Quad Summit 2021: The Elephant in the Room?

Policy Alert #237 | September 29, 2021

On September 24, 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden hosted Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga of Japan, and Prime Minister Scott Morrison of Australia at the White House for the first-ever in-person Leaders’ Summit of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, or Quad. In a joint statement, without naming China, the four leaders renewed their commitment to a free, open, and rules-based Indo-Pacific that is “undaunted by coercion.” The leaders expressed their resolve to “champion adherence to international law, particularly as reflected in the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), to meet challenges…in the East and South China Seas.” It is hard to miss the veiled references to China’s rising influence peppered throughout the joint statement from Quad leaders.

September has seen a number of major summits, including BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), capped off by the Quad, as well as the UN General Assembly. Moreover, the Quad meeting came just over a week after the announcement of AUKUS, a new three-way security pact among the U.S., U.K., and Australia centered on a deal to share highly sensitive nuclear submarine technology with Canberra. In Beijing, the angry reaction was swift and predictable; however, the agreement also created turbulence in U.S.-France relations, even as France is the only European country with territories and a military presence in the Indo-Pacific.

The Quad leaders have put forth ambitious initiatives that advance practical cooperation on 21st-century challenges: ending the COVID-19 pandemic, including by increasing production and access to safe and effective vaccines; promoting high-standards infrastructure; combatting the climate crisis; partnering on emerging technologies, space, and cybersecurity; and cultivating next-generation talent in the four countries. As Biden declared in his Quad remarks, “we are four major democracies with a long history of cooperation… we know how to get things done, and we are up to the challenge.” Although the Quad, unlike AUKUS, is not a military pact, establishing a unified front amid shared concerns about China is clearly topmost. 

In this Policy Alert, we examine the Rising Powers’ response to the Quad Summit amid the announcement of AUKUS the previous week.

India

For India, the Quad comes on the heels of the SCO summit in Tajikistan on September 17, two very different summits with contrasting geopolitical agendas. Turning his attention to the Quad, Indian Prime Minister Modi announced at the meeting in Washington, “It gives me great pleasure to discuss with my friends wide-ranging topics from supply chains to global security, from climate action to COVID response, to cooperation in the field of technology.” 

On September 24, Modi and U.S. President Biden also met for their first bilateral meeting. In his remarks, Modi voiced to Biden, “I find that under your leadership, the seeds have been sown for Indo-US relations to expand.” In a U.S.-India joint statement following the meeting, the two leaders committed to “renewing their close relationship and charting a new course to advance the partnership between the world’s largest democracies.” On Twitter, the Modi called Biden’s leadership on critical global issues “commendable” as they “discussed how India and USA will further scale-up cooperation… and overcome key challenges like COVID-19 and climate change.”

China

On September 24, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian denounced the Quad, proclaiming, “A closed, exclusive clique targeting other countries runs counter to the trend of the times and the aspirations of regional countries. It will find no support and is doomed to fail.” On September 27, after the conclusion of the Quad summit, Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hua Chunying expressed opposition to the so-called “China threat” by emphasizing three points: “First…China is a builder of world peace… and a provider of public goods…Second…most countries recognize…the international system…rather than the so-called “order” unilaterally defined by… US hegemony…Third…relevant countries should abandon the outdated Cold War zero-sum mentality and…promote…peace and stability.”

When asked to comment on AUKUS, Lijian called the new military pact “ill-conceived,” alleging that it will “gravely undermine regional peace” and “aggravate arms race.” Additionally, Chunying protested what China called the “double standards on the non-proliferation issue adopted by the U.S., U.K. and Australia,” professing concerns that AUKUS will undercut the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty and ASEAN countries’ efforts to build a Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone (NWFZ) in Southeast Asia.

Japan

In his public remarks at the Quad, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga offered, “The Quad is an extremely significant initiative by four countries who share fundamental values, cooperating for the cause of realizing a free and open international order based on the rule of law in the Indo-Pacific.” In an overview presented by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Prime Minister Suga “expressed serious concern for unilateral attempts to change the status quo by force and coercionin the context of the East and South China Seas.

On September 22, during a Japan-U.S. Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken agreed to continue to strengthen the Japan-U.S. alliance. In a press conference, when asked whether Japan supports AUKUS, Motegi conveyed that “Japan welcomes the launch of AUKUS in the sense of strengthening engagement in the Indo-Pacific region.”