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Foreign Policy Watch: Indo-Pacific and QUAD

[30th May 2026] The Hindu OpED: Different directions: On the Quad, Foreign Ministers’ Meeting 

PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2020] Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad)’ is transforming itself into a trade bloc from a military alliance, in present times. Discuss.Linkage: The PYQ is directly linked to the article as it examines the Quad’s evolution from a security-focused platform to cooperation in critical minerals, infrastructure, maritime security, supply chains, and technology.

Mentor’s Comment

The recent Quad Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in New Delhi reaffirmed the grouping’s commitment to a “Free and Open Indo-Pacific” (FOIP), maritime security, critical minerals, and resilient supply chains. Yet, the meeting also exposed a deeper contradiction: while the Quad seeks strategic coherence, its members increasingly pursue divergent geopolitical priorities. The issue gains importance as India prepares for a larger Indo-Pacific role while simultaneously managing strategic autonomy amid growing U.S.-China rivalry.

What is Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad)?

The Quad is a diplomatic partnership between Australia, India, Japan, and the United States committed to supporting a peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific that is inclusive and resilient.

Why was the Quad established, and how has it evolved institutionally?

  1. Origins in Humanitarian Cooperation: The Quad emerged after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, when India, Japan, Australia, and the U.S. coordinated disaster relief operations.
  2. Initial Formation (2007): The grouping formally began at the official level amid concerns over maritime security and regional stability in the Indo-Pacific.
  3. Temporary Dormancy: Strategic hesitation and Chinese opposition weakened momentum after 2007, leading to institutional stagnation.
  4. Revival (2017): Re-emerged amid concerns over China’s assertive maritime posture, militarisation in the South China Sea, and supply chain vulnerabilities.
  5. Leadership Upgrade (2021): Transitioned into leader-level summits, reflecting institutional consolidation and strategic confidence.
  6. India’s Chairmanship (2024-26): India assumed the Quad Chair in 2024 but has faced delays in convening the summit due to diplomatic tensions and scheduling disruptions.

Why is the Quad increasingly important in the Indo-Pacific strategic architecture?

  1. Maritime Security: Strengthens regional monitoring through the Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA) to track illegal maritime activities.
  2. Surveillance Coordination: Expands operational cooperation through the Indo-Pacific Maritime Surveillance Collaboration (IPMSC) and a Quad-at-Sea Ship Observer Mission.
  3. Critical Minerals Cooperation: Reduces excessive dependence on concentrated supply chains, particularly concerning China’s dominance in rare earth processing.
  4. Infrastructure Development: Marks a shift from dialogue to implementation through the first-ever Quad infrastructure project involving port development in Fiji.
  5. Energy Security: Improves resilience against geopolitical disruptions affecting fuel and strategic supply routes.
  6. Rules-Based Order: Reaffirms commitment to Freedom and Openness in the Indo-Pacific (FOIP), sovereignty, territorial integrity, and adherence to international law, especially UNCLOS.

How do divergent strategic interests constrain the Quad’s effectiveness?

  1. China Perception Gap: India prioritises border security and strategic autonomy, Japan focuses on East China Sea tensions, Australia emphasises economic-security balancing, while the U.S. treats the Quad as a pillar of Indo-Pacific containment.
  2. West Asia Contradictions: Members expressed concern regarding Iranian actions but avoided direct criticism of the U.S.-Israel actions, exposing selective strategic positioning.
  3. Russia Factor: U.S. geopolitical priorities increasingly diverge from India’s long-standing strategic engagement with Russia.
  4. Consultation Deficit: Limited coordination during crises such as the West Asia conflict raises questions regarding the Quad’s effectiveness as a consultative mechanism.
  5. Asymmetric Threat Priorities: Security concerns vary significantly across members, weakening strategic convergence.

Does U.S. unilateralism weaken the credibility of the Quad?

  1. Policy Inconsistency: Independent U.S. decisions regarding China, Iran, tariffs, sanctions, and security interventions create uncertainty among partners.
  2. Strategic Ambiguity: Simultaneous competition and engagement with China generate mixed signals regarding the Quad’s long-term direction.
  3. Consultative Weakness: Major geopolitical decisions taken without Quad-wide consultation undermine institutional trust.
  4. Regional Perception Challenge: Indo-Pacific countries increasingly assess whether the Quad represents collective regional security or U.S.-led balancing.

Why are delays in Quad summits raising concerns about institutional relevance?

  1. Pannun-Nijjar Fallout (2024): India-U.S. tensions affected diplomatic momentum and delayed summit scheduling.
  2. Trade and Tariff Frictions (2025): Disagreements over sanctions, trade measures, and Operation Sindoor claims disrupted plans for a Delhi summit.
  3. Leadership Discontinuity: India may transfer the Chair to Australia without hosting a summit, potentially signalling reduced momentum.
  4. Institutional Credibility: Regular summits remain essential for sustaining political commitment and strategic continuity.

Can the Quad move beyond strategic signalling toward functional cooperation?

  1. Climate Cooperation: Supports resilient infrastructure and climate adaptation in vulnerable Indo-Pacific states.
  2. Health Security: Enhances vaccine partnerships and emergency preparedness frameworks.
  3. Debt and Infrastructure Financing: Provides alternatives to debt-heavy development models in the Indo-Pacific.
  4. Supply Chain Resilience: Diversifies production ecosystems for semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, and strategic minerals.
  5. Technology Partnerships: Facilitates cooperation in critical and emerging technologies.

What should India’s approach toward the Quad be?

  1. Strategic Autonomy: Maintains engagement without entering formal military alliances.
  2. Issue-Based Cooperation: Prioritises maritime security, supply chains, infrastructure, and technology instead of alliance politics.
  3. Regional Balancing: Ensures Indo-Pacific stability while preserving ties with Russia, West Asia, ASEAN, and the Global South.
  4. Institutional Deepening: Strengthens continuity through regular summits, implementation mechanisms, and operational coordination.

Conclusion

The Quad’s challenge lies not in institutional survival but strategic coherence. Maritime cooperation, critical minerals, infrastructure, and technology partnerships continue to provide functional relevance. However, divergent threat perceptions and unilateral geopolitical actions risk weakening collective purpose. Sustained consultation, regular summits, and issue-based cooperation remain essential to ensure that the Quad evolves as a credible Indo-Pacific platform rather than a forum shaped by competing national priorities.


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