Asian Focus - The Indian Navy in the 21st Century
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 24, Heft 6, S. 33-42
ISSN: 0722-8880
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In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 24, Heft 6, S. 33-42
ISSN: 0722-8880
In: Indian defence review, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 158-163
ISSN: 0970-2512
In: Indian defence review, Band 28, Heft 2, S. 82-85
ISSN: 0970-2512
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 2, S. 20-23
ISSN: 0722-8880
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 2, S. 30-33
ISSN: 0722-8880
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 26-33
ISSN: 0722-8880
In: Indian defence review, Band 24, Heft 4, S. 92-95
ISSN: 0970-2512
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 29, S. 36-42
ISSN: 0722-8880
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 29, S. 8-15
ISSN: 0722-8880
In: Naval forces: international forum for maritime power, Band 29, S. 16-21
ISSN: 0722-8880
As India expands its strategic reach in the Indian Ocean, it will need friends that it can count on. The island state of Mauritius has long been one of India's closest allies in the region. This article discusses India's plans for a military intervention in Mauritius in 1983 to prevent a feared coup that may have threatened India's interests. A naval task force was readied, but the intervention did not proceed because of disagreements in India's leadership. Instead New Delhi facilitated a political solution to the crisis that firmly consolidated its special role. This previously undisclosed episode sheds light on India's thinking about the Indian Ocean, the alignment of India's interests with the United States, and India's military capabilities.
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The expansion of India's role as a security provider in the Indian Ocean region has aroused much interest in recent years. Many inside and outside India see great potential for India, and particularly the Indian Navy, to play a positive role in enhancing the region's security in the context of India's rise as a major power. Over the last several decades, India has developed good security relationships in the Indian Ocean, particularly with island or small littoral states such as Mauritius, Seychelles and Madagascar in the southwest Indian Ocean, Oman and Qatar in the Persian Gulf, the Maldives in the central Indian Ocean and Singapore in the east. India is now seen as a key security provider to, and even a security guarantor of, several of these states. However, the history of India's strategic role in the Indian Ocean has not been the subject of a great deal of study. This article will examine India's previously undisclosed interventions in the Seychelles in 1986, which acted as a prelude to other interventions throughout the region, including India's foray in Sri Lanka in 1987 and the Maldives in 1988.
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As India expands its strategic reach in the Indian Ocean, it will need friends that it can count on. The island state of Mauritius has long been one of India's closest allies in the region. This article discusses India's plans for a military intervention in Mauritius in 1983 to prevent a feared coup that may have threatened India's interests. A naval task force was readied, but the intervention did not proceed because of disagreements in India's leadership. Instead New Delhi facilitated a political solution to the crisis that firmly consolidated its special role. This previously undisclosed episode sheds light on India's thinking about the Indian Ocean, the alignment of India's interests with the United States, and India's military capabilities.
BASE
The expansion of India's role as a security provider in the Indian Ocean region has aroused much interest in recent years. Many inside and outside India see great potential for India, and particularly the Indian Navy, to play a positive role in enhancing the region's security in the context of India's rise as a major power. Over the last several decades, India has developed good security relationships in the Indian Ocean, particularly with island or small littoral states such as Mauritius, Seychelles and Madagascar in the southwest Indian Ocean, Oman and Qatar in the Persian Gulf, the Maldives in the central Indian Ocean and Singapore in the east. India is now seen as a key security provider to, and even a security guarantor of, several of these states. However, the history of India's strategic role in the Indian Ocean has not been the subject of a great deal of study. This article will examine India's previously undisclosed interventions in the Seychelles in 1986, which acted as a prelude to other interventions throughout the region, including India's foray in Sri Lanka in 1987 and the Maldives in 1988. ; Copyright Information: Publisher permission to deposit a version granted via email on 6/05/2015.
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