Strengthening India-Indonesia Relations: Historical and Strategic Partnership
Why in the news?
India and Indonesia signed key agreements on maritime security, health, traditional medicine, culture, and digital cooperation during President Prabowo Subianto’s visit, marking a significant step in bilateral ties and defense collaboration.
Recent Developments
- On January 27, 2025, India and Indonesia signed agreements in maritime security, health, traditional medicine, culture, and digital cooperation.
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Prabowo Subianto held a summit at Hyderabad House, New Delhi.
- The visit, early in Subianto’s tenure, aims to boost trade, maritime security, and defense cooperation.
Historical Ties
- Early Cooperation: Strong ties were built in the 1940s based on anti-imperialist ideals and democratic values.
- India supported Indonesia’s independence struggle (1945-1949) through diplomatic efforts, supplies, and labor union support.
- President Sukarno was the first Chief Guest of India’s Republic Day (1950), followed by Prime Minister Nehru’s visit to Indonesia.
- The Bandung Conference (1955) showcased joint leadership in the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM).
Phases of Drift and Renewal
- Tensions: Relations soured in the 1960s as Indonesia aligned with China and Pakistan.
- Diplomatic strains peaked during the 1965 Indo-Pak war, with Jakarta supplying arms to Pakistan.
- Revival: Under President Suharto (1967-1998), ties normalized with trade agreements.
- India’s 1990s economic reforms and the ‘Look East’ policy re-energized cooperation.
- Since 2014, the ‘Act East’ policy under Modi further elevated the partnership.
- Bilateral trade surged to $38.84 billion (2022-23), with Indonesia being India’s key coal and palm oil
The recent agreements signal a strengthened strategic partnership between the two nations.
Sources Referred:
PIB, The Hindu, Indian Express, Hindustan Times