Colombo Security Conclave: India’s Strategy for a Non-Traditional Indian Ocean

Syllabus: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.

 

Introduction

  • India hosted the 7th NSA-level Colombo Security Conclave (CSC) Summit on 20 November 2025, attended by Sri Lanka, Maldives, Mauritius, Bangladesh, with Seychelles as a new full member and Malaysia as guest.
  • CSC aims to promote regional security cooperation in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), especially on maritime security, counterterrorism, trafficking, organised crime, and cybersecurity.

Evolution of CSC

  • Initially a 2011 trilateral mechanism (India–Sri Lanka–Maldives), it lost momentum due to political transitions and lack of convergence on priorities.
  • Revived in 2020 with a broader mandate and formal structure.
  • Mauritius (2022) and Bangladesh (2024) joined, signalling growing regional acceptance of CSC as a cooperative platform.

Strategic Context

  • Summit held during major shifts in Indo-Pacific maritime security frameworks and a fragmented IOR security architecture.
  • CSC’s focus on non-traditional maritime challenges is crucial as littoral economies depend heavily on marine resources.
  • Maritime threats overlap with development priorities, affecting livelihoods, food security, and economic sustainability.

Significance of the 2025 Summit

  • Seychelles’ accession marks further institutional consolidation and regional commitment.
  • CSC enhances India’s engagement with maritime neighbours amid China’s growing IOR footprint.
  • Inclusion of Malaysia may pave the way for future expansion.
  • Highlights increasing importance of the security dimension in regional cooperation.

Key Challenges

  • Divergent perceptions of China: India views Chinese presence as a security challenge, while other CSC members depend on China for development.
  • Lack of institutionalisation; CSC currently operates only at NSA-level, requiring stronger, permanent mechanisms.
  • Domestic political uncertainties, especially in Bangladesh, may weaken cohesion and continuity.

Way Forward

  • CSC should adopt a robust institutional framework ensuring consistent cooperation, joint planning, and operational coordination.
  • India must balance security concerns with members’ development priorities to maintain group cohesion.

Strengthening CSC’s resilience will help build a cooperative, stable, and secure Indian Ocean architecture.

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