U.S. INDO-PACIFIC ACTION PLAN

1. DRIVE NEW RESOURCES TO THE INDO-PACIFIC

  1. Building shared capacity requires the United States to make new regional investments. Open new embassies and consulates, particularly in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands, and increase U.S. strength in existing ones, intensifying climate, health, security, and development work.
  2. Expand U.S. Coast Guard presence and cooperation in Southeast and South Asia and the Pacific Islands, with a focus on advising, training, deployment, and capacity-building.
  3. Refocus security assistance on the Indo-Pacific, including to build maritime capacity and maritime-domain awareness.
  4. Expand the role of people-to-people exchange, including the Peace Corps.
  5. Within the U.S. government, ensure the necessary capacity and expertise to meet the region’s challenges.
  6. Throughout,  work with Congress ensure that policy and resourcing have the bipartisan backing necessary to support U.S. strong and steady regional role.

2. LEAD AN INDO-PACIFIC ECONOMIC FRAMEWORK

  1. Launch a new partnership that will promote and facilitate high-standards trade, govern the digital economy, improve supply-chain resiliency and security, catalyze investment in transparent, high-standards infrastructure, and build digital connectivity doubling down on U.S. economic ties to the region while contributing to broadly shared Indo-Pacific opportunity

3. REINFORCE DETERRENCE

  1. The United States will defend its interests, deter military aggression against  own country and allies and partners including across the Taiwan Strait and promote regional security by developing new capabilities, concepts of operation, military activities, defense industrial initiatives, and a more resilient force posture.
  2. Work with Congress to fund the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and the Maritime Security Initiative.
  3. Through the AUKUS partnership, identify the optimal pathway to deliver nuclear-powered submarines to the Royal Australian Navy at the earliest achievable date; in addition, deepen cooperation and enhance interoperability through a concrete program of work on advanced capabilities, including cyber, artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, and undersea capabilities.

4. STRENGTHEN AN EMPOWERED AND UNIFIED ASEAN

  1. The United States is making new investments in U.S.-ASEAN ties, including by hosting ASEAN leaders for a historic U.S.-ASEAN Special Summit the first-ever to be held in Washington, D.C.
  2. The U.S. is committed to the East Asia Summit and ASEAN Regional Forum, and also seeks new ministerial-level engagements with ASEAN.
  3. Implement more than $100 million in new U.S.-ASEAN initiatives.
  4. Expand bilateral cooperation across Southeast Asia, prioritizing efforts to strengthen health security, address maritime challenges, increase connectivity, and deepen people-to-people ties.

5. SUPPORT INDIA’S CONTINUED RISE AND REGIONAL LEADERSHIP

  1. Continue to build a strategic partnership in which the United States and India work together and through regional groupings to promote stability in South Asia; collaborate in new domains, such as health, space, and cyber space; deepen economic and technology cooperation; and contribute to a free and open Indo-Pacific.
  2. The U.S. recognizes that India is a like-minded partner and leader in South Asia and the Indian Ocean, active in and connected to Southeast Asia, a driving force of the Quad and other regional fora, and an engine for regional growth and development.

6. DELIVER ON THE QUAD

  1. Strengthen the Quad as a premier regional grouping and ensure it delivers on issues that matter to the Indo-Pacific. The Quad will play a leading regional role on COVID-19 response and global health security, delivering on its investment to provide an additional one billion vaccines to the region and to the world.
  2. The Quad will advance work on critical and emerging technologies, driving supply-chain cooperation, joint technology deployments, and advancing common technology principles.
  3. The Quad will build a green shipping network, and will coordinate the sharing of satellite data to improve maritime domain awareness and climate responses.
  4. Quad members will cooperate to provide high-standards infrastructure in South and Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands and will work to improve their cyber capacity.
  5. The Quad Fellowship will formally launch in 2022, recruiting its first class of 100 students from all four countries to pursue graduate degrees in STEM fields in the United States beginning in 2023.
  6. The Quad will continue to meet regularly at the leader and ministerial levels.

7. EXPAND U.S.-JAPAN-ROK COOPERATION

  1. Nearly every major Indo-Pacific challenge requires close cooperation among the United States’ allies and partners, particularly Japan and the ROK.
  2. Continue to cooperate closely through trilateral channels on the DPRK.
  3. Beyond security, the U.S. will also work together on regional development and infrastructure, critical technology and supply-chain issues, and women’s leadership and empowerment. Increasingly, the U.S. will seek to coordinate its regional strategies in a trilateral context.

8. PARTNER TO BUILD RESILIENCE IN THE PACIFIC ISLANDS

  1. The United States will work with partners to establish a multilateral strategic grouping that supports Pacific Island countries as they build their capacity and resilience as secure, independent actors.
  2. Together, the U.S. will build climate resilience through the Pacific Region Infrastructure Facility; coordinate to meet the Pacific’s infrastructure gaps, especially on information and communications technology; facilitate transportation; and cooperate to improve maritime security to safeguard fisheries, build maritime-domain awareness, and improve training and advising.
  3. The U.S. will also prioritize finalization of the Compact of Free Association agreements with the Freely Associated States.

9. SUPPORT GOOD GOVERNANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY

  1. The U.S. will support Indo-Pacific governments’ capacity to make independent political choices by helping partners root out corruption, including through foreign-assistance and development policies, leadership at the G7 and G20, and a renewed role in the Open Government Partnership.
  2. The U.S. is also partnering with governments, civil society, and journalists to ensure they have the capability to expose and mitigate the risks from foreign interference and information manipulation.
  3. The United States will continue to stand up for democracy in Burma, working closely with allies and partners to press the Burmese military to provide for a return to democracy, including through credible implementation of the Five Point Consensus.

10. SUPPORT OPEN, RESILIENT, SECURE, AND TRUSTWORTHY TECHNOLOGIES

  1. The U.S. will promote secure and trustworthy digital infrastructure, particularly cloud and telecommunications vendor diversity, including through innovative network architectures such as Open RAN by encouraging at scale commercial deployments and cooperation on testing, such as through shared access to test beds to enable common standards development.
  2. The U.S. will also deepen shared resilience in critical government and infrastructure networks, while building new regional initiatives to improve collective cybersecurity and rapidly respond to cyber incident

INDO-PACIFIC ECONOMIC FRAMEWORK (IPEF)

  1. Australia
  2. Brunei Darussalam
  3. Cambodia
  4. India
  5. Indonesia
  6. Japan
  7. Malaysia
  8. New Zealand
  9. Philippines
  10. Singapore
  11. South Korea
  12. Thailand
  13. U.S.
  14. Vietnam

ASEAN MEMBER STATES

  1. Brunei Darussalam
  2. Cambodia
  3. Indonesia
  4. Lao PDR
  5. Malaysia
  6. Myanmar
  7. Philippines
  8. Singapore
  9. Thailand
  10. Vietnam

Pacific Islands Countries

  1. Cook Islands
  2. Fiji
  3. Republic of Marshall Islands
  4. Federated States of Micronesia
  5. Nauru
  6. Niue
  7. Palau
  8. Papua New Guinea
  9. Samoa
  10. Solomon Islands
  11. Tonga
  12. Tuvalu
  13. Vanuatu

 

 

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