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INDIAN OCEAN SECURITY (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   122326


Adrift on the high sea?: charting a course for India's maritime power in absence of a national policy / Prakash, Arun   Journal Article
Prakash, Arun Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   155751


Cocos and Christmas Islands: building Australia’s strategic role in the Indian Ocean / Brewster, David; Medcalf, Rory   Journal Article
Brewster, David Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Australia’s Cocos Islands and Christmas Island are remote islands with potentially great significance for Australia’s strategic role in the eastern Indian Ocean region and the wider Indo-Pacific. This paper explores the growing militarization of islands throughout the Indian Ocean in the context of growing strategic competition in the region. It then considers the strategic value of Australia’s Indian Ocean territories and makes recommendations about the further development of defense infrastructure to potentially support Australian air operations in Southeast Asia and the eastern Indian Ocean. Upgraded facilities on both Cocos and Christmas would provide Australia with valuable leverage in its relationships with regional defense partners and the United States.
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3
ID:   161464


Seychelles: at sea managing intelligence / Robinson, Ashton   Journal Article
Robinson, Ashton Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Seychelles faces pressure to reshape its security and intelligence structure, little changed for forty years, built to address the internal security interests of its former ruler France-Albert René. His outlook persists in diluted form under his successors. Seychelles faces new external challenges. A big risk is abuse of its position as a major off-shore financial centre. But Seychelles’ archipelagic nature gives other transnational challenges similar to other Indian Ocean island states and littoral countries like Kenya. These involve maritime security, fisheries, counter-smuggling and piracy. These are compounded by growing major power naval activity in the Indian Ocean. Much of this is adversarial placing Seychelles in a strategic cockpit in which it has few assets to deploy and deficient intelligence capability to analyse. Seychelles challenge is to evolve its intelligence capabilities when time is not in its side.
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