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Indo-Pacific

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Area covered by the Indo-Pacific biogeographic region
Indo-Pacific. The green circle coversASEAN.

TheIndo-Pacificis a vastbiogeographicregion ofEarth.

In a narrow sense, sometimes known as theIndo-West PacificorIndo-Pacific Asia,it comprises the tropical waters of theIndian Ocean,the western and centralPacific Ocean,and the seas connecting the two. It does not include the temperate and polar regions of the Indian and Pacific oceans, nor theTropical Eastern Pacific,along the Pacific coast of theAmericas,which is also a distinctmarine realm.The term is especially useful inmarine biology,ichthyology,and similar fields, since many marinehabitatsare continuously connected fromMadagascartoJapanandOceania,and a number of species occur over that range, but are not found in theAtlantic Ocean.

The region has an exceptionally highspecies richness,with the world's highest species richness being found in at its heart in theCoral Triangle,[1][2]and a remarkable gradient of decreasing species richness radiating outward in all directions.[1]The region includes over 3,000 species of fish, compared with around 1,200 in the next richest marine region, theWestern Atlantic,and around 500 species ofreef buildingcorals, compared with about 50 species in the Western Atlantic.[3]

The term first appeared in academic use inoceanographyandgeopolitics.Scholarship has shown that the "Indo-Pacific" concept circulated inWeimar Germany,and spread to interwar Japan. German political oceanographers envisioned an "Indo-Pacific" comprising anticolonial India and republican China, as German allies, against "Euro-America".[4]Since the late 2010s, the term "Indo-Pacific" has been increasingly used ingeopoliticaldiscourse. It has a "symbiotic link" with theQuadrilateral Security Dialogue,or "Quad", an informal grouping betweenAustralia,Japan,India,and theUnited States.It has been argued that the concept may lead to a change in popular "mental maps" of how the world is understood instrategicterms.[5]According to the political scientist Amitav Acharya, the "Indo-Pacific" was a concept built by strategists.[6]The Indo-Pacific started to gain ground in international relations literature as a geopolitical challenge by the U.S. toward China.[7]

In its widest sense, the term geopolitically covers all nations and islands surrounding either the Indian Ocean or the Pacific Ocean, encompassing mainland African and Asian nations who border these oceans, such asIndiaandSouth Africa,Indian Ocean territories such as theKerguelen IslandsandSeychelles,theMalay Archipelago(which is within the bounds of both the Indian Ocean and the Pacific),Japan,Russiaand otherFar Eastnations bordering the Pacific,Australiaand all thePacific Islandseast of them, as well as Pacific nations of the Americas such asCanadaorMexico.[8][9][10]ASEANcountries (defined as those in Southeast Asia and the Malay Archipelago) are considered to be geographically at the centre of the political Indo-Pacific.[11]

Subdivisions

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The figure shows 8 maps of biogeographic regionalizations that were tested using model selection with analysis of molecular variance(AMOVA) by Crandall et al. 2019.
Biogeographic regionalizations that were tested using model selection with analysis of molecular variance(AMOVA) by Crandall et al. 2019. Colours represent different regions within a scheme.

TheWWFandNature Conservancydivide the Indo-Pacific into 3 realms (or subrealms), and each of these into 25 marine provinces and 77 ecoregions (Marine Ecoregions of the World;MEOW) based on data-driven expert opinion.[12]Other schemes for subdivision of the Indo-Pacific have included: 5 provinces, based on endemism in fishes;[13]3 regions split into 10 provinces based on dissimilarity of fish assemblages,[14]11 provinces based on range boundaries in corals,[15]12 divisions split into 124 ecoregions based on biogeographic clustering from coral distributions[16]and finally 8 realms from distributions of 65,000 marine species.[17]All but the last of these schemes were tested against one another by an international consortium of marine scientists using genetic data from 56 Indo-Pacific species, with the reasoning that genetic data should reflect the evolutionary processes that structure the Indo-Pacific.[18]While there was no clear winning scheme, and all schemes were supported by data from at least one species, the genetic data in general favored schemes with few subdivisions, supporting the Indo-Pacific as relatively unstructured biogeographic realm - possibly the world's largest. Below are briefly described the 3 MEOW realms of the Indo-Pacific:

Central Indo-Pacific

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The Coral Triangle and countries participating in theCoral Triangle Initiative

The Central Indo-Pacific includes the numerous seas and straits connecting the Indian and Pacific oceans, including the seas surrounding theIndonesian archipelago(with the exception ofSumatra's northwest coast, which is part of the Western Indo-Pacific), theSouth China Sea,thePhilippine Sea,the north coast ofAustralia,and the seas surroundingNew Guinea,western and centralMicronesia,New Caledonia,theSolomon Islands,Vanuatu,Fiji,andTonga.The Central Indo-Pacific, due in part to its central location at the meeting of two oceans, has the greatest richness and diversity of marine organisms, specifically located within theCoral Triangle,which contains 76% of all known coral species in the world.[2]

