The year gone by, the Quad’s year of interregnum
The Quad: Year of Interregnum — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Quad (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) is a grouping of India, Australia, Japan, and the United States, centred on maintaining a free, open, and inclusive Indo-Pacific. [S1]
- It is examined under GS-II (International Relations) and is a recurring source of Prelims MCQs (members, summits, initiatives) and Mains questions (India's strategic posture, China containment debate). [S1]
- The phrase "year of interregnum" (Jan 2026 article) signals a phase of strategic uncertainty in 2025 caused by Trump's return and its ambiguous signals for multilateral cooperation. [S4]
- Despite turbulence, the Quad's agenda has diversified well beyond security — covering semiconductors, ports, health, cyber, and climate — making it a template for Indo-Pacific minilateralism. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- September 21, 2024: The 6th Quad Leaders' Summit was held at Wilmington, Delaware, hosted by President Biden — the last major Quad event before the U.S. presidential transition. The Wilmington Declaration was adopted. [S2][S3]
- January 2026: An analysis in The Hindu (Harsh V. Pant & Sayantan Haldar, Observer Research Foundation) described 2025 as a Quad "year of interregnum" — flagging strategic drift due to Trump's "America First" doctrine and questions over U.S. Indo-Pacific commitment. [S4]
- India was scheduled to host the 2025 Quad Leaders' Summit — whether and when this materialised was the central uncertainty of the interregnum period. [S2]
- Trump's return to the White House in January 2025 triggered global recalibration; given Trump was a key architect of the 2017 Quad revival, his policy signals were watched closely for continuity vs. disruption. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2007 | Quad 1.0 — first iteration proposed by Japan's PM Abe; included a joint naval exercise (Malabar). Dissolved quickly due to diplomatic pressure from China and change of government in Australia. |
| November 2017 | Quad revived — senior officials met in Manila on the margins of the East Asia Summit (EAS), discussing maritime security, counter-terrorism, and Free and Open Indo-Pacific principles. [S1] |
| 2019 | Upgraded to Foreign Ministers' level dialogue. |
| March 2021 | First Quad Leaders' Summit (virtual) under Biden — group institutionalised at the highest political level. |
| September 2021 | First in-person Quad Leaders' Summit, Washington D.C. |
| May 2022 | Tokyo Summit — launched Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA). |
| May 2023 | Hiroshima Summit (on the margins of G7). |
| November 2023 | San Francisco ministerial (on the margins of APEC). |
| September 21, 2024 | 6th Quad Leaders' Summit, Wilmington, Delaware — Wilmington Declaration adopted. [S2][S3] |
| 2025 | India scheduled as host; "year of interregnum" due to U.S. policy churn. [S4] |
Predecessors: The Malabar Naval Exercise (India-US, 1992; Japan joined 2015; Australia joined 2020) is the operational predecessor and remains a key military track alongside the Quad diplomatic track.
