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India's Act East Policy and Implications for Southeast Asia

from THE REGION

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2017

Amitendu Palit
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore (NUS)
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Summary

The Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the upgrading of India's erstwhile “Look East Policy” (LEP) to a more action-oriented “Act East” strategy at the India–ASEAN summit in Myanmar in November 2014. Since then, much debate and discussion has taken place on the nature and content of the strategy. A large part of the debate has been speculative, since India is yet to come out with an official vision statement for it. However, various pronouncements by India, as well as the shifting pattern of its engagement with countries to its East, are beginning to throw greater light on the strategy. This chapter discusses the features of the strategy as discernible till now and emphasizes its geographic scope and strategic depth. It discusses the specific relevance and implications of the Act East strategy for Southeast Asia. While India's engagement with ASEAN is likely to become more comprehensive and strategic over time, the region would need to be prepared for the implications of India playing a more active role in regional affairs.

Act East: What it Means

One of the noticeable aspects of the Act East strategy has been the lack of any specific articulation about it from the Indian establishment. This could well be due to the strategy being an evolving one. Apart from its own evolution through the Indian strategic prism, Act East, clearly, is trying to take note of the rapid and complex developments in the region, particularly changes in the economic and security dynamics.

An analytical understanding of Act East, since its announcement a year ago, has been largely gleaned from a number of official statements emphasizing India's eagerness to play a proactive role to its East. Most of these statements are attributable to Prime Minister Modi, who has contextually alluded to Act East on several occasions. As mentioned earlier, the first of these was at the ASEAN Summit in November 2014 in Myanmar, when he announced the upgrading of the LEP to the action-oriented Act East policy. He mentioned Act East again during his visit to South Korea in May 2014, emphasizing the country's importance as a partner in the policy. Soon after, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj underlined India's efforts to engage more deeply with Southeast Asia through the Act East policy and described Thailand as a significant partner in this respect during her visit to Bangkok in June 2015.

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Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2016

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