China’s ‘Maritime Bases’ in the IOR: A Chronicle of Dominance Foretold

Abhijit Singh
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… Continue reading China’s ‘Maritime Bases’ in the IOR: A Chronicle of Dominance Foretold read more
Volume:39
Issue:3
Commentaries

After a successful visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Colombo in March, Indian policy elite are hopeful that the new Sri Lankan government will roll-back some of the geopolitical concessions made by the Rajapaksa regime to Beijing, thereby restoring India’s primacy in its near neighbourhood. India’s policy elite are hopeful that Maithripala Sirisena, the new president, will roll back some of the geopolitical concessions made by his predecessor to Beijing, thereby restoring Indian primacy in its near neighbourhood.

New Delhi’s maritime analysts, however, remain a worried lot. Ever since a PLA-Navy (PLA-N) submarine docked twice in Colombo last year, Indian sea-power thinkers have been considering the prospect of a permanent Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean. Since November 2014, there have been strong rumours of a possible PLA-N base in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR). Media reports have indicated that Beijing was discussing a plan for multiple basing facilities in the Indian Ocean. An alarmed New Delhi even revived an old proposal for an Indian Ocean Zone of Peace—all in the hope that it would dissuade China from appropriating valuable space in its ‘strategic backyard’.