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India News Updated May 26, 2026

Jaishankar Calls for Free, Open Indo-Pacific at Quad Meet for Global Growth

EAM Jaishankar emphasized the Indo-Pacific's role as a global growth driver at the Quad Foreign Ministers' Meeting. He highlighted the need to address supply chain resilience, connectivity choke points, and critical infrastructure gaps. The ministers discussed collaboration on maritime security, critical technologies, and economic resilience. Jaishankar stressed shared responsibility among maritime democracies for a free and open Indo-Pacific.

Indo-Pacific must remain driver for global growth, stability: EAM Jaishankar at Quad meet

New Delhi, May 26

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said on Tuesday that India, Japan, Australia and the US, as maritime democracies, pluralistic societies and market economies, share the responsibility towards a free and open Indo-Pacific, while stressing that the region must remain a driver for global growth and stability.

In his opening remarks at the Quad Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi on Tuesday, EAM Jaishankar stated, "Meeting for the third time in less than 18 months, we will be discussing and deciding our shared activities. Obviously, that will take into account the many challenges and opportunities in the world. Our focus will clearly be on the Indo-Pacific, which is the specific limit of the Quad."

EAM Jaishankar said that the ministers need to address supply chain resilience, connectivity choke points, manufacturing and resource concentrations and gaps in critical infrastructure.

He stated that officials of the Quad in the past several months have advanced collaboration across key core priorities, including maritime security, critical technologies, economic resilience and Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR).

"At the global level, we have to address supply chain resilience, connectivity choke points, manufacturing and resource concentrations and gaps in critical infrastructure. Each one of them offers a new argument for more partnerships, stronger growth and realising the promise of technologies. The Indo-Pacific has, in addition, its own particular concerns. This will require enhancing strategic confidence, ensuring maritime security, promoting economic choices, and fostering a deeper collaborative ethos, and that is best done by promoting trusted and transparent partnerships," EAM Jaishankar said.

"Over the past several months, our officials have advanced collaboration across key core priorities, including maritime security, critical technologies, economic resilience and HADR. We have seen encouraging progress on many initiatives. As maritime democracies, pluralistic societies and market economies, we share the responsibility towards a free and open Indo-Pacific. The region must remain a driver for global growth and stability. We will be underlining that today, through our deliberations, which I am confident will be useful and productive," he added.

The Quad comprises Australia, India, Japan and the United States, and focuses on strengthening cooperation across key sectors including maritime security, resilient supply chains, critical minerals, infrastructure development, disaster relief and emerging technologies.

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong, Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio are attending the Quad Foreign Ministers' Meeting.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

It's good to see the Quad working together, but I hope this doesn't become another military alliance. What we need is more economic cooperation and technology sharing, not more warships in our waters. Let's focus on HADR and connecting people, not posturing.

Siddharth J

The phrase "maritime democracies, pluralistic societies, and market economies" is a diplomatic masterstroke. It subtly draws a line without naming anyone. Jaishankar is a genius at this kind of nuanced diplomacy. The Quad is India's best bet for balancing power in the region.

Kavya N

While I agree with the sentiment of a free and open Indo-Pacific, I worry about the Quad becoming too focused on security and ignoring development needs in the region. There are billions of people in the Global South who need infrastructure, healthcare, and climate action more than geopolitical talk.

Rohit P

Supply chain resilience and critical infrastructure are the real game-changers here. India needs manufacturing hubs, better ports, and tech partnerships. If Quad can deliver on those practical outcomes, it's a win for our economy. Actions speak louder than diplomatic statements.

Meera T

India hosting the Quad and being a key player in Indo-Pacific—this is a proud moment for our foreign policy. But with great power comes great responsibility. We must ensure the Quad doesn't become a tool for any single country's agenda. India must lead with its own vision. 🚢🌏

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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