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  • The Quad is a very unique piece of strategic diplomatic engineering.

  • When people learn about the history of the Quad, they find that there's a lot of surprises in there.

  • The Quad has had, essentially, a set of activities around building a favorable balance of power

  • that can deter bad behavior in the region.

  • At the Shangri-La Dialogue, senior defense officials have gathered to talk about the

  • Asia Pacific region's most pressing security challenges.

  • The world has changed since the last Shangri-La Dialogue in 2019.

  • Geopolitical tensions in the South China Sea remain, while a global pandemic and Russia's

  • invasion of Ukraine have added fuel to the fire.

  • China isn't pleased with some of the developments in the region,

  • such as the multinational group called the Quad.

  • The real goal of the U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy is to establish an Indo-Pacific version of NATO.

  • So, what is the Quad, and what does it mean for countries in the region?

  • The Quad, or the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, comprises four big economies,

  • the United States, India, Australia and Japan.

  • Over the years, it's been imprecisely dubbed as the 'Asian NATO,' or 'a security alliance,'

  • terms which the Quad partners have denied or dismissed as 'misleading.'

  • CNBC managing editor Ted Kemp is the author of a project

  • focusing on the future of the Quad in Asia-Pacific.

  • There is definitely a perception that the Quad is some sort of Indo-Pacific parallel to NATO,

  • but that's really not the case. Because it has no specific mandate, they can make economic issues,

  • issues around Covid or even global warming part of the mandate of the Quad, and in fact, they are doing that.

  • The four countries first came together after the 2004 Indian ocean tsunami

  • to help with rescue and reconstruction assistance.

  • As recovery efforts tapered down, the group was disbanded.

  • In 2007, Shinzo Abe, who was then Japan's Prime Minister,

  • called for anarc of freedom and prosperityaround the Pacific and the Indian Oceans.

  • Shinzo Abe proved very far-sighted in the way that he made use of the Quad framework

  • to begin to build something more permanent.

  • If there is one individual who brought the Quad to life, it's him.

  • As China got wind of their first joint meeting that year, it became concerned about their intentions.

  • Beijing subsequently lodged formal protests against the four countries.

  • China saw the writing on the wall.

  • Individual Quad members were not talking about this being a response to China, but Beijing knew.

  • The problem for China is that the more it has protested, and especially the more aggressively

  • it protested, the more it strengthens the Quad.

  • Australia, Japan and Singapore were invited to join India and the U.S. for Exercise Malabar

  • in the later part of 2007 – naval wargames that would later become

  • a permanent feature for the Quad countries.

  • In the years that followed, the future of the group was tied

  • to the fortunes of politicians in the four countries.

  • And then Shinzo Abe left office, and the Quad effectively fell off the map.

  • By then, the political appetite to continue with the Quad was waning.

  • Two months after Abe's resignation, Australia had a new Prime Minister in Kevin Rudd,

  • who withdrew the country from the security dialogue.

  • The U.S. also had more pressing concerns then, such as Iran and North Korea.

  • This coincided with a state visit by India's then-Prime Minister to Hu Jintao's China.

  • It's very important to note in that respect that India really sets the pace when it comes

  • to considering the explicit mention of China as a security item on the agenda of the Quad.

  • Of the four countries in the Quad, India is the only one which shares,

  • really, a land border with China and a long one and contested one at that.

  • This leads India to have a particularly cautious and nuanced approach.

  • We are definitely a part of the Quad.

  • It is certainly not a military alliance as far as the Indian Navy is concerned

  • and as far as India is concerned.

  • We would like to cooperate in any sort of eventuality where our common interests are

  • addressed, mostly, I would say, below the conflict threshold.

  • Despite inactivity on the political front, the Quad nations continued with their military exercises.

  • During that period, the U.S. was also pursuing a “pivot to Asia.”

  • Then, Xi Jinping's era begins in 2012, and quickly the world's democracies learn that

  • there isn't going to be some sort of democratic reformation that occurs over time within China.

  • Shinzo Abe then comes back into office right behind Xi and kicks it right back up again.

  • And that's how we basically evolved to the Quad that we have today.

  • As China under President Xi Jinping pursued a more aggressive foreign policy,

  • tensions were brewing in the South China Sea and its borders.

  • Japan's Abe was also bent on reviving his idea of anarc of freedom and prosperity,”

  • this time called theAsia's Democratic Security Diamond.”

  • What the Quad countries individually and collectively have been concerned about is about China's behavior.

  • Whether that is in the South China Sea, the militarization of the islands there.

  • The harassment of claimants in that region, or it is in the East China Sea.

  • Or, for instance, at the China-India border.

  • They believe that these spaces, China has taken unilateral moves to change the status quo,

  • sometimes with the use or the threat of the use of force.

  • They also think that Beijing has been using its economic influence for coercion, for instance, against Australia.

  • The wheels were set in motion once again in 2017 when senior officials from the Quad nations

  • met on the sidelines of the ASEAN and East Asia Summits.

  • Since then, officials from the four countries have met regularly,

  • culminating in the first Leaders Summit in 2021, held virtually due to the pandemic.

  • The Quad leaders then met in-person later that year in Washington.

  • So how can the Quad be an effective counterbalance to China's dominance in the region?

  • The Quad is essentially a group of like-minded countries who share a vision of the region,

  • of the Indo-Pacific, that they'd like to see, a free, open, inclusive, secure, prosperous region,

  • where countries are free to choose and where rules-based order prevails.

