The Indo-Pacific
The ‘Quad’: A Strategic Liability for India
08 Feb, 2019 · 5557
Kushal Sinha argues that India's military involvement in the Quad would not be complementary to New Delhi's strategic objectives and long-term vision.
The
January 2019 iteration of the Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi featured a panel discussion
on the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) during which senior defence
officials from India, Australia, the US and Japan put forth their perspectives
regarding the four-country grouping. Broadly, the speakers focused on the
freedom of navigation on the high seas and a rule-based order in the
Indo-Pacific region, and expressed concerns regarding the increasing Chinese military
presence in the South China Sea
(SCS).
However,
the most prominent take away from this interaction was that 13 years since its
formation, members of the grouping have not yet arrived at a consensus on the Quad’s
conceptual and practical contours. To illustrate, while India’s Chief of the
Naval Staff, Admiral Sunil Lanba, rejected any military element and role for
India in the Quad during the discussion, Japan’s Admiral Katsutoshi Kawano defined
Quad as a grouping for military cooperation.
Given
the prevailing state-of-affairs, and India’s strategic objectives and long-term
vision, is it worthwhile for New Delhi to invest its energy in the grouping?
QUAD and India’s Strategic
Objectives and Long-Term Vision
Insofar,
Quad members have described the grouping as an alignment
of like-minded countries that share common strategic and economic interests. A
closer examination reveals that the only factor binding them in this enterprise
are their disputes with China in their own littoral waters, which collectively
span the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), the SCS, the East China Sea (ECS), and the Pacific
Ocean Region. Moreover, each member state defines the geographic contours of
the ‘Indo-Pacific’ region according to their respective interests and need. Indeed,
there is a consensus on the SCS and the ECS, but there seems to be no consensus
among the members on where the ‘Indo-Pacific’ region begins or
ends.
India
aspires to become the ‘net security provider’ in the IOR and aims for the
Indian Navy to operate a 200-ship fleet by 2027. Given India’s geographical
location and other factors, the Indian Navy prioritises the IOR’s security
cover over those of the SCS, ECS and the Pacific in its official doctrine and
treats it as its core strategic theatre. Strategically, it would make more
sense for New Delhi to focus and modernise its military platforms in the IOR
rather than wading into the SCS and beyond. At present, if New Delhi aligns militarily
with the Quad, the Indian Navy would have to carry out naval manoeuvres outside
the IOR. This would cause the Indian Navy’s assets to be divided, weaken New
Delhi’s presence in the IOR, and dilute strategic depth.
Post
the India-China informal summit in Wuhan in April 2018, New Delhi-Beijing relations
are in a delicate phase and aligning militarily with the Quad would disturb the
balance that India is trying to foster between China and the West. India’s
denial of Australia’s participation in the former’s Malabar Naval Exercise 2018
has further narrowed the scope of such an alignment. Given how this took place
after the Wuhan summit, this move was widely critiqued, and New Delhi was even
called the “weakest
link” in the Quad. It is evident that New Delhi does not want
to rock the boat with Beijing by aligning militarily with any group
specifically formed to counter China.
Financial and Logistical
Considerations
The
Indian Navy will find it difficult to finance deployment and manoeuvres of its
fleet in areas where it does not have any primary strategic interests such as the
SCS and the Pacific Ocean Region. Expenditures incurred in an event of such
deployment will non-commercial in nature, which will not converge with India’s defence
interests due to lack of strategic interests.
Moreover,
India does not have the logistics related capacity to expand its reach beyond
the west of the Malacca Strait to ensure a steady a supply of vital spares to
the fleet. This will prove to be an expensive and gruelling task for the Indian
Navy due to the absence of permanent refuel and repair points along the way and
operating fixed wing or rotor aircraft for this purpose would drastically
increase the operating cost.
Despite
being a signatory of the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA)
with the US, New Delhi cannot solely rely on this Agreement and other member
states for logistics due to the difference in military hardware. The Indian
naval fleet is predominantly made up of either Soviet/Russian or indigenous
platforms whereas the other three navies’ are entirely made up of Western
hardware with some indigenous elements. This not only makes logistics a burden
but also increases the gap in inter-operability. A 2017 analysis
shows that the Indian Navy alone would require massive recapitalisation worth a
minimum of US$ 40-50 billion annually for the next decade to bridge this gap. For
a country with a defence budget of US$ 44.6 billion, such costs seem beyond the
bounds of possibility.
The Way Ahead
For
India in particular, the Quad is a non-starter due to the absence of clarity on
the definition, role, and objectives. From New Delhi’s vantage point, military
involvement in the Quad framework would disturb India-China relations and could
also prove unfeasible in terms of finances and logistics. Instead of aligning
with a specific group aimed at a single country, which could destabilise the emerging
status quo, New Delhi should follow
the non-aligned pattern of carefully balancing relations between West, the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and China.
To
maintain robust capabilities in the IOR, India can build-up its sea denial and
control capabilities by enhancing naval capabilities and re-calibrating
bilateral ties with littoral countries in the eastern flank of the IOR such as Indonesia
and key ASEAN members like Vietnam. This would not only enhance bilateral
relations but also augment intelligence sharing. It would also provide
the Indian Navy with access to their docks, which would in turn contribute
positively towards sustaining Indian naval presence in the region.
Kushal Sinha is a Research Intern at the IPCS' South East Asia Research Programme.