ABSTRACT
This book examines the emerging maritime security scene in Southeast Asia. It considers highly topical implications for the region of possible strategic competition between China and India - the rising naval powers of Asia - with a possible naval "arms race" emerging between these countries both with naval force development and operations. As part of its "Look East" policy, India has deployed naval units to the Pacific Ocean for port visits and exercises both with East Asian navies and the US Navy, but India is also concerned about the possibility of the Chinese Navy operating in the Indian Ocean. Even as the US-India defence relationship continues to deepen, the US and China are struggling to build a closer links. China’s and India’s strategic interests overlap in this region both in maritime strategic competition or conflict – which might be played out in the Bay of Bengal, the Malacca and Singapore Straits and the South China Sea. The sea lines of communication (SLOCs) through Southeast Asian waters constitute vital "choke points" between the Indian and Pacific Oceans carrying essential energy supplies for China and other Northeast Asian countries. Any strategic competition between China and India has implications for other major maritime players in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, especially Australia, the Republic of Korea and Japan, as well as the US. This book identifies possible cooperative and confidence-building measures that may contribute to enhanced relations between these two major powers and dampen down the risks associated with their strategic competition.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |6 pages
Introduction
part |2 pages
Part I Regional strategic environment: contemporary regional relations
chapter |13 pages
Between rising naval powers: a broad strategic overview
chapter |14 pages
The PLA Navy: expanding into uncharted waters
chapter |8 pages
Regional maritime security environment: a Chinese perspective
chapter |10 pages
Regional maritime security environment: the Malaysian perspective
part |2 pages
Part II Contemporary regional maritime security
chapter |15 pages
Regional maritime security: threats and risk assessments
chapter |17 pages
Shaping naval power: implications of the naval build-up in Asia
chapter |6 pages
The future development of the PLA Navy
chapter |11 pages
Regional maritime security environment: an Indian perspective
chapter |12 pages
Japanese civilian cooperation in maritime security since 1999
chapter |11 pages
The Australian Navy in the Asian century: setting a new course
part |2 pages
Part III Looking to the future