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Asia Defense | Security | South Asia
The move to publicly challenge India’s “excessive maritime claims” is sure to irk New Delhi privately.
The guided-missile destroyer USS John Paul Jones (DDG 53) transits the Arabian Gulf, October 27, 2020.
Credit: Flickr/Official U.S. Navy Page
According to the United States 7th Fleet, USS John Paul Jones carried out a freedom of navigation operation near India’s Lakshadweep Islands on April 7. The Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer “asserted navigational rights and freedoms approximately 130 nautical miles west of the Lakshadweep Islands, inside India’s exclusive economic zone, without requesting India’s prior consent, consistent with international law,” a statement from the Fleet claimed.
“India requires prior consent for military exercises or maneuvers in its exclusive economic zone [EEZ] or continental shelf, a claim inconsistent with international law. This freedom of navigation operation (“FONOP”) upheld the rights, freedoms, and lawful uses of the sea recognized in international law by challenging India’s excessive maritime claims,” the statement explained.
This is far from being the first time that the United States has challenged India’s position that it be served prior notice before foreign navies pass through its EEZs. Experts maintain that in order to further India-U.S. maritime cooperation, developing a common and shared understanding of international maritime law remains an imperative.
But the fact that the FONOP comes amid deepening maritime collaboration with the U.S. – and widespread enthusiasm in New Delhi’s strategic community about the Quad’s potential to develop a security architecture for the Indo-Pacific – has the potential to add complications. At the very least, it demonstrates that the U.S. remains concerned about what it describes as India’s “excessive maritime claims” across the Indo-Pacific – and not just that presented by China alone in the region.
“We conduct routine and regular Freedom of Navigation Operations (FONOPs), as we have done in the past and will continue to in the future. FONOPs are not about one country, nor are they about making political statements,” the 7th Fleet statement about the Lakshadweep Islands FONOP noted.
On April 7, USS John Paul Jones also conducted a FONOP “in the vicinity” of the Maldives, “by conducting innocent passage through its territorial sea and normal operations within its exclusive economic zone without requesting prior permission, consistent with international law.”
“This freedom of navigation operation (“FONOP”) upheld the rights, freedoms, and lawful uses of the sea recognized in international law by challenging Maldives’ excessive maritime claims,” the statement announcing the operation also noted.
At the time of filing the story, neither the Indian Ministry of External Affairs nor the Ministry of Defense had made any official statements about the U.S. FONOP.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visited New Delhi last month amid the deepening defense ties of his country with India, meeting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other senior Indian security and defense leaders. On March 12, the Biden administration hosted the first-ever Quad leaders’ summit. The event has lead many to hope that the grouping will be able to effectively club together to meet rising Chinese intransigence across the Indo-Pacific, and in the South China Sea, in particular where the U.S. routinely carries out FONOPs to challenge China’s expansive “nine-dash line” maritime claims.
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