US should accept that its FONOPs have political implications

Posted By : Telegraf
10 Min Read

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The April 7 announcement by the US Navy that it had conducted a freedom of navigation operation (FONOP) in India’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) generated a surge of anti-American sentiment that could erode advances in US-India relations. This could have been avoided by recognizing the reality that FONOPs convey political messages.

FONOPs are US “challenges to other states’ explicit maritime claims” that are not consonant with international law – as interpreted by the US. The Pentagon considers them routine and “not aimed at any country.” But many countries view a top-of-the-line US warship purposefully violating their laws as intimidating – indeed, a threat to use force. To them it is at the very least an unfriendly act that can influence relations in other spheres.

The administration of former US president Donald Trump had moved the case-by-case decision-making out of the White House to the Pentagon. The idea was that the Pentagon would submit a yearly plan of FOPNOPs for approval and once the plan was approved they would be undertaken as scheduled – regardless of the political implications.

Also read: Did Delhi just yield the Indian Ocean to the US?

The intent was to make FONOPs ”routine” and apolitical. This was folly. FONOPS have always had a political purpose – to enforce the US interpretation of the “international order,” in this case the Law of the Sea.

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