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India and China still oceans apart

IndoCarib

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THE Indian Ocean is Australia's backyard - at least it is if you live in the west. It also plays a major role in transporting energy from the oil and gas-rich Persian Gulf to Australia's principal trading partners, China and Japan. With each passing year, these and other East Asian powers become more dependent on the free passage of oil over the Indian Ocean.

This makes China nervous. India and China have an ambivalent relationship. On the one hand they have common interests based on growing trade and similar positions in the WTO and on climate change. On the other, they have abiding suspicions over the longstanding border dispute and what India sees as Chinese meddling in its own backyard - South Asia and the Indian Ocean region.

New Delhi is concerned about China's friendship with India's principal competitor in South Asia, Pakistan, and with its growing economic and military relationships in the Indian Ocean.

On its part, Beijing is deeply concerned about India's growing naval clout. It fears that India, possibly in collusion with the US, could interdict its oil in times of rising tension or war. Even though India is far weaker than China, it has the advantage of occupying a strategic "box seat" in the Indian Ocean. It also shares many commonalities with the US in terms of its longer-term strategic outlook and the two navies frequently exercise together.

All this gives rise to a classic "security dilemma" in the Indian Ocean region - one in which China fears India might cut off its oil and India fears China's counter-manoeuvres are intended to "surround" it.

If this were not bad enough, the Indian Ocean is surrounded by some of the poorest, most troubled countries in the world. It confronts enormous issues of poverty and food and water scarcity. It suffers serious non-conventional security threats - people-smuggling and trafficking, drug and gun-smuggling, piracy and a host of environmental and natural disaster challenges.

Any actions that would have the effect of deepening this security dilemma, such as the proposals floated in Washington to base US reconnaissance aircraft on the Cocos Islands and nuclear-powered submarines at HMAS Stirling, should be avoided. China would definitely interpret any such moves as an attempt to threaten its "soft underbelly" - its dependency on Middle East oil - during times of rising tension.

What is needed instead is a strategy designed to provide for joint action to alleviate the sense of insecurity on the part of the major powers that their legitimate interests in the Indian Ocean might not be met.

Unfortunately, the security-building mechanisms in the Indian Ocean are inadequate and show little prospects of improvement. Unlike the Asia Pacific, where four great powers (the US, China, Japan and Russia) to an extent balance each other, India is by far the dominant littoral power in the Indian Ocean.


Australia has the next most powerful navy, and it can only aspire to be a middle power.

This means India is able to dominate the security-building mechanisms in the Indian Ocean - no India, no viable mechanisms. As with any great power, India will use its influence to ensure its wishes are met. And those wishes have more to do with locking what it fears to be a China-Pakistan combination out than building a regime capable of solving some of the region's manifest problems so we can all "rise on the same tide".

Canberra should be working quietly to convince New Delhi that the best way to ensure that China doesn't seek a permanent military presence in the Indian Ocean region would be to work with it to alleviate its concerns.

This would not be a short-term prospect, however. Australia's challenge would be to convince Washington of this need, as much as it would be to convince India and China.

But we must make a beginning. The Indian Ocean must remain "the great connector", which has been its principal role throughout its long history.

If indeed US forces require reinforcing in the Indian Ocean, at the very least it will be important to ensure they are perceived to be, and are, designed to assist the region meet its multifarious security challenges. This would, in turn, require that Washington take a stronger interest in security-building mechanisms in the region than it has hitherto.

Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
 
"THE Indian Ocean is Australia's backyard - at least it is if you live in the west."

oh lols, Australians

simply put, it never was and will not be in the foreseeable future
 
"THE Indian Ocean is Australia's backyard - at least it is if you live in the west."

oh lols, Australians

simply put, it never was and will not be in the foreseeable future

maybe Australia cant project power in IO region,but americans stationed there can.they are very close to some of the chock points of the chinese shipping routes.
 
Hmm...this article was better than most I have seen till date, but still some incorrect points-
India Foreign policy wants positive influence in the IOR, that is influence earned by goodwill due to peacekeeping, aid, security help,etc.
China, USA or any great power will never face any competition from the IN unless they endanger a very severe security risk to India or it's closest of allies in the IOR
 
It maybe off-topic....but india decided to buy MQ-4C BUMS for navy...
 
I must say I was surprised while reading this article since The Australian, owned by Rupert Murdoch of Fox News and News of the World fame, tends to be unabashedly pro-US. Much of the article actually seemed balanced and sensible.

Until the last line:

This would, in turn, require that Washington take a stronger interest in security-building mechanisms in the region than it has hitherto.

So, according to The Australian, the solution to the mutual mistrust is to bring in yet more cooks into the kitchen -- or Ocean -- especially one which, as the article itself admits, is already in cahoots with the Indians.

Brilliantly obtuse logic!
 
China always has been japanese backyard by that logic and continue to be.. ;)

We have never jump joy to claim that China sea as Japanese backyard in contrary we will curse the one who wrote that to 18th hell..but unlike you Indians that took everything as granted...you Indians such IndoCarib seems to be very please that Indian Ocean is Australia's backyard by posting this article...and other Indian just a$$kissing by bring US into this subject :lol:
 
...you Indians such IndoCarib seems to be very please that Indian Ocean is Australia's backyard by posting this article...and other Indian just a$$kissing by bring US into this subject :lol:

thats because we never claim entire India Ocean just because indians sail those waters for thousand years or just because it was named "Indian Ocean" unlike China on "SCS" or "ES" or "PS"...whatever you call it...get it???whatever...this article is on Indian Ocean..what you chinese guys are doing here buddy????go back to your SCS thread and claim your superiority over vietnam and Phillipines there... :coffee:
 
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