The dragon in the room

by Team FNVA
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C. Raja Mohan
The Indian Express
December 20, 2012

ASEAN expects Delhi to play a bigger role in regional security.

A rare summit this week in Delhi, between the leaders of the ten-member ASEAN, marks one of the most productive periods of India’s interaction with Asia in modern times. Two decades of India’s Look East policy and ten years of annual high-level engagement with the Association of South East Asian Nations have produced one of India’s most robust international partnerships.

The celebrations, however, must be tempered by the recognition that the next phase in the relations between India and the ASEAN will be a lot more demanding and test the skills of Delhi’s statecraft. As the rapidly changing geopolitical environment makes Asia look for a larger Indian security role in the region, Delhi appears hesitant and ambiguous. To be sure, the summit might call for greater maritime security cooperation between India and the ASEAN, underline the importance of the Law of the Sea in resolving maritime territorial disputes, and emphasise the principle of freedom of navigation.

All these catch-phrases are meant to convey India’s diplomatic support to the current security concerns of the ASEAN members, especially their worries about the growing military capabilities of China and Beijing’s increasing political assertiveness in its territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

But is Delhi really prepared to go beyond the diplomatic and meet the growing ASEAN expectations for a stronger Indian contribution to the regional balance of power? No one at the summit is likely to mention the “C” word, but there is no denying the dragon in the room. It is not that either India or ASEAN want to define their partnership in terms of China. But both are aware that most of the emerging security challenges in Southeast Asia are about the geopolitical consequences for China’s rise.

But, let’s return for a moment to the celebrations of India’s ties with Southeast Asia. A century ago, the discovery of historic civilisational links with Southeast Asia was a booster shot for Indian nationalism and helped it reclaim its natural place in Asia. A little over two decades ago, when India was down and out — its economic model in a shambles and its international isolation stark — it was Southeast Asia that extended valuable solidarity.

The ASEAN provided the most acceptable international benchmarks for India’s own economic liberalisation. It was also the ASEAN that helped Delhi cope with the new imperatives of regionalism in Asia. It was with the ASEAN member states that India negotiated some of its early free trade agreements at a bilateral level. Nearly three years ago, India implemented its first free trade agreement in goods with the ASEAN as a whole.

This week India and ASEAN will finalise a new agreement that liberalises trade in services and investments. India has already agreed last month to join the ambitious negotiations for a free trade agreement, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, with the ASEAN and its other economic partners — China, Japan, Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

India’s ASEAN partnership has been emblematic of the country’s own economic transformation — internal and external — since it began the reforms at the turn of the 1990s. The ASEAN is also becoming the test-bed for India’s potential role as a provider of security to other nations and as a swing state in the Asian balance of power.

After more than three decades of peace and tranquility, Southeast Asia now confronts a period of great turbulence, marked by mounting tensions among the major powers and the deepening regional conflicts. China’s deepening territorial conflict with Japan and its new rivalry with the United States have injected fluidity into Asia’s great power relations.

Beijing’s relations with some of its Southeast Asian neighbours, especially Vietnam and the Philippines, have headed south amid competing territorial claims in the South China Sea. The coherence of the ASEAN itself is under question as member states take divergent approaches to dealing with a rising China. The hope that the region can devise a collective security framework has been dashed amid these new developments.

Individually and collectively, then, the ASEAN members are looking to restore the balance of power in the region. Some of them are turning to the US to strengthen their security and others are deeply wary about the dangers of being caught up in a new Cold War between Beijing and Washington. All of them are importing advanced weapons systems and paving the way for an arms race in Southeast Asia.

In seeking a larger role from India in regional security, the ASEAN has no illusion that India is the white knight that will ride to the rescue of the region threatened by China. Southeast Asia’s expectations from India in the defence arena are limited and three-fold.

One, an end to India’s current passive participation in the multilateral security mechanisms, such as the ASEAN Regional Forum and the annual defence-ministerial meetings of the ASEAN and its partner nations. Second, the ASEAN wants Delhi to inject some life into the many bilateral defence agreements it has signed with its member states. Although India provides some military training and other support to many Southeast Asian countries, there is much more it can do enhance the material capacities of the ASEAN defence establishments. Finally, the ASEAN would like to see a more purposeful Indian defence policy in Southeast Asia, which can stabilise the regional security environment in collaboration with other major powers.

India has indeed sounded the trumpet of defence diplomacy as part of its engagement with the ASEAN over the last two decades. The notes of India’s trumpet, however, must become a lot more certain. If Delhi does not help promote a stable balance of power in Southeast Asia now, India’s own security challenges in the future could get a lot more daunting.

The writer, a distinguished fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, Delhi, is a contributing editor for ‘The Indian Express’.

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