Japan's key role in capacity-building in the Indian Ocean
Date
Authors
Brewster, David
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ANU National Security College
Abstract
One of the key themes of this Conference has been to
explore the potential for Japan to enhance its contributions
to Indo-Pacific maritime security, not just in the Pacific,
but also in the Indian Ocean. Ambassador Sumio Kusaka
in ‘Indo-Pacific Maritime Security’: Challenges and
Cooperation outlined Japan’s concerns about the Indian
Ocean security as part of its growing role across the IndoPacific. In ‘The Role of Japan in Indian Ocean Security,’
Masenori Nishi describes why Japan’s dependence
on the sea lines of communication (SLOCs) across the
Indian Ocean is likely to continue for the foreseeable
future. Admiral Kazu Akimoto in ‘A New Dimension to the
Australia-Japan Maritime Security Cooperation,’ explains
how the Bay of Bengal/Eastern Indian Ocean would
become a zone of major strategic importance for Japan in
the event of a closure of the South China Sea to navigation
– meaning that energy traffic through Malacca Strait would
likely move eastwards to transit the Lombok Strait and
Makassar Strait, into Philippine Sea, staying beyond the
first island chain. In those circumstances, Japan and its
partners must be in a position to stabilise that part of the
Indian Ocean.
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Book Title
Indo Pacific Maritime Security: Challenges and Cooperation
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Free Access via publisher website
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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