4. Core Static Facts
Membership & Structure - Members: India, Australia, Japan, United States [S1] - Format: Leaders' Summits (apex); Foreign Ministers' Meetings; Senior Officials' Meetings; Working Groups (thematic) - No permanent secretariat — rotating chair/host
Guiding Principle - A "free, open, prosperous, and resilient" Indo-Pacific; rules-based international order [S1][S2]
Key 2024 Wilmington Deliverables [S2][S3] | Initiative | Detail | |------------|--------| | Semiconductor Supply Chains Contingency Network MoC | Enhances resilience of Quad semiconductor supply chains | | Quad Ports of the Future Partnership | Sustainable, resilient port infrastructure across Indo-Pacific | | Quad DPI Principles | Common principles for development and deployment of Digital Public Infrastructure | | Quad Regional Ports & Transportation Conference | To be hosted by India in Mumbai in 2025 |
Standing Thematic Pillars (established since 2021) - Vaccines / Health Security (COVAX/Quad Vaccine Partnership) - Climate & Clean Energy - Critical & Emerging Technologies (CSET) - Cyber Security - Space (data-sharing, satellite) - Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA) [S1]
Implementing Ministry (India): Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) — Indo-Pacific Division [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- The Quad is widely interpreted as a soft-balancing coalition against China's revisionism in the South China Sea and broader Indo-Pacific, though members officially frame it as a non-military, positive agenda group. [S1][S4]
- Trump's "America First" orientation raised fears of transactional bilateralism replacing multilateral frameworks; yet Trump was himself the architect of the 2017 revival, suggesting continuity of the grouping even under his administration. [S4]
- India's strategic calculus: Quad allows hedging — engaging the U.S. security umbrella without formal alliance commitments, preserving strategic autonomy. [S1][S4]
- The Indo-Pacific is described as the "most contested terrain" in China-U.S. competition — the Quad is Washington's primary plurilateral instrument in this theatre. [S4]
Economic
- Semiconductor MoC directly addresses supply-chain fragility exposed during COVID-19; India's role as a chip-assembly destination is strategic. [S2]
- Ports of the Future Partnership provides an alternative narrative to China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) port investments across Asia and Africa. [S2]
- DPI Principles — India's UPI/Aadhaar stack positions it as a rule-setter in this domain for the Global South. [S2]
Technological / Scientific
- IPMDA (Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness, 2022) — uses commercial satellite data, sensors, and radar to build a shared maritime "picture" across Southeast Asia, Pacific Islands, and Indian Ocean. [S1]
- Critical and Emerging Technology (CSET) Working Group covers AI, quantum computing, telecom (5G/6G alternatives to Huawei), and biotech. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- The "rules-based order" framing anchors Quad legitimacy in international law (UNCLOS, WTO), differentiating it from power-politics narratives. [S1][S4]
- Critics note the absence of ASEAN members and smaller Indo-Pacific nations from the core grouping creates a legitimacy gap; ASEAN Centrality is formally acknowledged but structurally marginalised. [S1]
Historical
- Quad 1.0's collapse (2007–08) due to China pressure and Australia's withdrawal is a cautionary lesson on alliance durability — Quad 2.0's institutionalisation at the Leaders' level was designed to prevent a repeat. [S1]
- The "interregnum" concept (2025) echoes the 2007–2017 hiatus — a recurring vulnerability in Quad continuity tied to domestic politics in member states. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- September 21, 2024: 6th Quad Leaders' Summit at Wilmington, Delaware; Wilmington Declaration adopted; Biden hosted Albanese, Kishida, Modi. [S2][S3]
- September 2024: Semiconductor Supply Chain MoC signed among Quad members. [S2]
- September 2024: Quad Ports of the Future Partnership announced with focus on sustainable port development in Indo-Pacific. [S2]
- September 2024: Quad DPI Principles unveiled; India's digital stack highlighted as model. [S2]
- 2024: Quad Regional Ports and Transportation Conference announced to be hosted by India in Mumbai in 2025. [S2]
- January 20, 2025: Donald Trump assumed office for second term — introduced uncertainty on pace/priority of Quad summitry; India's turn to host the 2025 Leaders' Summit became the key deliverable to watch. [S4]
- January 12, 2026: ORF analysts (Harsh V. Pant, Sayantan Haldar) characterised 2025 as the Quad's "year of interregnum" — noting disruption but arguing it was too early to write off the group. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Quad comprises four countries: India, Australia, Japan, and the United States. [S1]
- The Quad was first revived at the senior-officials level in Manila in November 2017, on the margins of the East Asia Summit. [S1]
- The 6th Quad Leaders' Summit was held on September 21, 2024, at Wilmington, Delaware. [S2][S3]
- The joint statement from the 2024 Quad Leaders' Summit is called the Wilmington Declaration. [S3]
- The 2024 Wilmington Summit was hosted by President Joe Biden. [S2]
- The Semiconductor Supply Chains Contingency Network MoC was a key deliverable of the 2024 Quad Summit. [S2]
- India was designated host of the 2025 Quad Leaders' Summit; a Quad Ports Conference was slated for Mumbai. [S2]
- The Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA) was launched at the 2022 Tokyo Quad Summit. [S1]
- Malabar Naval Exercise — Australia joined in 2020, completing the Quad's military track alignment. [S1]
- The Quad has no permanent secretariat; it operates through rotating chairmanship and thematic working groups. [S1]
- The Quad's overarching goal is a "free, open, prosperous, and resilient Indo-Pacific" — not explicitly a military alliance. [S1]
- Australia's withdrawal in 2007–08 caused the collapse of Quad 1.0; the 2017 revival was designed at officials' level first to ensure durability. [S1]
- The implementing ministry for Quad matters in India is the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA). [S1]
- Donald Trump is credited as a key architect of the 2017 Quad revival — his 2025 return created the "interregnum" narrative. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (International Relations — India and its neighbourhood; bilateral, regional, and global groupings)
Syllabus Heading: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests; Groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests; Indo-Pacific and India's strategic interests.
