News | National
8 Nov 2024 11:46
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    The Indo-Pacific is an idea more than a region – and it’s pushing politics in a ‘pessimistic and paranoid’ direction

    The term ‘Indo-Pacific’ has become central to foreign policy debates. But it oversimplifies geopolitical reality and fuels ideas of a ‘New Cold War’.

    Nicholas Ross Smith, Senior Research Fellow, National Centre for Research on Europe, University of Canterbury, Paul M. Bacon, Professor, Graduate School of Asia-Pacific Studies, Waseda University
    The Conversation


    Over the past decade, the idea of an important geopolitical space called the “Indo-Pacific” has become integral to the grand strategising of countries inside and outside this vast geographical area.

    The term is not new, however. Australia – one of a few truly Indo-Pacific countries – used it during the 1970s to paint an optimistic vision of a future in which it was interlinked economically and politically with its neighbours in the Indian and Pacific oceans.

    However, since Japan (under the leadership of Shinzo Abe) first used the term in 2007 as a way of conceptualising relations with India in the context of “broader Asia”, the Indo-Pacific has evolved significantly.

    And with the advent of the AUKUS security pact in 2021, it is now common to refer to the Indo-Pacific as either a region or super-region. But this oversimplifies what is, in fact, a far more complex geopolitical reality.

    What is a region?

    A region is best thought of as a geographically enclosed complex. According to political scientist David Lake, regions are “so interrelated in terms of their security that actions by any one member, and significant security-related developments inside any member, have a major impact on others”.

    The problem with thinking of the Indo-Pacific as a region or super-region is that at its widest definition – stretching from the east coast of Africa to the west coast of South America – it comprises more than half the geographic space of the surface of the Earth.

    Simply put, the Indo-Pacific is too large to meaningfully conceive of as a region or even a super-region.

    Furthermore, although many states have adopted an Indo-Pacific outlook in their strategising, they typically (save for greater powers) still think of their national security in a strict regional sense.

    So, the Indo-Pacific as a geopolitical space looks vastly different in Washington DC than it does in Jakarta, Wellington, Tokyo or Manila (to choose but a few).

    This is not to say the Indo-Pacific concept should be ignored. It represents an important development in international security. The fact is it has experienced the greatest geopolitical shift over the past decade or so – and this is likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

    Indo-Pacific straegies: Australian PM Anthony Albanese, US President Joe Biden and then British PM Rishi Sunak discuss AUKUS in 2023. Getty Images

    The China factor

    If not a region or super-region, then, what is the Indo-Pacific?

    It is perhaps better thought of in terms of what international relations experts Barry Buzan and Ole Waever call “macrosecuritisation”: the identification of an “existential threat” to something deemed precious and worth protecting which demands an immediate and, if necessary, extraordinary collective response to protect it.

    This was given a major boost in 2017 when the United States – still by far the most powerful global actor – formally adopted the Indo-Pacific concept at the centre of its strategic thinking.

    In the process, it identified China as a clear strategic competitor. This decision had immediate real-world implications.

    Firstly, it helped resuscitate the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) involving the US, Australia, India and Japan after nearly a decade of impasse.

    Secondly, after Joe Biden ran for president on an “America must lead again” foreign policy platform, it led to the formation of AUKUS in 2021 and the launch of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity in 2022.

    Geopolitical complexity

    Importantly, not only the US is involved in this macrosecuritisation. Australia, India, Japan and, more recently, the United Kingdom and European Union (and particular member states, such as France) are all involved.

    Together they are pushing an Indo-Pacific concept that is built on the identification of the rules-based international order as being under existential threat due to China’s rise and perceived assertiveness.

    The framing of China as a “threat” rather than an “opportunity” – which dominated the previous “Asia-Pacific” construct – means a radically different perspective in the countries adopting Indo-Pacific outlooks.

    This clearly matters greatly to regional geopolitics. But it still does not mean the Indo-Pacific has to be seen as a region or super-region.

    Rather, the concept is distorting the geopolitics of different regions – especially East Asia, South-east Asia, South Asia and the South Pacific.

    These remain genuine regions with their own unique security dynamics. But the Indo-Pacific idea is enveloping them and shifting the dynamics in a more pessimistic and paranoid direction.

    A ‘New Cold War’

    There is now a concerning habit of treating the Indo-Pacific as a coherent unitary geopolitical space rather than a constellation of different regions.

    This lends credence to the simplistic analogy of the Indo-Pacific becoming the ground zero of a “New Cold War”. And it ignores the perspectives of the smaller countries that find themselves being sucked into this growing contest.

    Seeing the Indo-Pacific for what it really is – not a natural geographical phenomenon but a construct – is an important step towards developing more coherent and nuanced policies that adequately capture the geopolitical complexity of the Indo-Pacific constellation.

    But this runs contrary to the macrosecuritisation process already in place.

    There are many reasons why the current situation in the Indo-Pacific is nothing like the original Cold War. But the securitisation process is simplifying the geopolitics, at least in perception, into something reminiscent of it. The ramifications could be devastating.

    The Conversation

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     08 Nov: Why did white women and the Democratic base abandon Kamala Harris? My view from the campaign trail
     08 Nov: A 21 year old Wellington man has been arrested after a probe into three fires at the same property
     08 Nov: Time to wolf a couple of cheese rolls and start dancing on the pedals for the Tour of Southland riders
     08 Nov: What a Trump presidency means for millions of migrants and their families in the US
     08 Nov: Why China is worried about a second Trump presidency – and how Beijing might react
     08 Nov: A third Christchurch-based bid to join league's NRL claim they're making the necessary improvements to get support for entry from the governing body
     08 Nov: A coroner has ruled the murder suicide of an elderly Christchurch couple was not driven by hatred or violence, but by love
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The All Blacks have looked to last year's World Cup rugby quarter-final win over Ireland to set the tone ahead of tomorrow morning's test in Dublin More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Jamie Wilson linked arms with politicians and celebrities, but behind closed doors a business was marred with problems More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Kristin Cavallari doesn't want to have another child 11:25

    Business:
    Jamie Wilson linked arms with politicians and celebrities, but behind closed doors a business was marred with problems 11:17

    International:
    Following the US election result, new fronts for false election fraud claims have opened online 11:17

    National:
    Why did white women and the Democratic base abandon Kamala Harris? My view from the campaign trail 11:17

    Law and Order:
    A 21 year old Wellington man has been arrested after a probe into three fires at the same property 11:07

    Entertainment:
    Kristin Cavallari is "dipping [her] toe back in the dating pool" 10:55

    Living & Travel:
    Time to wolf a couple of cheese rolls and start dancing on the pedals for the Tour of Southland riders 10:47

    Business:
    New Zealand's largest bank, ANZ, is reporting a small rise in net profit 10:47

    International:
    Germany in political disarray after ruling coalition collapses hours after US election 10:47

    National:
    What a Trump presidency means for millions of migrants and their families in the US 10:27


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd