SPC-A Commercial Publications: An Australian Perspective on Maritime CSBMs in the Asia-Pacific Region

An Australian Perspective on Maritime CSBMs in the Asia-Pacific Region
An Australian Perspective on Maritime CSBMs in the Asia-Pacific Region



PDF : 8.32 MB

by
Desmond Ball and Sam Bateman

Abstract

This paper defines Australia's area of primary strategic interest, noting that this security in this region is very much concerned with maritime issues and capabilities; the waterways through the region are strategically important for both merchant and naval vessels, and coastal and offshore resources provide a principal means of livelihood in many countries of the region. It assesses the regional security environment, which is characterised by rapid change and increasing complexity and uncertainty, as security concerns broaden to include economic and environmental issues and more actors (with an improved range of capabilities) participate. It lists the reasons why greater regional cooperation is needed to manage this increasingly complex security environment, and advocates the construction of 'building blocks' - a multiplicity of subregional arrangements - towards enhanced security cooperation. The Timor Gap Treaty is examined as such a building block before suggesting two maritime confidence and security building measures - a regional maritime surveillance and safety regime, a a regional avoidance of incidents a sea regime.

Availability

Published by the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, the Australian National University (ISBN 0 7315 1238 3), as Working Paper No. 234, and has been reproduced with their permission. Hard copies can be purchased online.