A report titled 'Australia, India and the United States: The Challenge of forging new alignments in the Indo-Pacific' released this month byUS Studies Centre at University of Sydney,has suggestedAustralia to adopt a new approach towardsIndia.
The report said the relations between thetwo nations, which were seen as'the odd couple' ofthe Indian Ocean, are changing and evolving recently.
"Australia has begun to see India as an important partner. Australia's evolving view of India is intimately linked to its strategic reorientation towards the Indo-Pacific," it said, adding Australia, India and Japan could anchor an alignment of Indo-Pacific democracies that could also include other democracies in the region.
The report said that whileIndia was likely to become a major security partner for Australia in Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia,Australia needed to work outside its "normal comfort zone" of security partnerships, having regard to India's unique strategic perspectives and traditions.
It said thatAustralia should consider how its relationship with India fittedwith ANZUS (Australia, New Zealand, United States Security Treaty) alliance and theUS-led alliance system and alsofacilitate India's participation in a web of security relationships in Asia Pacific, as an important contribution to regional stability.
"In the long term, Australia needs to look towards an
evolving Indian Ocean order in which the United States, India, Australia and others will all play significant roles," it further said.
"Building an Australia-India-US security partnership in the Indian Ocean Australia should promote trilateral security cooperation with the USand India with a primary focus on Indian Ocean," it said.
The report also highlighted key areas for trilateral Australia-India-US security cooperation including joint exercises at sea and on land, shared use of training facilities in northern Australia to promote multilateral interoperability among regional partners, building a system of shared maritime domain awareness in Indian Ocean, including shared access to Australian and Indian facilities.
"Australian defence officials may look for immediate returns or reciprocity in the relationship with India, which is often lacking," it noted.
Ondefence cooperation,thereport said, "Australia would also benefit from the conclusion of a logistics sharing arrangement in the nature of the arrangements India has with Japan and the US."
It also noted that while Australia was keen to ink thelong overduefree trade agreement with India, it needed toapproach its economic relationshipdifferently from other Asian economic partners.
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