Flags of Australia and India.
Credit: iStock Photo
Amidst the gloom — if not doom — over India-United States ties, an Australian defence industry trade mission reached India on October 6.
While the objective is to bring together Australian and Indian defence companies in the specialised fields of command, control, communications, cyber-defence, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, the expected partnership is already being described as ‘truly seismic’ by the Australian High Commissioner to India.
Australia’s goal is to see India as an ‘indispensable security partner’, and the recent visit by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh to Canberra, the first in 10 years, appeared to have solidified five years of the establishment of the India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. Singh also chaired a business roundtable in Sydney.
More importantly, three agreements were signed to deepen cooperation in information sharing, maritime security and joint activities.
Bilateral ties between India and Australia have grown deeper over the years. The multifaceted engagement ranging from defence and security, trade and investments, education, health, industrial collaboration, logistics and technology transfer, and green and clean energy, has only intensified. This has given an enduring character to their engagement.
The Indian diaspora, too, has facilitated promoting cultural diplomacy that has eased communication between the two countries. It was their involvement in Australian politics and India’s liberal democratic structure that led to a comprehensive strategic partnership in 2020.
Now, upholding a ‘Free and Open Indo-Pacific’, coupled with US President Donald Trump’s unpredictability, and the uncertain future of Quad (Australia, Japan, India and the US), makes it imperative to strengthen ties between Australia and India. This may not contain China, but it fulfils a shared responsibility to maintain international law and order, and a commitment to deepen democracy and freedom for all.
Though one can’t disregard China’s overwhelming provocations and assertiveness, and thus, the strategic compulsions of ensuring defence preparedness.
Trump’s hardening stand towards India led analysts to believe that Australia, a key US ally, will be apprehensive about deepening relations with India.
However, over the years, Australia has acted independently on its economic decisions, bilateral dealings, and immediate security concerns, as well as issues around climate change.
A deepening partnership
The Labour government’s win in the May elections and the return to power of Anthony Albanese, the first Prime Minister to win two consecutive elections in the last 20 years, is significant in many ways.
This indicates that Australian foreign policy is making significant adjustments to be both a US ally and to develop self-reliance by increasing its force posture and defence capability.
Australia’s proactive role in the Indo-Pacific was reflected in its defence deal with Papua New Guinea, which aligned the Indian and Australian militaries’ goal to get unbridled access to select sites around the Pacific island nation.
Meanwhile, India’s Act East and extended neighbourhood policies are interlinked to the wider Indo-Pacific agenda. The Indian shift in regional power dynamics is aimed at seeking strategic partnerships with countries that share similar concerns about China.
Both Australia and India strongly support institutionalising the Indo-Pacific for better regional governance mechanisms, with many countries supporting free, open, inclusive, prosperous, and peaceful norms. They are working closely on the Indo-Pacific Ocean Initiative (IPOI) on maritime security, preservation of marine biodiversity, resources and ecology, capacity building, disaster risk management, trade and connectivity, and technological and academic collaborations to comprehensively manage the entire maritime domain.
India’s SAGAR initiative, or Security and Growth for All in the Region, not only underscores the importance of the Indian Ocean states such as Mauritius and Seychelles that can be brought within the Indo-Pacific geopolitical realm but also its projection as a ‘net security provider’ in the region.
Multi-alignment is the order of the day. Australia and India are pursuing increasingly aligned foreign and defence policies of armed neutrality, maintaining rules-based order, democracy, and self-reliance. This is finely blended to suit their national interests and foreign policies. Australia and India have signed some crucial agreements recently: the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2020, the Mutual Logistics Support in 2021, and the Free Trade Agreement in 2022. The two nations have institutionalised cooperation in the defence and economic realms.
The Australian defence industry’s visit to Delhi earlier this month is expected to enhance Indian Ocean stability and peace. It can also be extended towards the Pacific Island Countries, Papua New Guinea, and Solomon Islands, where India is equally invested under the Forum for India and Pacific Island Countries (FIPIC). These 14 Pacific Island countries can work towards securing the Indian and the Pacific Ocean from illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing, and armed robbery in the Indo-Pacific region; and in creating resilient lifestyles and infrastructure to combat climate change.
Australia also has a large reserve of critical minerals necessary for India for its transition to green energy and ensuring energy security.
Quad’s future
It remains to be seen how Trump’s tariffs on India will impact its role in the Indo-Pacific, and how adroitly it balances and strengthens its ties with Australia and Southeast Asian states.
There is also the looming question of a rapprochement between India and China that could undermine the Indo-US defence and security relationship.
More importantly, the future of Quad itself comes into question.
India might be able to absorb the tariff shock as the US’ punitive measures could blow over in the medium term. But doubts remain over China’s willingness to deal with the border dispute or its geopolitical ambitions. China’s assertiveness and its political, diplomatic, and defence posturing do not reflect accommodation when it comes to India’s interests.
The Quad has become a major institutional or rules-based force in the regionalisation process. After 2017, its members strictly followed institutional proceedings and framing norms for a ‘free and open Indo-Pacific.’
In the event Trump does not back off on tariffs, the Quad member states will not just have to pool in financially for mutual stability and prosperity, but will need the backing of South Korea, New Zealand, and the ASEAN countries to be more involved in Indo-Pacific regionalism.
The major task ahead for Australia-India relations will be to strengthen three key institutional platforms — the Indian Ocean Rim Association, Indian Ocean Naval Symposium and FIPIC — which can be achieved by deeper Australian initiatives to involve the Pacific Island Forum as a dialogue partner. Consistent and comprehensive interactions between India and Australia will be crucial for the Indo-Pacific region.
Shubhamitra Das is Associate Professor, Centre for Indo-Pacific Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.
This article was first published under Creative Commons by 360info.
(Disclaimer: The views expressed above are the author's own. They do not necessarily reflect the views of DH.)