h*ttps://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgxwJZJbtVwKHBMZGRgQDtHlGrmxG?compose=GTvVlcSDXXxnRwdzLRCwgDKcflJFQhGWgZPRTCRtCxwbBgfXtQcwqFbTRJgCcvDgCHjQbZnvDghxB
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‘Quad’ Meet in Tokyo Signals Growing China Unease
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkdFy4iAUhp_G3CUDATVecFF120lb07HtdutVhpBjRAmkgTTFp1_UvdgZGIaPA4f5P8EdNKb3rDPWRYOFvpQ1m9IMYYSimtEaZ9Mskrbc9wAtl4q5foCoGyolBXfS6MuFlCwIjQ6sqisguF4Amc-AcgIYZbMpqQSeYkz2JLq0KflQS9ACGHxD742GSLGDc52dkLtJeh_GOI4Jt5Jb0E5qUIkwbcBdmF8Dr-MWwMVSx86cvImtbDRXNm56M0rdTMh94KAnZA3-EYv0w3-m6pQfDS7Wzbh5vxufV49jRQr0j9PA0Ga9pYF3u8-tfDn-SjfrfCyOIi3etzZv1Vn4fJbrJd5J5Dfn07lY5TbXRdhf-bcgWyfaj8OOvHZVSuV-mzwdi0Wu0fPuz2z58_Ay_NaHt7dQ6vyDzOOqUct2s4KFyWWImKUovaQ-x4jOCU1wolx_9D-q_nLNhKK2SRM7VNZxcbrkEfVMqhZCRA30JhQ0Fz3Xk2CnDGs7aOl8CZpXCuqbOHczffXgfAdMw2gVOAf9DQabWfgBolkUutUmPKrZ_y7-AkzRwUs>All
four members face troubles with a newly aggressive Beijing
Oct 7
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<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNUstyozAQ_BpzgxICY3zQIbY3KZKYlJNsNj5RQkywbD2IJELw16-ws1VbJR3U6ul59DDqoNVmJJ22LugtmIo3ZJ7mKEYoaEjaxPk8D7itPgyApFwQZ3oIur4WnFHHtZoCcLJM0uBAKCxqxBCe43geJ0nGYLnIEDQZXrB0WdNgSlPRvuGgGBD4AjNqBYEgB-c6O0tuZvjWn2EYImo5taAcVyAipqWHO38_e9qEEsCFXIVOn0YdWt4qKmzYGj1w1XqSp0sf6gVvPQXULNnAeB8z_Da-Y3EqjjouN-2wfb0ZHtf3Q52U6AdPPYa2m13q8W7_vuNPx194uymG8shw-bqzhRRnNhZZoVbxnqNxez6dy3VhC1X69wX_YsnOMfl22CfPXY1T_rGLHo7lslDocf8nW33fPfW_1eHlxVPdeMeLsG7FSm7XsNQFz2c4652srO4NA1-57WvrKDv94BIa3supo8mOgBOM8OTWIkbpIkmjOBLOHMdv0Xy6dpYi2eLon8Q0x8AQLiT40bZgtCe0k87lx7taTaPrFXdjBYrWApqr4e66IRf_3NgBUTBYAc6BuYJ-C3JfAUrzwGdrtBdV5H8P_wLMMNVW>
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkk1vozAQhn8N3EBgTEIOHJpkW9FtqLLtdpsTMmZCnPiD2qaU_PqaJJVWsg9-PJ53PO9QYqFVesw7ZazfG9AVa_IUZ1EcRX6T4ybO0sxnptprAEEYz63uwe_6mjNKLFNyeoCSRYL9Q46yLI7n6Qyl8zjDdRY3sznN6iQFkhJAe3-SqUjfMJAUcvgEPSoJPs8P1nbGS-48dO_WMAwhMYwYkJZJ4CFVwuHO7Y-eNIEAsAGTgVWnUQWGtZJwE7RaDUy2XnLvOEgvWcP4GFP0Nr4jfiqOKi7X7bB5vRueVo9DnZTRjWPHos16ix3vdu9b9nz8hTbrYiiPFJWvW1MIfqZjMSvkMt6xaNycT-dyVZhClu584Z802Voq3g675E9XI8z22_D3sVwUMnra_Zstvx6e-7_y8PLiQu34wIqgbvlSbFawUAXLPDTrraiM6jUFV7npa2MJPd24gIb1YvrR5MENUiWta9AUfSAaHCV0cuQH-CxHEZqcnMcRnic4jENu9XH84s2HbT0ciRaFP0pTj32dMy7Atb0FrVxAO8ldbpzjTlCIXjI7ViBJzaG5DoO9Ts_FWzt2kEsYDAdrQV-hm5DMVRDhzHdqjXJJZf6_v9939t6t>
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxVUUtu5SAQPM1jZ4vvAy9YRJHmGhafth-JDQ7gJJ7TD7ZXIyG66Ka7Sl3OVJhTPvSWSkV7gTwGrwVXmGCMvOaeKKFQKOOUAVYTFl3zDmjb7RKcqSHFs4GygXH00nhSyk-TIBO15umsF5O3XirgQL1hEp00o9l9gOhAwzfkI0VAi37VupUHe3vQP-04H_uy21KN--xdWlsqrGaGFieo7nXGNqamB33_ugF7m1Py7T0t45bTnKGU8A0tXyrA1jpuCipOEnHStMvu7hNaPXeAhbVO8c4awzrOJHSDIKoz3jJqQcpB8b6w3qzmb4rmp9y62ox7Fxe8RJYLPr18YqC4U8qJjk-EdQa86CyAco5wyY0fCRmGX8Vl_7HBjIKmmJ6LlwRzyXhP-qXmj-N38V91fnC8zvS_taCsw7JCgThDTu3DfDp0VZqoscV1j6EeI0RjF_C3d_U2-7KiHhvoCD9lgVoh38lmqGoKMFeosfnUhkZtSjCNqIYIyz-PObxy>

