Confidence and Cooperation in South Asian Waters
December 2014
Confidence and Cooperation in South Asian Waters: An Outline History
Description
Confidence and Cooperation in South Asian Waters is a regionally initiated project that currently focuses on maritime issues affecting India and Pakistan. It is structured and coordinated as an applied research project of the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies (CFPS) at ϳԹ in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Origin
The initiative evolved out of an academic research project by Dr Ayesha Siddiqa, a defence analyst and former Director Naval Research for the Pakistan Navy, conducted at the Sandia National Laboratories' Cooperative Monitoring Center (CMC) in the United States.1 In the course of her research she consulted with Mr David Griffiths at the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies (CFPS) and the two concluded that an ideal opportunity existed to develop the conclusions of the study into practical action. Since 1997 Mr Griffiths and Dr Peter Jones, also a CFPS Research Fellow (now Associate Professor with the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies at University of Ottawa), had been working with the Maritime Institute of Malaysia (MIMA) on facilitating a network of bilateral maritime security arrangements between Southeast Asian nations. Adding an Indian Ocean element engaging knowledgeable individuals from Pakistan and India was a natural extension of that process and a politically unthreatening opportunity to establish a forum for improved maritime cooperation and mutual understanding between the two countries. Such an initiative fell within the research mandate of an existing CFPS project on Regional Dimensions of Maritime Security, which had been co-created by Dr Jones and later coordinated by Mr Griffiths.
Activities
The following is a brief overview description of activities. More detailed information is available from the reports for each session and the references.