Eastern Indo-Pacific

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The Eastern Indo-Pacific surrounds the mostly volcanic islands of the central Pacific Ocean, extending from theMarshall Islandsin the west through central and southeasternPolynesiatoHawaii,to the west coast ofChile.The World Wide Fund for Nature believe the region ends at Chile'sEaster IslandandIsla Salas y Gómez,although it is sometimes extended even further to include Chile'sDesventuradas IslandsandJuan Fernández Islands.[19][20][21][12]

Western Indo-Pacific

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The Western Indo-Pacific covers the western and central portion of the Indian Ocean, including Africa's east coast, theRed Sea,theGulf of Aden,thePersian Gulf,theArabian Sea,theBay of Bengal,and theAndaman Sea,as well as the coastal waters surroundingMadagascar,Seychelles,theComoros,theMascarene Islands,Maldives,and theChagos Archipelago.[12]

Ecology

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Some seashore and coastal plants are found throughout most of the region, including the treesPisonia grandis,Calophyllum inophyllum,Heliotropium arboreum,Pandanus tectorius,Cordia subcordata,Guettarda speciosa,and the shrubsScaevola taccada,Suriana maritima,andPemphis acidula.These plants have adapted to grow on coral sand, and have seeds adapted to crossing salt water, including distribution by birds or which can survive floating in salt water.[22]

The treescoconut(Coco nucifera),candlenut(Aleurites moluccanus), andMorinda citrifoliaoriginated in the Central Indo-Pacific, and were spread further across the region by human settlers.[22]

Economic region

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The Indo-West Pacific has been a hub of economic activity since ancient times. The entrance of the European colonial powers, such as theDutchandBritish East India Companiesand the Portuguese, and the launch of atrans-Pacifictransport ofslaves,migrants, and goods, created a deeper Indo-Pacific economic integration.[23]

The "Indo-Pacific" has been an economic idea since its early formulation inWeimar Germany.According to Hansong Li, the German geographerKarl Haushofer,son of the economist Max Haushofer, believed thatcapital,along withurbanisationandpopulation growth,are key vectors that determine the 'manometers' of the oceanic region. Haushofer also explained whyindustrialisationbroke out in Europe rather than the Indo-Pacific by a spatial theory of demography.[4]: 3–22 

In the 21st century, with the rising involvement of the United States in the new growth areas of Asia, the idea of the Indo-Pacific Economic Corridor (IPEC) emerged during the U.S.–India Strategic Dialogue of 2013. The Secretary of StateJohn Kerryreferred to the potential of the Indo-Pacific Economic Corridor in transforming the prospects for development and investments as well as for trade and transit between the economies of South and Southeast Asia Indo-Pacific economic corridor.[24]

K. Yhome in his scholarly study has mapped out the potential for various emerging trans-regional corridors in Asia along with the challenges of linking IPEC into the larger web of regional economic integration initiatives taking shape in the region in 2017.[25]

On 23 May 2022, the president of the United States, Joe Biden, launched theIndo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity(IPEF). This agreement includes a dozen of initial partners including: Australia, Brunei, India, Indonesia, Japan, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. Together, all the countries included within the framework represent 40% of the world GDP. The IPEF contains four pillars:

  1. Connected Economy: throughdigital economyrules,data localization,AI,privacy.
  2. Resilient Economy: through bettersupply chaincommitments that better anticipate and preventdisruptions in supply chains.
  3. Clean Economy: with commitments toclean energy,decarbonization,andgreen infrastructure.
  4. Fair Economy: with recommendation to strengthen efforts to crack down on corruption, effective tax implementation, anti-money laundering,and anti-bribery regimes.[26]

Geopolitical context

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Origins

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Historical precedent for the Indo-Pacific as a politically contested space comes from ancient times; in the European colonial era, commercial interests led to conquest by powers such as the Dutch and British East India Companies throughout the region.[23]

The German geopoliticianKarl Haushoferfirst used "Indo-Pacific" in the 1920s in multiple works ongeographyandgeopolitics:Geopolitics of the Pacific Ocean(1924),Building Blocks of Geopolitics(1928),Geopolitics of Pan-Ideas(1931), andGerman Cultural Politics in the Indo-Pacific Space(1939). Haushofer legitimated the integration of the two oceans by evidence inmarine biology,oceanography,ethnography,andhistorical philology.He envisioned an "Indo-Pacific" comprising anticolonial forces in India and China, as Germany's ally against the maritime domination of Britain, the United States, and Western Europe.[4]