By: Neeta Lal

The 2017 resurrection of the so-called Quad nations of Japan, the US,
India, and Australia from a decade-long hiatus is indication that the
group, which has met five times since its resumption, is growing
increasingly concerned about maintaining the liberal rules-based
international order that China has been systemically eroding.

The summit this week in Tokyo between the group’s foreign ministers is an
effort “to collectively affirm the importance of maintaining a free, open
and inclusive Indo-Pacific,” with discussions focused on the post-COVID 19
international order, the need for a coordinated response to challenges
emerging from the pandemic as well as an array of regional issues,
cooperation among members and potential defense and national security
synergies.

The members once again reiterated their support for the centrality of the
10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations and ASEAN-led mechanisms
in the region in the face of China’s attempts to make the South China Sea
into a Chinese lake.

All four Quad member countries themselves are locked in contests with
Beijing on some issue or other. China’s claim to the Japanese-controlled
Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea, its growing military assertiveness
as well as its unilateral decision to alter the status quo in the South
China Sea, where it has built and militarized manmade islands, have been a
sore point with Tokyo in recent times. All these were highlighted by
Japan's annual defense policy paper in July.

Japan’s new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga also minced no words when he told
Japanese media in the runup to the summit that the world is “possibly
becoming even more unpredictable and uncontrollable due to heightening
selfish nationalism and growing tension between the US and China.”

He said he will pursue diplomacy that is based on the Japan-U.S. alliance
as a cornerstone and "strategically promote the FOIP (Free and Open
Indo-Pacific)" while establishing stable relations with neighbors including
China and Russia. The "Free and Open Indo-Pacific, launched by Japan and
the US, is tailored primarily to keep China in check.

US Assistant Secretary of East Asian and Pacific Affairs David Stilwell
echoed Suga when he said that Quad’s aim is “to establish, promote and
secure Indo-Pacific principles, especially as People’s Republic of China
tactics, aggression, and coercion increase in the region.”

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticized the Chinese Communist Party’s
“reckless economic policies and its ruthless suppression of environmental
activists China irresponsibly exploits natural resources around the globe,
threatening the world’s economy.”

Australia-China bilateral ties too have been troubled, particularly in the
wake of Australia’s support of an independent inquiry into the origins of
the pandemic. Not known for its subtlety, Chinese state media dubbed
Australia as a “dog of the United States.” Beijing promptly suspended some
beef imports on a technicality and slapped tariffs of 80.5 percent on
Australian barley. China also launched an anti-dumping probe into
Australian wine imports.

