Trump`s frequent use of the term "Indo-Pacific" as a replacement for "Asia-Pacific" — the more widely used label in diplomatic and business circles — revealed the level of importance Washington places on New Delhi.
During a speech in Vietnam, the U. leader highlighted his desire for a "truly free and open Indo-Pacific," repeating the term after Secretary of Defense James Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson used it in earlier remarks.
The label`s usage underscores "India`s geographic connection to the Asia-Pacific as a cornerstone of the Trump administration`s strategic thinking," Alyssa Ayres, senior South Asia fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said in a note this week.
The "free and open" part of Trump`s statement also adds an ideological aspect to regional security and was widely seen as a reference to Beijing`s behavior in the South China Sea. New Delhi, which isn`t one of America`s treaty allies but nonetheless enjoys a robust bilateral relationship based on shared democratic values, has a significant role to play in that.
"Like it or not, or hide it or not, the term Indo-Pacific now seems to be a means of including India in the military calculations of U. strategy in the Pacific," Manoj Joshi, distinguished fellow at think tank Observer Research Foundation, said in a recent note.
Trump wants to make India the core of his Asia strategy — but he needs to know a few things first
Dramelin
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