

Baruah is a fellow with the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace where she directs the Indian Ocean Initiative. It unpacks how these players impact the region’s geopolitical environment and maritime security.ĭarshana M. This section examines the traditional and emerging players in the Indian Ocean region, particularly their military, diplomatic, and economic engagements. The fourth section assesses how regional organizations and multilateral partnerships enforce maritime laws and craft protocols.Įxplore the map The Key Players in the Indian Ocean Region The third section reviews the region’s economics, trade patterns, and oil flows. The second section examines the evolving security situation, including sovereignty disputes, climate impacts, illegal fishing, search and rescue zones, and choke points. The first section summarizes the key players, both traditional and emerging, in the region. This paper complements the map, further analyzing the areas of interest and contextualizing them within the current geopolitical environment.

The first of its kind, it shows how the Indian Ocean’s economic, political, military, and geographic features interact to create a single geopolitical arena. 2 Developed by Carnegie’s Indian Ocean Initiative, the map provides a coherent, continuous, and data-driven understanding of the players, security challenges, and other factors that shape the region (see figure 1).

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Indian Ocean Strategic Map does just that. But to understand the true importance and strategic advantages of the region, it must be viewed as one continuous theater. Given the region’s importance, many countries around the world work with regional partners to maintain open access to the Indian Ocean’s critical waterways and natural resources.įor decades, the Indian Ocean region has been erroneously studied through the continental divisions of Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia. 1 Stretching from Africa’s eastern coast to Australia’s western coast, the region is home to thirty-three nations and 2.9 billion people. Today, it remains critical to the security and stability of shipping lanes and trade routes, accounting for over one-third of the world’s bulk cargo traffic and two-thirds of the world’s oil shipments and ensuring global access to food, precious metals, and energy resources. The Indian Ocean region has been an important trade arena for centuries.