India has faced a series of growing problems that have awakened it to the
need for multinational cooperation including China’s “string of pearls
strategy” of tightening relations all across India’s lower flank, in
Maldives, Sri Lanka and Pakistan as well as fomenting trouble along the
4,000 km Line of Actual Control between the two countries, most recently
with a border incident in Ladakh that took the lives of 20 Indian army
troops.

Beijing has always criticized Quad as an ‘exclusive clique’ out to scupper
its rise and has dubbed it as a great threat to global peace and security.
Petulance notwithstanding, Quad’s supporters hail the formation’s resolve
to keep Beijing’s continuing economic and military belligerence in check.
Against a backdrop of US President Donald Trump striking a blow at the
roots of internationalism and multilateral cooperation, synergy between
Quad’s members assumes greater significance, say analysts.

Many say the Quad signals a unified resolve to counter China’s growing
assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific. The Tokyo meeting could well be the
moment when Quad begins to turn from abstract idea to credible political
coalition, said an editorial in The Indian Express.

“What is transforming the Quad today from talk shop into a purposeful
strategic framework is China’s growing unilateralism and brazen effort to
establish regional and global dominance. China seems to believe that it can
keep pushing India on a range of issues and yet claim a veto over India’s
relations with other powers, including the US, Japan and Australia,” it
said.

Political analyst Darshana Baruah wrote in a recent paper for Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace that “The emergence of the Indo-Pacific
as a new geographic space — bringing together the Indian and the Pacific
Oceans — represents the new strategic reality of the twenty-first century.”

However, the grouping has its fair share of detractors too, who dismiss it
as “false dawn for the development of meaningful security arrangements
outside formal alliances in the Indo-Pacific.”

Analyst Salvatore Babones writes in The Wire that “…a free and open
Indo-Pacific doesn’t need the Quad. India has every incentive to counter
Chinese expansionism in South Asia, with or without a tenuous membership in
an ill-defined intergovernmental grouping. It might do so more effectively
with US military hardware, but it can more easily afford
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJwlkE1uxCAMhU8z7IggYTrJgkU3vUbEj5O4JZCC6TS3L-lIFpZs_J79OUOwpnzqIxVitUCe0eu7GoUUgnmtvBzvI8MyLxlgNxg05QrsqDagM4QpXgP9MA2KbRpgmMbJGT8pa5W0Tkppx8G7ZXob_f3OLpvZVI8QHWj4gXymCCzojegot-H91n-0eD6fnZyWlOlc8Ac6l_ZW7UUvWhKP9tAGvBZetlSD5xb4Zo7j5JR4AeAYPRpu68lzLQVN5IUrIbiJhAazy2YhvmNrBShNjaG-xNvNDynUY1Cd7ALlz_M3-G9ab0rsa9-VagsZ93Wtw7LGsEOBuEJO7cN6wfnvNDZzy3uNSOcM0dgA_oWNXpz_KdB5gI7wLAGIIL-KjeXYNhBqZM3NpyYatWkXNCPCCOEPrsSVkw>
Russian
equipment. Of course, the United States would like to develop India as a
market for its defense exports. But if US defense sales to India are the
main motivation for pushing the Quad, then Australia and Japan hardly need
to be involved.”

Be that as it may, some Indian analysts say the Quad offers India a good
opportunity to share a platform with like-minded countries who share their
wariness of China.

“India has always been mindful of upsetting China with a robust
participation in the Quad,” explains Dr. Shekhar Pandey, director at a
Delhi-based think tank. “However, China’s relentless aggression on all
fronts is forcing it to rethink its stance. The Chinese are refusing to
back off from the Ladakh frontier; they are continuing their military
partnership with Pakistan and have lost no opportunity to scupper India’s
membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. Even the bilateral trade
relations that are often touted as the bedrock of a strong bilateral
partnership is hogwash because China has failed to address the mounting
trade deficit.”

On the contrary, Pandey said, the Quad offers multiple benefits to New
Delhi including addressing the stability of regional and global supply
chains that are affected by the pandemic and helping bolster its own fight
against Covid by building alternative supply chains, collaborating on Covid
treatments, vaccines, and other related areas.

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