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Quad has evolved from a security dialogue into a comprehensive governance platform for the Indo-Pacific. Critically examine the strengths and limitations of this transformation." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "Assess how Donald Trump's return to the White House in 2025 has affected the Quad's strategic coherence and India's options in the Indo-Pacific." (GS-II, 15 marks) 3. "The Quad is neither a military alliance nor a mere talk-shop. Evaluate this claim in light of its recent institutional evolution and deliverables." (GS-II, 250 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Indo-Pacific Strategy & ASEAN Centrality | Quad operates in the Indo-Pacific; ASEAN's concerns about being sidelined are a key tension |
| AUKUS | A parallel security architecture (Australia-UK-US) overlapping with Quad in the Pacific; complements or complicates Quad's non-military self-image |
| Malabar Naval Exercise | Operational/military complement to Quad's diplomatic track |
| Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) | Quad infrastructure initiatives (Ports of the Future, PGII) are explicitly positioned as alternatives |
| India's Act East Policy | India's strategic outreach to Southeast Asia and Pacific is the bilateral scaffolding on which Quad is layered |
| Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) | Quad DPI Principles make UPI/Aadhaar a geopolitical asset; links to India Stack diplomacy |
| South China Sea Disputes & UNCLOS | Quad's "rules-based order" framing is most immediately tested here |
| India-US Bilateral Relations (iCET) | The Initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology is the bilateral tech track parallel to Quad's CSET working group |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- "Quad is a military alliance" — Wrong. Quad explicitly positions itself as a civilian/diplomatic platform; AUKUS is the explicitly defence-oriented grouping. Conflating the two is a frequent error.
- Quad revival year — Aspirants sometimes cite 2007 (Quad 1.0) as the revival year. The correct revival year is 2017 (Manila, EAS margins). [S1]
- Summit count confusion — The 2024 Wilmington Summit was the 6th Quad Leaders' Summit, not the 4th (some summaries count only in-person or virtual separately). [S2]
- Wrong host for 2024 Summit — It was hosted by Biden in Wilmington, not at any multilateral sideline event (e.g., G20/UNGA). [S2]
- Australia's role in Malabar — Australia joined Malabar in 2020, not at Quad's 2017 revival. Conflating the diplomatic revival with the military exercise expansion is a trap.
11. Sources
- [S1] MEA Quad Brief (Feb 2025) — https://www.mea.gov.in/Portal/ForeignRelation/Unclassified_Quad_Brief_Feb_2025.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S2] PIB — Fact Sheet: 2024 Quad Leaders' Summit — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2057460 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] PIB — The Wilmington Declaration Joint Statement — https://www.pib.gov.in/pressreleasepage.aspx?PRID=2057454 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] The Hindu (Jan 12, 2026) — "The year gone by, the Quad's year of interregnum" by Harsh V. Pant & Sayantan Haldar, ORF — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-12/th_international/articleGCPFE6R6A-13083703.ece — (Tier 4, article excerpt as primary source)