Context:
- India’s relations with the key Gulf countries have never been as good as they are today.
Relation with Gulf nations:
- The deepening energy interdependence is marked by growing volumes of energy imports into India and the prospect of substantive investments from the Gulf into the Indian hydrocarbon sector
- The number of Indian migrant workers in the region stands at more than 7 million
- The Gulf is among India’s top trading partners
- A high-level engagement between India and the Gulf has blossomed in recent years
- PM Modi and External Affairs Minister have travelled frequently to the Gulf and there has been a steady stream of senior Gulf leaders visiting India
- The expansion of the political engagement has been matched by the growing security cooperation, especially on counter-terrorism
- India and its Gulf partners are also taking tentative steps towards defence cooperation.
Too little attention:
- India’s relations with the Gulf have been constrained by too strong a focus on the bilateral
- Delhi is paying too little attention to the growing weight of the Gulf in regional affairs and the strategic possibilities that it opens up for India
Importance of Gulf Nations:
- Saudi Arabia has long been a pivotal state
- As the nation with one of the world’s largest petroleum reserves and capable of modulating its oil production, Riyadh has played a critical role in shaping the world energy markets since the 1970s
- As the home to Mecca and Medina, Saudi Arabia has a unique place in the Islamic world
- Since the late 1960s, Riyadh has exercised significant political influence in the evolution of the Middle East
- The rise of the UAE, in contrast, has been less noticed
- What differentiates the UAE from other petrostates is a rare purposefulness that has turned it into a strategic actor of consequence in the Middle East and beyond
- The UAE was the fourth-largest importer of weapons during 2013-17 and has a defence budget which is nearly 40 per cent of India’s defence spending
- The UAE is also a major player in the global logistics market, thanks to the successful development of Dubai as a major port and aviation hub
- It is now striving to emerge as a centre of art, higher education and technological innovation.
Two very important axes of potential partnerships in the Middle East:
- One is the idea of a “moderate Arab centre”. The UAE leadership has made the construction of a moderate bloc in the region its highest regional priority
- It sees the construction of such a core around Egypt and Saudi Arabia
- Abu Dhabi believes that only a coalition of moderate Arab states can move the region out of its current deeply troubled state
- Abu Dhabi also believes that the values of cultural openness, religious tolerance, women’s empowerment, and economic opportunities for younger people — which helped the Emirates succeed — can be extended to other parts of the Middle East
- The idea of a moderate Arab centre should resonate deeply with India’s natural ethos and its traditional empathy for modernising forces in the Arab world
- Helping the construction of a moderate Arab centre envisaged by Abu Dhabi, then, is very much in India’s interest
- Second is the growing impact of the Gulf countries in the Indian Ocean region
- Nowhere is this more evident than the Horn of Africa
- The recent success of the UAE and Saudi Arabia in brokering peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea who had been locked in a prolonged conflict underlines the positive role of the Gulf in Africa
- Alliances, military bases, interventions and peace-making have long been considered as the preserve of great powers
- But the Gulf countries today are bringing a combination of financial resources and political will to shape the geopolitics of their neighbouring regions
- Some of the Gulf countries like the UAE are eager to collaborate with India on development assistance and the construction of strategic infrastructure in the Indian Ocean littoral
- If India continues to be disinterested, they are bound to look for other partners
Way forward
- The Gulf states have relied in the past on the Anglo-Americans for their security
- As America and Britain gaze at their own navel, the Gulf states are taking greater responsibility for managing the regional order
- The conditions under which India could afford to take a purely bilateral approach to the Gulf nations are beginning to disappear
- India needs an integrated regional strategy to secure its ever-rising stakes in the Middle East and the Western Indian Ocean.
Source:Indian Express