Incorporating Indo-Pacific and the Quadrilateral into India's strategic outlook/ Vinay Kaura

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2019Subject(s): Online resources: In: Maritime Affairs Journal of the National Maritime Foundation of India :Summary: China's unprecedented economic rise and its growing military profile have transformed the threat matrix for India. China is challenging India's interests in its immediate neighbourhood in multiple ways. Managing strategic challenge from China, therefore, has become a topmost foreign policy priority for India. The article argues that given the structural constraints of New Delhi-Beijing rapprochement, there is an urgent need for India to step up quadrilateral security cooperation with the U.S., Japan and Australia. The revival of the Quad reflects this growing consensus. However, India's hedging approach - simultaneously balancing and engaging with China - may be politically expedient in the short run, but not without long-term adverse consequences.
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China's unprecedented economic rise and its growing military profile have transformed the threat matrix for India. China is challenging India's interests in its immediate neighbourhood in multiple ways. Managing strategic challenge from China, therefore, has become a topmost foreign policy priority for India. The article argues that given the structural constraints of New Delhi-Beijing rapprochement, there is an urgent need for India to step up quadrilateral security cooperation with the U.S., Japan and Australia. The revival of the Quad reflects this growing consensus. However, India's hedging approach - simultaneously balancing and engaging with China - may be politically expedient in the short run, but not without long-term adverse consequences.

INDIA, USA, JAPAN, AUS, CHINA, MARITIME

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