The Indo-Pacific strategic space has gained substantial relevance in the last five years
due to multiple reasons ranging from political, socio-economic, military and more. The
geopolitical and geo-strategic developments have a significant bearing on the maritime
interaction between the nations in the region and also the extra-regional powers. The
political and socio-economic realities of the region encourages non-state actors to be
active in the region and also the state using these non-state actors as regular
instruments of state power. This is a very serious and complicated internal security
matter to be resolved using the conventional means. Maritime Domain Awareness
(MDA) is the only way forward to counter such non-traditional threats. Although, there
has been reasonable attention and focus by the maritime forces like the Navy and
Coast Guard to build capacity & capability to enhance MDA, however the internal
water bodies and the coastal regions have remained work in progress.
The traditional MDA got significant push post the 9/11 incident and the American
establishment made it a high priority strategic objective. Massive maritime
infrastructure and capacity building efforts took shape within the US and through their
allies to ensure effective MDA. In India, post the 26/11 incident, similar efforts were
initiated and the MDA infrastructure got prioritized in the IOR. However, in both the
cases, being an event driven initiative, it remained a security centric formulation with
minimal penetration with the other stakeholders. The MDA that we see today is largely
limited to the sea surface and the underwater component is still a work in progress,
even in the US led effort. The Underwater Domain Awareness (UDA) will require, very
specialized focus and high end Science & Technology (S&T) support.
The UDA in the tropical littoral waters of the Indo-Pacific Strategic Space has some
very unique challenges and opportunities. The sub-optimal sonar performance is a
major impediment to any UDA initiative. The socio-economic status of the nations in
the region is a major road block for maritime governance. Prioritizing S&T for
enhancing sonar performance with indigenous efforts is a major cause of concern. The
extra-regional powers continue to push their hardware with least performance in the
tropical littoral waters. “Digital Oceans” today can have a far greater relevance
particularly in the tropical littoral waters of the Indo-Pacific Strategic Space.
The UDA framework proposed by the Maritime Research Centre (MRC), Pune tries to
encourage pooling of resources and synergizing of efforts across the
stakeholders, namely the maritime security, blue economy, environment & disaster
management and the science & technology providers. The framework can minimize
the ongoing fragmented approach across stakeholders within the nations and also
among the nations in the region. The UN has declared 2021-2030 as the Decade of
the Ocean Science for Sustainable Development, and it does presents a great
opportunity for realizing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and still retain the
pace of blue economic growth. There is significant merit for us, to synergise internal
and coastal security concerns with sustainable developmental goals to achieve our
objectives of enhanced maritime governance in a holistic manner.