The US aims to institutionalize a new minilateral grouping called ‘Squad’ | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
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The US aims to institutionalize a new minilateral grouping called ‘Squad’

Posted 28 May 2024

2 min read

Earlier this month, US secretary of defence met his Australian, Filipino, and Japanese counterparts to institutionalize and launch the ‘Squad’ as a new four-way security arrangement in Indo-Pacific.

  • The crystallization of this new quadrilateral grouping is a testament to the growing importance of “minilateralism”.

About Minilateralism

  • It is an international relations concept that involves small groups of nations collaborating to tackle problems (security, economic, technological, etc.) or pursue mutual goals.
  • Nature: They are informal, flexible, voluntary frameworks with varied situational interests, shared values or relevant capabilities.

 Reasons for rise of minilateralism

  • Dysfunctional multilateral institutions: Diverse interests and ideologies of member states result in lack of consensus and gridlock. e.g., Dysfunctional WTO's dispute settlement system.
  • Flexibility and agility: Minilaterals are relatively more flexible and agile than traditional multilateral arrangements, allowing quicker decision making and targeted cooperation.
  • Issue based cooperation: Allows like-minded countries to come together on specific issues of mutual interest. e.g., Supply-Chain Resilience initiative between Australia, India, and Japan.
  • Changing ‘Balance of Power’: Emergence of more aggressive and assertive China in recent times led to emergence of groupings like QUAD, AUKUS, etc.

Concerns with rising Minilaterals

  • Legitimacy and inclusiveness: Lack of inclusiveness can undermine interests of countries in Global South.
  • Limited resource and capabilities: Smaller groups lack sufficient collective resources to address complex global challenges such as Climate Change.
  • Tensions and divisions among countries: Due to potential for growth of exclusionary bloc politics, particularly in areas of strategic cooperation.
  • Accountability and transparency: Less formal structure and processes in minilaterals raise concerns of inadequate democratic oversight.

 

  • Tags :
  • QUAD
  • AUKUS
  • Indo-Pacific
  • Minilateralism
  • Squad
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