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Editorial Topic

India’s Balancing Act in the Bay of Bengal

Brief Context

Indias maritime ambitions in the Bay of Bengal face challenges despite its progress in ports and regional trade.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/International Relations; India & Its Neighbours

Context

  • India’s maritime ambitions in the Bay of Bengal face challenges despite its progress in ports and regional trade.

About Bay of Bengal: Strategic Geography

  • The Bay of Bengal is bounded by India’s eastern coastline, and is India’s maritime gateway to Southeast Asia.
  • It connects the Indian Ocean to the Strait of Malacca, one of the world’s most critical chokepoints. 
  • It serves as the maritime periphery of India’s Andaman and Nicobar Islands, which host strategic military infrastructure and surveillance capabilities.
  • It was seen as  a ‘natural sphere of influence’, by India that shapes its security doctrines and foreign policy.

Significance of Bay of Bengal For India

  • Trade & Connectivity: It serves as a vital maritime corridor linking South Asia with Southeast Asia, facilitating global trade and supply chains.
  • It includes infrastructure, trade policies including development of ports, logistics for seamless economic integration with neighboring countries.
  • Geopolitical Influence: India’s presence in the Bay of Bengal strengthens its regional leadership, countering external influences and ensuring maritime stability.
  • Energy & Resources: The bay is rich in natural resources, including oil, gas, and fisheries, making it crucial for economic growth and energy security.
  • Security & Stability: India plays a key role in maintaining maritime security in the region, given rising concerns over piracy, illegal fishing, and transnational crime.
  • Environmental & Climate Impact: The bay’s coastal ecosystems are vital for biodiversity and disaster resilience, requiring sustainable policies to protect marine life and coastal communities.

India & Countries in Bay of Bengal

  • Bangladesh: It is India’s closest maritime neighbor and is highly impacted by shifts in India’s trade and infrastructure policies.
  • Myanmar: India’s engagement with Myanmar is crucial for both regional connectivity and security.
  • Nepal & Bhutan: They rely on India for access to Bay of Bengal ports.
  • Sri Lanka: It plays a significant role in regional shipping routes.
  • Thailand & Southeast Asia: India’s policies influence BIMSTEC partnerships, which include Thailand.

Key Concerns and Challenges

  • Geopolitical Competition: China’s deep-water port constructions in Kyaukpyu (Myanmar), Hambantota (Sri Lanka), and Chittagong (Bangladesh) pose strategic challenges.
  • Maritime Security Threats: The region faces rising threats from piracy, illegal fishing, arms trafficking, and natural disasters.
    • India’s ability to coordinate maritime surveillance and security with littoral states is often hampered by capacity gaps and political sensitivities.
  • Inconsistent Trade Policies: India’s withdrawal of transshipment privileges for Bangladesh raised concerns about the predictability of its trade commitments.
  • Environmental Vulnerabilities: The Bay of Bengal is highly susceptible to climate change impacts — rising sea levels, cyclones, and coastal erosion.

India’s Balancing Act

  • Security Architecture:
    • The Indian Navy’s Eastern Naval Command and the Tri-Service Command in the Andaman Islands serve as deterrents and rapid deployment centers in the eastern maritime theatre.
    • MILAN Naval Exercises: Participants from Southeast Asia, Africa, and the West, hosted in the Bay by the Indian Navy.
    • IORA (Indian Ocean Rim Association): India promotes a vision of cooperative maritime governance, tackling issues like piracy, illegal fishing, and environmental degradation.
    • QUAD Alliance: It signals India’s alignment with like-minded democracies on freedom of navigation and rule-based order.
  • Economic Engagement:
    • Act East Policy: Strengthening ties with Southeast Asian nations through trade agreements and infrastructure projects, reinforcing India’s strategic presence in the region.
    • Security and Growth for All in the Region (SAGAR): It is a flagship initiative of India’s maritime diplomacy, focusing on capacity-building, economic ties, and cooperative security.
    • Regional Connectivity: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal (BBIN) and BIMSTEC frameworks (including recently signed BIMSTEC Maritime Transport Cooperation Agreement), which include economic corridors and energy diplomacy in the Bay region.
    • Infrastructure Development: Initiatives like the Kaladan Multimodal Transit Transport Project in Myanmar and India-Bangladesh coastal shipping enhances India’s trade leverage.
    • Sagarmala: It aims to modernize ports, improve coastal logistics, and enhance maritime trade efficiency, benefiting India’s eastern seaboard.
    • Transshipment & Trade Facilitation: India has invested in port infrastructure to facilitate smoother trade flows.
  • Environmental Diplomacy: India is promoting Blue Economy cooperation and climate-resilient infrastructure in littoral states. It includes:
    • Hydrographic surveys and disaster management training.
    • Indian assistance in satellite data sharing for monsoon and cyclone predictions.
    • Promoting green shipping corridors and renewable energy projects in island nations like the Maldives.

Way Forward

  • Reinforce Multilateralism: A stable, rules-based framework aims to bolster India’s credibility as a benign power.
  • Transparent Trade Practices: India could establish clearer, more predictable trade policies, especially with neighbors like Bangladesh and Myanmar.
  • Joint Infrastructure Projects: Co-developing ports, digital corridors, and energy grids with partner countries ensures shared benefits and reduces dependency on extra-regional players like China.
    • It turns competition into collaboration.
  • Disaster-Resilient Development: Investing in joint coastal resilience programs — like cyclone early warning systems or climate-smart fisheries — can address a common threat and foster goodwill across borders.
  • Security Cooperation Without Overreach: India can promote maritime security through joint exercises and shared protocols, while remaining sensitive to sovereignty concerns.
Daily Mains Practice Question
[Q] How can India balance its strategic ambitions and regional responsibilities in the Bay of Bengal while maintaining trust and cooperation with its neighboring countries?

Source: TH

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