Abhijit Singh

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Archive data: Person was Research Fellow at IDSA from July 2013 to February 2016
Joined IDSA
July 31, 2013
Expertise
Maritime Issues, Littoral Security
Education
B.Sc
Current Project
The Indo-Pacific – Towards a Comprehensive Maritime Security Architecture
Background
Commissioned in the Executive Branch of the Indian Navy in July 1994, he is a specialist in Gunnery and Weapons Systems and has served on-board frontline ships. During his tenure with the Flag Officer Doctrines and Concepts, he was actively associated in the formulation and articulation of naval doctrines and operational concepts. As the Officer-in-Charge of the Indian Navy’s History Division in 2008, he assisted the late Vice Admiral GM Hiranandani (Retd) in the authorship of the third volume of Indian Naval History, “Transition to Guardianship”. Prior to joining the IDSA, he was a Research Fellow at the National Maritime Foundation (NMF) for 3 years where he researched and wrote extensively on littoral security and geo-political events in West Asia and South Asia.
Select Publications
China’s ‘Maritime Bases’ in the IOR: A Chronicle of Dominance Foretold, Strategic Analysis, May 2015
Climate Change and Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean Region, Journal of Defence Studies, January 2015
Indian Ocean Challenges – a Quest for Cooperative Solutions, Edited book for NMF / KW Publishers, Feb 2013
Dark Chill in the Persian Gulf – Iran’s regular and Irregular Maritime Forces, Book under Publication at NMF
The Indian Navy’s New Expeditionary Outlook, Occasional paper for Observer Research Foundation (ORF)

Research Fellow
E-mail: abhijit[dot]singh27[at]gmail[dot]com
Phone:+91 11 2671 7983

Publication

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Sino-Indian Dynamics in Littoral Asia – The View from New Delhi

China’s growing stakes in the Indian Ocean, in particular the People’s Liberation Army Navy’s (PLAN) expanding profile in South Asia, has caused deep concern in India, where many believe Chinese naval deployments have shrunk New Delhi’s traditional sphere of influence. China’s inroads in India’s strategic backwaters— in particular, growing PLAN submarine forays—are viewed with suspicion in New Delhi, where many are convinced of the need for a counter-China strategy.

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India’s Submarine Modernisation Plans

India’s future submarine fleet operations are likely to involve SSKs and SSNs operating in the littoral spaces, in a strategic environment sanitized and protected by SSBNs. If New Delhi can ensure compliance with present construction deadlines, it could put its submarine modernization plans back on track.

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The Escalating South China Sea Dispute – Lessons for India

For Indian observers, it is useful to extrapolate known Chinese position in the Indian Ocean Region and assess Beijing’s likely strategic behaviour. Indian policymakers might well recognise the fact that once China finds itself in a position of maritime advantage, diplomatic engagement has limited utility as a bargaining tactic.

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Reenergising India-Africa Maritime Relations

Africa needs not only maritime administration frameworks and the local capacity to enforce regulations, but also a model for sustainable blue-economy development that does not result in the destruction of its natural maritime habitat. In this, it can use India’s assistance.

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Malabar 2015: Strategic Power Play in the Indian Ocean

Earlier last week, India and the United States held the 19th edition of Exercise Malabar, a joint naval exercise, in the Bay of Bengal. This year, the interactions were an improvement over previous engagements, owing not only to the closely coordinated nature of combat drills, but also because of the presence of Japanese navy that took part in an Indian Ocean iteration of the Malabar for the first time in eight years. Importantly, the interaction has transitioned from being an India-U.S. bilateral engagement into a formal structured trilateral exercise, which maritime analysts say may be aimed at countering growing Chinese military presence in the Indian Ocean.

An abiding symbol of warming strategic relations between the U.S. and India, Exercise-Malabar is the most wide-ranging professional interaction the Indian Navy has with any of its partner maritime forces. Even so, the decision to include Japan as a permanent member came as a surprise, considering that New Delhi has for long resisted overtures from the U.S. to broaden the scope of the interaction.

As expected, China made its displeasure apparent, with the Global Times cautioning India against attempts at building an anti-China coalition in the Indo-Pacific region. Chinese analysts believe that India’s “multi-vectored diplomacy” does not allow New Delhi the option of confronting Chinese military power in the Indian Ocean. Even so, India did raise the tempo of its participation in the Malabar, perhaps at the behest of the United States, whose deployment of the aircraft carrier (USS Roosevelt) and a nuclear attack submarine (USS City of Corpus Christi) subtly pressured New Delhi into sending the INS Sindhudhwaj (Kilo class submarine) and a P8 long-range patrol aircraft for the exercises.

