Indian warships began a week-long naval exercise off the coast of western Australia. The second AUSINDEX exercises, the first in the Indian Ocean, are aimed at increasing interoperability between Australian and Indian naval forces, executing complex naval manoeuvres. The first AUSINDEX was held in the Bay of Bengal in 2015. The bilateral exercises come on the back of two apparently contradictory developments.
As the only countries with the largest Indian Ocean coastline, Australia and India are natural partners in maritime security, particularly in the region where India has its greatest strategic interests. In the past couple of years, the two countries have ramped up security cooperation beyond mil-to-mil exercises. Over the years, the two countries have cleared political hurdles created by the nuclear deal with uranium shipments expected to start in the coming months and Australia is one of the favourite destinations for Indian students.
India turned down Australia’s request to join the trilateral Malabar exercises. In its previous iteration in 2007, Australia was the first to pull out of the “quadrilateral” between US, India, Japan and Australia after China demarcated all four participants. Since then Malabar has been an India-US exercise, with Japan being admitted only in 2016.
Source: TOI