The Indo-Pacific has become the epicenter of the twenty-first century geopolitical conflict, the main arena of strategic competition, development of alliances, and regional security. The paper discusses how Indo-Pacific geopolitics is multidimensional, taking a closer look at the U.S.China rivalry, emergence of flexible minilateral security arrangements, and how different countries in the regions respond to this. The study relies on a qualitative research design entailing a thematic content analysis of academic literature, policy reports, and think tank publications, and finds three key dynamics to be resourcing the regional security architecture: first, the escalation of the great-power competition promoted by the aggressive maritime expansion of China and by the forward-deployed deterrence of the United States; second, the transformation of the alliances that go beyond rigid bilateralism to fluid minilateral constructs like Quad and AUKUS that would increase the regional interoperability without establishing formal treaty relations; third, the hedging strategies The finding also points out how the aspect of non-traditional security menace, such as cyberattacks, grey-zone activities, unlawful fishing, and climate-based susceptibility, is rising to prominence and becoming a burden as far as conventional security protocols are concerned. The work should be added to the literature on international security and Indo-Pacific strategy as an amalgam of historical military competition and economic statecraft and hybrid threat, whereby a flexible, multilayered and inclusive regional security architecture was required, which could help the balancing of deterrence and cooperation.
Chauhdry et al. (Thu,) studied this question.