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24 October 2023
by Ridzwan Rahmat
The UK Royal Navy offshore patrol vessel HMS
Spey
is pictured at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in December 2021.
Spey
and sister ship
Tamar
are permanently forward deployed to the Indo-Pacific region.
(Crown copyright/UK Ministry of Defence, 2022)
The UK needs to devote more resources to the Indo-Pacific region amid China’s growing threat and create a dedicated strategy that sets out how military instruments can be used to protect London’s interests in the region.
This was the assessment made by the UK House of Commons Defence Committee in its report on the country’s so-called ‘tilt’ into the Indo-Pacific region. The report was published on 24 October and stems from an inquiry that began in January 2022.
Among other goals, the inquiry was established to assess the UK’s defence posture in the Indo-Pacific, the state of its relations with countries in the region, and how the military might be able to play a role in strengthening these relations.
The UK first articulated plans for an ‘Indo-Pacific tilt’ in its integrated review of security, defence, development, and foreign policy objectives in 2021.
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