  • The difference between a rules-based order and a coercive one, is one where the rules

  • are actually followed by the bigger powers and the smaller powers alike.

  • Whereas a coercive one is where some countries get to dictate terms and get to use their

  • power and influence to set the terms alone and for their own needs.

  • They also have a view that this vision is being challenged through various means,

  • for example, to put it very bluntly, by coercive steps from China.

  • And they have decided that they alone cannot tackle these challenges.

  • They cannot offer alternatives all by themselves.

  • We will be steady and consistent, looking for avenues of cooperation where they exist

  • while recognizing China's growing power and the manner in which that is reshaping our region.

  • We will also stand by our friends as they uphold their rights, and that's especially

  • important as the PRC adopts a more coercive and aggressive approach to its territorial claims.

  • So, I think it's not China's power per se or its rise.

  • After all, the four Quad countries, if China is not their largest trading partner,

  • it's pretty close up there.

  • They have their own ties with China.

  • The idea is to provide choice, to provide stability, and to bring resources to the region

  • that otherwise might not have been available.

  • Now, it is incumbent upon the Quad to show that they can deliver.

  • But is there room for the Quad to expand, to become the Quint, perhaps?

  • I think a year ago, there was still some question, but I think that debate has now ebbed.

  • At the start of 2020 when the Covid-19 pandemic was raging worldwide, Vietnam, South Korea

  • and New Zealand joined the Quad members for a discussion on controlling the pandemic.

  • Countries like South Korea, for example, can plug in and say we want to work,

  • not on all the Quad issues, but certain agenda items.

  • Or Vietnam, for example, working on the public health side.

  • Other countries might be interested in working with the Quad in maritime security.

  • And so, I think the flexibility, both in terms of agenda, as well as who you partner with,

  • how you partner, is, I think, something that the Quad should maintain because I think that

  • will make it more responsive and adaptive to the region's needs.

  • If you look at Southeast Asia, if you look at the Southeast Asian nations,

  • there's a broad spectrum of willingness to work with the Quad or seeing an advantage to working

  • with the Quad versus not seeing an advantage.

  • There is no single Southeast Asian take on the Quad.

  • We're looking a lot more at like-minded associations, and there's nothing preventing

  • the Quad from doing Quad Plus arrangements with single countries like France, like the UK.

  • It's fitting within a new order, which is emerging, which includes the AUKUS Pact.

  • AUKUS is a nuclear submarine and security deal between Australia, the U.S. and the U.K., signed in 2021.

  • The AUKUS Pact is a straight up military deal designed to strengthen Australia's naval deterrent.

  • It's not one-off, but it feels more one-off than the Quad,

  • which is a more open framework and one with greater staying power.

  • It may perhaps be a little ironic that |the strength of the Quad lies in its informal nature.

  • Because the Quad is not an alliance, its four diverse members

  • have the flexibility to pick and choose what they'll work on together.

  • The Quad is one of many coalitions and mini-laterals in the region.

  • We're moving from the hub-and-spoke model in Asia to a spiderweb model,

  • where it's not just all roads lead to Washington or all roads lead to Beijing.

  • It is a spiderweb where the various nodes are connected in different ways to each other.

  • Even as the Quad nations have intensified their cooperation, it hasn't been entirely smooth sailing.

  • India's refusal to condemn Russia for its invasion of Ukraine has put it at odds with its Quad partners.

  • Preserving unity within the group may be a delicate balancing act.

  • In April 2022, India refused to allow Japanese military planes transporting

  • aid supplies to displaced Ukrainians to land in the country.

  • How have they been able to get around these disagreements within the Quad countries?

  • One thing the differences over Russia have highlighted is that the Quad is like-minded,

  • but it's not same-minded on everything.

  • While India hasn't condemned Russia by name,

  • it has condemned actions that violate those principles and rules.

  • The disagreement, I think, comes in, how do you tackle those violations?

  • The way they talk about it is we respect that we are not the same country,

  • and that one country will not dictate terms to others.

  • That a diversity of views is possible.

  • I think we very much saw a grouping which was capable of mutually sidestepping that difference

  • and focusing on practical points of convergence and, indeed, practical cooperation.

  • These areas of cooperation include infrastructure development, climate initiatives

  • and a working group on vaccines.

  • Japan comes in with a wealthquite literallyof financing, which does help a country

  • like India, which is a leading producer of vaccines, be able to come together with Australia

  • and the U.S. to distribute vaccines for relief from the pandemic, as a common good.

  • So I think the Quad has found its legitimacy, validity, and its purpose in the broader re-composition

  • of the strategic landscape in the Indo-Pacific.

  • At the recent Quad leaders' meeting in Tokyo, we confirmed that the Quad will seek to extend

  • more than US$50 billion of further infrastructure assistance

  • and investment in the Indo-Pacific over the next five years.

  • The future of the Quad, to a very large extent, is going to depend on the

  • domestic political environment in the United States.

  • Because if there's one threat to the Quad that's existential, it's the U.S. withdrawing from it.

  • Like all institutions, and like all bureaucracies, the Quad, the longer it continues to thrive,

  • does it get to escape velocity and get to a point where it can survive any of this stuff

  • that might arise domestically and in these countries' politics?

  • I don't know, we'll see.

The Quad is a very unique piece of strategic diplomatic engineering.

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