is the most important in the region and is "currently strained," Hilton said.

But the US-China relationship, as important as it is, will not be the only determinant. The future regional order will be considerably impacted by other, powerful, players in the region, he said.

"India in particular will grow in strategic weight. As the world's largest democracy and a growing large economy, India has shown unequivocally development and democracy can coexist. India's voice will be particularly consequential in regional order building," the deputy high commissioner said.

As will other emerging Indo-Pacific powers such as Indonesia and Vietnam, he said.

"Australia accepts that the rules of the region will naturally change as the geo-political power balances changes. And it is vital that countries like India, Indonesia and Vietnam have more of a say and a greater stake in institutions and norm-setting," Hilton said.

Australia seeks an Indo-Pacific region of stable, prosperous and sovereign states, "resistant to coercion", but open to engagement on the basis of shared interested, he said.

"We are committed to an ambitious, proactive agenda to shape such a region and want to work with all regional partners in this endeavour," the diplomat said.

On Indo-Australian ties, he said, India is a "natural partner" for Australia. "Its growing and strategic heft is being felt beyond the Indian Ocean, creating new opportunities for our cooperation based on shared values and outlook," he added.

"As the Australia-India relationship continues to grow we are looking to further build our cooperation across the Indo- Pacific in a range of areas," the deputy high commissioner said.

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Dec 04 2019 | 6:50 PM IST

Explore News