More worrying for China was the inclusion of Japan in an India-U.S. naval exercise, a move some observers say revives the prospects of a “maritime quadrilateral.” In its original avatar in 2007, the “quad” – consisting of the navies of the U.S., India, Japan and Australia – had drawn strong criticism from Beijing. So strident, in fact, had China’s reaction been that to maintain cordial relations with Beijing India and Australia had been forced to clarify their position. Almost a decade later, however, growing PLA-N aggressiveness in the South China Sea seems to have reversed the consensus on keeping the peace with China.

Last month, the Indian Navy (IN) embarked on a much publicized week-long maritime engagement with the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) in the Bay of Bengal – the first meeting of the two navies for a bilateral operational exchange in the Indian Ocean. The composition of the participating contingents – especially the presence of a Collins-class submarine and a P8 maritime surveillance aircraft – suggested an anti-China focus. Significantly, the AUSINDEX was held within weeks of Australia’s trilateral engagement with Japan and the U.S. in the Southwestern Pacific in July, raising the possibility of a potential alliance of democracies to counter Chinese military activity in the Indian Ocean Region.

Speculation about an emerging “security quartet” in the Asia-Pacific gained further momentum after the visit of the Australian Defence Minister Kevin Andrews to New Delhi in early-September. Addressing a public gathering, Andrews observed that the current Australian government was open to participating in a four-sided security initiative with the U.S., Japan and India, provided it were invited by New Delhi to do so. A few weeks later, Richard Verma, the U.S. ambassador, seemed to echo that sentiment when he urged New Delhi to assist the U.S. in securing the global commons – affecting a transition from “balancing power” to “leading power.”

To be sure, neither statement made any mention of a Chinese maritime presence in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR). Yet, their central message was clear: A strong maritime relationship with India is the key to the preserving the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific region. While the U.S. and its allies remain prepared to share the bulk of the burden of “securing the Asian commons” – as the U.S. ambassador seemed to suggest – India is expected to protect the sub-continental littorals from growing Chinese influence.

It isn’t as if New Delhi has not considered of the implications of formalizing multilateral maritime exercises in the Indian Ocean. India has good reason to be wary of Chinese military presence in the IOR. Since May this year, when a Chinese Yuan-class submarine visited Karachi, New Delhi has been worried over the possibility of a Chinese takeover of its maritime neighborhood. In the garb of anti-piracy operations, Indian observers believe, Chinese submarines have been performing specific stand-alone missions – a process meant to lay the groundwork for a rotating but permanent deployment in the IOR. More importantly, Indian observers say the deployment pattern of PLAN submarines reveals a plan to secure access in contested spaces, facilitating greater “open-seas” presence – an operational imperative outlined in Beijing’s 2015 defense white paper. That such a tactic is at work was corroborated by India’s Andaman and Nicobar Command (ANC) recently, when it reported an alarming rise in attempts by Chinese naval ships to get close to Indian territorial waters.

Equally significant for New Delhi is the China’s growing amphibious warfare capability. After Beijing announced its defense white paper in May 2015, recent PLA-N exercises have had an amphibious component, including ground assault drills by marine forces. Chinese naval contingents have conducted a series of island defense exercises this year, deploying dedicated amphibious task-forces in the Western and Far-Eastern Pacific. Even PLA-N anti-piracy deployments in the Indian Ocean have included the Type-71 class amphibious vessels, suggesting an aspiration for greater littoral presence. Indian analysts point out that China’s growing expeditionary capability can only be counteracted by the United States’ substantial amphibious assets, which is why the Malabar this year is reported to have laid emphasis on littoral operations.

India’s reliance on the United States to curtail China’s Indian Ocean ambitions, however, has a significant downside. With the U.S. Navy now conducting maritime patrols within the 12-mile territorial zone around China’s recently reclaimed islands in the disputed Spratly archipelago, maritime tensions in the Pacific are at an all-time high. In response to Washington’s rebalance to Asia, Beijing has hardened its maritime posture in the Western Pacific. From an Indian perspective, the United States’ endorsement of “freedom of navigation” patrols in the South China Sea might leave China with little option but to expand its military maritime presence in the wider Indo-Pacific – if only to show the U.S. and its allies that Chinese maritime power cannot be contained within China’s near-seas.

As India reorients its maritime posture to cater to the new realities of Asia, there is a realization that maritime stability remains hostage to the growing overlap of the strategic ambitions of regional states. India’s maritime managers are acutely conscious of the likelihood of future contingencies arising out of greater strategic imbalances in the Asian commons. The Malabar-2015 and AUSINDEX, therefore, need to be seen as part of a broader collective effort to preserve the balance of maritime power in the Indo-Pacific littorals.

This article was originally published in The Diplomat.

  • Published: 28 October, 2015