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India touts military alliance at naval moot
NEW DELHI—India called for an alliance of navies to boost security at
sea at its first naval summit Thursday with nations that have a stake in
the busy maritime lanes of the Indian Ocean. Twenty-six representatives
of navies from countries including Australia, Egypt, France and Sri
Lanka are attending the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium (IONS), seen by
experts as an effort by New Delhi to assert its strategic presence.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, launching the two-day event, said
regional cooperation would help combat piracy and terrorism. “Recent
years have seen a rise in crimes such as terrorism, smuggling, including
of narcotics, arms and weapons, and piracy and robbery,” Singh said.
“The perpetrators of these crimes are well-organised and well-funded
transnational crime syndicates who take full advantage of the vastness
of the oceans. The need for cooperation among the navies of the region
in preventing such crimes is therefore of paramount interest,” he said.
“India remains committed to an Indian Ocean that is stable and
peaceful,” the prime minister said, calling for “the freedom of the seas
for all nations... to deepen trade and economic links.”
Indian naval chief admiral Sureesh Mehta called for a loose military
alliance of regional navies to keep the busy sea lanes secure. “The
threats of intra-state turmoil as well as a variety of security threats
that are short of state-on-state conflict, remain a grim reality,
presenting a significant risk to peace and stability,” Mehta told the
summit.
India has offered an unofficial naval blockade of the waters around Sri
Lanka and the Maldives to prevent Tamil guerrillas from smuggling arms
onto the island to fuel their battle for a homeland. “The threat from
malevolent non-state actors presents a clear and present danger to not
just one or some, but to all of us,” Mehta said, without directly
referring to the Sri Lankan conflict. “(However) it is critical to
ensure that whatever we plan and do flows from a broad consensus, with
political backing, maritime commitment, and naval resolve,” the chief of
India’s 137-ship navy added. India during the 2004 tsunami spurned an
unsolicited US offer to provide help to the thousands of victims and
instead sent its own naval ships to Sri Lanka and Indonesia in a sign of
its expanding reach.
Last September, India invited Australia, Japan, Singapore and the US for
major joint naval exercises off the Andaman islands — raising eyebrows
in Pakistan and China. The symposium will also focus on the war in Sri
Lanka, notably the Tamil Tigers’ continued weapons smuggling, diplomats
said.
“This critical military crisis highlights the need for synergy among
navies to keep the Indian Ocean free of pirates and gun-runners,” a New
Delhi-based diplomat said. Uday Bhaskar, a former Indian naval
commander, said the summit was a clear “attempt by India to enhance the
credibility of its navy as a maritime power.” The summit will wind up on
Friday with a closed-door conclave of the naval chiefs in the Indian
seaside resort of Goa.
India on Thursday launched its first naval summit aimed at forging ties
with nations that have a stake in the busy maritime lanes of the Indian
Ocean. Twenty-six representatives of navies from countries including
Australia, Egypt, France and Sri Lanka are attending the Indian Ocean
Naval Symposium (IONS), seen by experts as an effort by New Delhi to
assert its strategic presence.—Agencies
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