Wooing India, chief of US Pacific Command Admiral Harry Harris said that on the security front, the US needs India's leadership in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region as there are significant security challenges that no country can tackle alone.
"We are ready for you. We need you," he said in his address at the 'Raisina Dialogue', a conclave on geo-economics and geo-politics here.
Talking about India hosting Japan and Australia for its first ever trilateral dialogue here last year, Harris said some of the topics discussed were maritime security, including freedom of navigation patrols, and tri-lateral cooperation in the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
"One idea to consider is initiating a Quad-lateral Security Dialogue between India-Japan-Australia and the United States. Adding the US into this dialogue can amplify the message that we are united behind the international rules-based order that has kept the peace and is essential to all of us," he said.
"By being ambitious, India, Japan, Australia, the United States and so many other like-minded nations can aspire to patrol together anywhere international law allows... And for decades, the United States has conducted freedom of navigation patrols without incident. No nation should perceive it as a threat," he said.
On the US' re-balance to Asia Pacific, Harris said strengthening economic connective tissue through security and diplomatic partnership is what America's Rebalance to the Indo-Asia-Pacific is all about.
Without naming China or its military assertiveness in
South China Sea, the Admiral said freedom of navigation on the high seas and the airspace above them "are not privileges of rich and powerful countries. They're fundamental rights of all nations".
The Admiral said that two visionary policies are now coinciding at the perfect time.
"Initiated four years ago by President (Barack) Obama, the United States is conducting a strategic Rebalance west to the Indo-Asia-Pacific. While at the same time, India is implementing Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi's 'Act East' policy.
"You need look no further than last October's Malabar maritime exercise between India, Japan and the United States to see the security inter-connectedness of the Indian Ocean, Asia, and the Pacific Ocean," he said.
"Considering the USD 5.3 trillion dollars in trade that traverses each year from the Indian Ocean and through the South China Sea, we all have a vested interest in ensuring our region remain secure, stable, and prosperous. How Indo-Asia- Pacific nations employ naval forces to support these economic interests matters greatly," Harris said.
He said that by 2050, it is expected that 7 out of every 10 people who walk the planet will live in the Indo-Asia- Pacific region.