Contemporary use

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The Japanese Prime MinisterShinzō Abereferred to the "confluence" of the Indian and Pacific Oceans in his speech to theIndian Parliamentin August 2007 as "the dynamic coupling as seas of freedom and of prosperity" in the "broader Asia".[27][28]The focus of Japanese Prime Minister's August 2007 speech in the Indian Parliament was on security of sea lanes linking the two oceans. In the academic discourse relating to such maritime security issue in the Indo-Pacific, the first articulation was carried by a paper published in January 2007 by theInstitute of Defense Studies and Analyses(IDSA), New Delhi. It was a result of consultations between IDSA and theJapan Institute of International Affairs(JIIA) held in New Delhi in October 2006.[29]From 2010 onwards, the term Indo-Pacific acquired salience within the Indian government and has since been used often by India's apex political leadership.[30]From about 2011 onwards, the term has been used frequently by strategic analysts and high-level government/military leadership in Australia, Japan and the United States to denote said region. However, a formal/official documented articulation of the term first appeared in Australia's Defence White Paper, 2013.[31]It is also "symbiotically linked"[5]with theQuadrilateral Security Dialogue—an informal grouping of like-minded democracies in the region, comprisingAustralia,India,Japan,and theUnited States.

Since 2011, the term "Indo-Pacific" is being used increasingly in geopolitical discourse.[32][33]

In 2013, Indonesian Foreign MinisterMarty Natalegawaproposed an "Indo-Pacific Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation" to restore trust, manage unresolved territory disputes, and help countries deal with change in the region.[34]In 2013, U.S. officials have begun using the term "Indo-Asia Pacific".[35]

In 2019, theUnited States Department of Statepublished a document formalizing the concept of a "Free and Open Indo-Pacific",to be sustained among members of" the Quad ", a partnership of four Indo-Pacific democracies led by the United States, in concert with Australia, India, and Japan.[36]"Indo-Pacific" has also featured prominently in top-level U.S. strategic documents such as the 2017National Security Strategy,[37]the 2018Nuclear Posture Review,[38]and the 2018National Defense Strategy.[39]According to Felix Heiduk and Gudrun Wacker at theGerman Institute for International and Security Affairs,the concept of a "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" is aimed at containing China and the "Indo-Pacific" is "primarily understood as a U.S.-led containment strategy directed against China" in Beijing.[40]Australian scholar Rory Medcalf has argued that "The Indo-Pacific...does not exclude or contain China, though it does dilute China’s influence."[41]It has been argued that the concept of the Indo-Pacific may lead to a change in popular "mental maps" of how the world is understood in strategic terms.[42]

The term's profile was raised when it found mention in the joint statement issued by the Indian Prime MinisterNarendra Modiand United States PresidentDonald Trumpafter the former's state visit to theWhite Houseon 26 June 2017. "As responsible stewards in the Indo-Pacific region, President Trump and Prime Minister Modi agreed that a close partnership between the United States and India is central to peace and stability in the region. In marking 70 years of diplomatic relations between India and the United States, the leaders resolved to expand and deepen the strategic partnership between the countries and advance common objectives. Above all, these objectives include combatting terrorist threats, promoting stability across the Indo-Pacific region, increasing free and fair trade, and strengthening energy linkages".[43]However, President Trump's November 2017 articulation on Indo-Pacific was widely seen as something that would usher in a new (US–China) Cold War.[44]This led to the Indian Prime Minister spelling out the Indian vision of Indo-Pacific as an enabler for "a common pursuit of progress and prosperity... not directed against any country... (albeit based on) our principled commitment to rule of law".[45]According to Dr. Cenk Tamer, the U.S. seeks to create an "anti-China axis" in the Asia-Pacific region through the conceptualization of the Indo-Pacific because it sees India as a key part in containing China. This was reiterated byPresident Biden,who declared a "secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific."[7]Tamer calls the Indo-Pacific a concept that started to gain ground in international relations as a geopolitical challenge by the U.S. toward China.[7]

The term was also used in 2019 by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in its statement ASEAN Outlook on the Indo-Pacific (AOIP),[46]though the bloc also still uses the longstanding term "Asia-Pacific" which is preferred by China and Russia.[47]Its use by ASEAN is arguably an attempt by the bloc at balance-of-power hedging[48]between competing visions for the region between the US and China. However, it is also clear that ASEAN does not share the exact same understanding of the term as the US,[49]and its AOIP statement specifically states[46]that it envisions continuing to play a "central and strategic role" in the region.

Criticism

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TheAustralian Citizens Party,a minor party associated with the US-ledRouche movement,criticises the "Indo-Pacific" vision as a reenactment of Nazi strategy, given the concept's link to Karl Haushofer.[50]

Former Prime Minister of AustraliaPaul Keating,in a televised address at theNational Press Club,criticised the notion of the "Indo-Pacific" as a construct of the United States in its diplomatic war with China:[51]

The United States says, well, that's all very interesting. But look, if you behave yourself, you Chinese. You can be a stakeholder in our system. And look, you wouldn't have to be Xi Jinping or anybody, to take the view of your Chinese Nationalist say, "Well, hang on, let me get this right. We are already one and a quarter times bigger than you, will soon be twice as big as you, and we may be two and a half times as big as you. But we can be a stakeholder in your system, is that it?" I mean, it’d make a cat laugh.

See also

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References

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Further reading

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