Rajeshwari Krishnamurthy and Richard Ghiasy

The transitioning security order in the Indo-Pacific

The Transitioning Security Order in the Indo-Pacific is report that analyses the changing the security order/s of the region and provides some actionable recommendations for India-EU collaboration towards a cooperative security community in the Indo-Pacific.

The ‘Indo-Pacific’ simultaneously represents a geography, a concept, a process, and an outcome. Yet, how the construct influences security order and the ordering process in the region has received limited attention, thus encouraging this topic’s expansion. Moreover, there is no definitional consensus on what a ‘security order’ entails. What however, is clear is that as geopolitical tension increases across the region and the world there is much at stake and role for the region.

Regional stakeholders’ actions reflect this calculus. For instance, what is underway is not a linear power-balancing effort involving a collective of entities working in concert merely to deter China. On the contrary, regional stakeholders are steering the process in directions they find manageable, reasonable, and beneficial to their respective national interests.

So where does the India-EU partnership figure in this matrix?

Indian and EU capabilities to produce a de-escalatory effect on Sino-US contestation are limited and are likely remain so for the foreseeable future. However, the construct provides valuable impetus to the India-EU politico-security partnership and a compelling opportunity to collaboratively temper the ordering process as co-shapers rather than passive participants. The two are uniquely positioned to foster a third way based on cooperative, consultative approaches as an alternative to the US’ more binarily-inclined strategies and China’s opaque security visions. Crucially, both are well-placed to engage proponents and critics.

Based on these considerations, this policy report written by Rajeshwari Krishnamurthy of The Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) and Richard Ghiasy of the Leiden Asia Centre (LAC), does three things:

  • Traces how the construct induces transitions in the security order/s of the Indo-Pacific
  • Contextualises how these transitions interact with Indian and EU security interests
  • Offers 10 simple but actionable ways to optimise India-EU collaboration for a cooperative security community in the Indo-Pacific.

Download the full study and policy brief here:


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