Sitharaman: “Hold nuclear and missile proliferators to North Korea accountable”
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 25th Oct 17
In her
first foreign trip as defence minister, Nirmala Sitharaman fired shots across
the bows of both China and Pakistan on Tuesday, without naming the two
countries.
Addressing the
Asean Defence Ministers Meeting-Plus (ADMM-Plus) in Manila, Sitharaman called
for safeguarding freedom of navigation, over flight and commerce in regional
waters – a key concern of East Asian states that must live with an increasingly
powerful and assertive China.
Taking aim
at China’s growing penchant for unilateralism, Sitharaman stated: “Nations
should resolve maritime disputes peacefully and in accordance with
international law. We support a rules based order for oceans and sea that is
critical for the continued growth and development of the Indo-Pacific region.”
Deploring
the recent nuclear and missile tests conducted by North Korea – or the
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) – India pointed the finger at
China and Pakistan for their widely suspected proliferation of nuclear and
missile technologies to that country.
“It is
important that DPRKs’ proliferation linkages are investigated and those who
have supported its nuclear and missile programme are held accountable”, said
Sitharaman.
On
terrorism, Sitharaman stated: “The transnational activism of terrorist groups,
the spectre of returning foreign fighters and the conduct of irresponsible
states that provide safe havens, funding and even encouragement to terrorist
groups all need to be addressed together and comprehensively. Terrorism
anywhere is a threat everywhere.”
Maintaining
pressure on Pakistan, Sitharaman cited last month’s BRICS Summit Declaration calling
for action against several Pakistan-based terrorist groups, including the
Laskhar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad.
ADMM-Plus,
which was inaugurated in Hanoi, Vietnam in 2010, is an annual meeting that
brings together the defence ministers of ten Asean countries, with those of
eight “dialogue partners”. These include India, China, Japan, Australia, New
Zealand, South Korea, Russia, and the United States.
Placing
controversial military issues on the side-lines, the ADMM-Plus focuses on seven
areas of cooperation: namely maritime security, counter-terrorism, humanitarian
assistance and disaster relief, peacekeeping operations, military medicine,
humanitarian mine action and cyber security.
India, like
the other dialogue partners, talks up Asean as the framework for the
Asia-Pacific security architecture. However, within Asean, there is little
unified will for confronting Beijing. While Vietnam, Indonesia and Singapore regard
China as the premier regional security threat, others like Malaysia, Brunei and
Philippines believe their interests lie in accommodating China.
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