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India To Play Major Role In Shaping Post Covid-19 World Order: Australian Envoy

NEW DELHI: Crystal ball gazing into a post-Covid-19 world, the Australian high commissioner-designate to India Barry Oโ€™Farrell has said that while he sees the US playing a far more cautious role in terms of exercising global leadership, he sees India as a major โ€œnatural power in the regionโ€, playing an enormous role in shaping the post-COVID world.

Elaborating, Oโ€™Farrell said, โ€œ Itโ€™s well placed to do this as one of the very few economies currently expected to emerge from this crisis not in recession.โ€

He made these observations while sharing his views on the geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific as well as India-Australia relations at the National Defence College (NDC) via a teleconference here on Wednesday. Oโ€™Farrell said, โ€œI see even faster shifts in the Indo-Pacific power balance, with an associated sharpening of strategic competition. And an even more factious multilateral system.โ€

While the US-driven Indo-Pacific construct is largely seen as being aimed at countering China, those allying with Washington on this (India included) have largely chosen to downplay this aspect. However, Oโ€™Farrellโ€™s speech made it clear that Chinese dominance in the Indo-Pacific region remains a matter of concern. Without naming China he drew attention to the fact that, โ€œAcross the Indo-Pacific we are seeing increasing strategic competition driving exploitation of some of the more fragile developing states.โ€

He also referenced Chinaโ€™s increasing attempts at strategic dominance in the region noting, โ€œ In the race to secure economic and strategic advantage through port access and military reach, great power rivalry is testing state sovereignty of our more vulnerable regional partners.โ€

Noting that southeast Asia is โ€œcore to our concept of the Indo-Pacific,โ€ Oโ€™Farrell said, โ€œ We expanded cooperation with southeast Asia on maritime issues, including on maritime law, maritime domain awareness and strengthening civil maritime organisations โ€ฆ all of which was designed to strengthen a rules-based maritime order.โ€


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China is accused of violating this rules-based maritime order in the South China Sea, where it has claimed and occupied disputed islets, raised artificial islands and fortified them.

Oโ€™Farrell referred to Chinaโ€™s inroads into the Indian Ocean region. โ€œWe also have great ambition for the India-Australia relationship to strengthen the security and stability of the Indian Ocean region.โ€

The HC-designate made it clear that Australia โ€œlooks to it (India) as a strategic partner with complementary interests.โ€ He undescored that New Delhi and Canberraโ€™s strategic interests converge in the Indian Ocean Region, โ€œ We both have significant Indian Ocean coastlines, strategic island territories, highly capable military reach and valuable trade routes across the Indian Ocean,โ€ he said describing cooperation between the two countries in this regard as a โ€œnatural fitโ€.

He noted, โ€œIndia represents a major power without some of the baggage that others can bringโ€, pointing to Delhiโ€™s โ€œtraditionally non-aligned stance and its deep cultural and religious links to the regionโ€.

He suggested that India and Australia could build on the trilateral maritime security workshop they had held with Indonesia last year to identify ways โ€œto be the best custodians of the Indian Ocean.โ€

Oโ€™Farrell said his country supported Indiaโ€™s leadership of the IORA (Indian Ocean Rim Association) as โ€œit helps to shape it into a genuinely norm-building entity.โ€