Sejong Policy Briefs

(brief 2022-03) Comparison and Implications of Indo-Pacific Strategies: Focusing on the United States, Europe, Japan, India, and ASEAN

Date 2022-02-23 View 893 Writer CHOI Yoon Jung

Comparison and Implications of Indo-Pacific Strategies: Focusing on the United States, Europe, Japan, India, and ASEAN


Choi Yoon Jung 

(yjchoi@sejong.org) 

Director of the Department of Diplomatic Strategy Studies, 

the Sejong Institute 

 

Executive Summary

 

 

Why Indo-Pacific Strategy?

Indo-Pacific has overtaken Asia-Pacific as the core of the international order that forms the most important geopolitical strategic concept of the 21st century.

Major countries such as the U.S., Europe, Japan, India, and ASEAN announced their Indo-Pacific strategies based on strategic considerations of preventing China's hegemonic expansion, establishing a stable order in the strategic center of the Indo-Pacific region, and joining the U.S.-centered alliance for power.

To summarize the major countries' strategies for the Indo-Pacific region, they have shared in their development such characteristics as the "quantitative expansion of strategies and agendas" of the Indo-Pacific strategies with perspectives and goals for each major country, a trend that started with the Indo-Pacific strategies of the U.S. and Japan, the "qualitative expansion of the agenda from security to prosperity" that pursues practical economic interests although it had originally begun due to security concerns over China, and the "expansion of membership" in the form of minilateral and multilateral cooperation rather than bilateral cooperation.

 

Indo-Pacific Strategies of Major Countries: Perspectives and Objectives

Among major countries with Indo-Pacific strategies, first of all, Japan is leading the Indo-Pacific strategy with the U.S. as the first country to have come up with the Indo-Pacific strategy under the banner of "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" (FOIP).

The U.S. is strengthening its alliance with traditional Asian and European allies, frustrating China's hegemonic challenges, and accelerating the maintenance of U.S.-led international order.

ASEAN is adaptively responding to the U.S.-led regional strategy and emphasizing cooperation with substantive benefits.

India is keeping China in check, strengthening its cooperation with the U.S. as needed while maintaining strategic autonomy through its own diplomatic and trade strategies.

Although Europe's positions vary slightly from country to country, it emphasizes rules and/or standards by focusing on managing and maximizing economic interests rather than excluding China.

 

Indo-Pacific Strategies of Major Countries: Comparison by Theme

Indo-Pacific strategies, which were originally designed as security strategies, have expanded to involve a variety of actors and to address the agenda for prosperity to make up for the economic losses caused by China's decoupling attempts.

All countries are actively announcing their cooperation plans in digital, semiconductor, supply network, cybersecurity, infrastructure, and networks. Also, they are announcing their cooperation plans in traditional and non-traditional security agendas such as marine security, climate change, vaccines, and human rights.

 

Implications and Policy Recommendations

Major actors who announced their Indo-Pacific strategies, such as the U.S., Europe, India, and ASEAN, have been seeking cooperation with South Korea in order to act on the above major issues.

South Korea is responding with its New Southern Policy as a regional strategy, but cooperation is limited due to differences in vision and purpose.

Therefore, South Korea needs to establish a foreign policy strategy to inherit and develop its New Southern Policy, participate in the establishment of a new regional order with the U.S., and build a foundation for cooperation.

Henceforth, South Korea needs to establish a "Korean-style Indo-Pacific Regional Strategy" that maximizes South Korea's national interests by enhancing connectivity between South Korea's Indo-Pacific policies and other countries' Indo-Pacific strategies, promote a "matrix-type cooperation strategy by country and by agendas" focusing on South Korea's comparative advantages, and improve its relations with cooperative countries (especially Japan) and develop a cooperative apparatus.