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India To Join US, Japan and Australia in Maritime Surveillance Watch

India To Join US, Japan and Australia in Maritime Surveillance Watch

Summary

India has joined a new intelligence-sharing agreement with the United States, Japan, and Australia called the Indo-Pacific Maritime Surveillance Cooperation Initiative. This partnership aims to improve monitoring of the Indian Ocean and reflects the countries' concerns about China’s increasing influence in the region.

Key Facts

  • India, the U.S., Japan, and Australia are working together to share intelligence through the new Indo-Pacific Maritime Surveillance Cooperation Initiative.
  • This is the first security arrangement created by the group known as the Quad in several years.
  • The initiative focuses initially on surveillance in the Indian Ocean.
  • The Quad members describe themselves as maritime democracies located in different parts of the Indo-Pacific.
  • China criticized the agreement, warning it should not target third countries or create exclusive groups.
  • The Quad is not a formal military alliance and does not have mutual defense commitments like NATO.
  • The group was created after their joint response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and has worked to promote a free and open Indo-Pacific region.
  • The recent meeting in New Delhi marked renewed cooperation after a pause due to trade tensions between these countries.
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