Maritime Security — Basic Structure
Basic Structure
India's maritime security encompasses comprehensive protection of 7,516 km coastline and 2.4 million sq km Exclusive Economic Zone through integrated multi-agency framework. The three-tier architecture involves Indian Navy for deep-sea operations, Coast Guard for coastal waters, and Marine Police for shallow areas, coordinated through Joint Operations Centres and National Maritime Domain Awareness Centre.
Legal foundation provided by Maritime Zones of India Act 2019 defining territorial waters (12 nautical miles), contiguous zone (24 nautical miles), and EEZ (200 nautical miles). Key challenges include traditional threats like territorial disputes and naval competition, plus non-traditional challenges like piracy, terrorism, smuggling, illegal fishing, and cyber threats.
International cooperation through QUAD, IONS, and IORA enhances capabilities through information sharing, joint exercises, and coordinated responses. Blue Economy initiative targets $1 trillion ocean economy by 2030 through sustainable marine resource utilization.
Technology integration includes coastal surveillance networks, satellite monitoring, and maritime domain awareness systems. Recent developments include QUAD Maritime Domain Awareness initiative and expanded bilateral cooperation agreements.
Critical for UPSC: understand evolution from sea-blindness to maritime consciousness, multi-agency coordination mechanisms, international law applications, and current affairs connections to Indo-Pacific strategy.
Important Differences
vs Border Management
| Aspect | This Topic | Border Management |
|---|---|---|
| Nature of Boundary | Maritime boundaries defined by international law (UNCLOS) with zones extending up to 200 nautical miles | Land boundaries defined by bilateral agreements, treaties, and historical claims with fixed demarcation |
| Legal Framework | Maritime Zones of India Act 2019, UNCLOS, international maritime law | Border Security and Management Division, bilateral agreements, customary international law |
| Enforcement Agencies | Indian Navy, Coast Guard, Marine Police with three-tier coordination | Border Security Force, Indo-Tibetan Border Police, Sashastra Seema Bal, Assam Rifles |
| Threat Spectrum | Piracy, terrorism, smuggling, illegal fishing, naval competition, cyber threats | Infiltration, terrorism, smuggling, border disputes, military confrontation |
| International Cooperation | QUAD, IONS, IORA, multilateral maritime partnerships | Bilateral border management agreements, confidence-building measures |
vs Act East Policy
| Aspect | This Topic | Act East Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic Focus | Entire Indian Ocean Region with emphasis on Indo-Pacific maritime domain | Southeast Asia and East Asia with focus on land and maritime connectivity |
| Primary Objectives | Maritime domain security, sea lane protection, naval cooperation | Economic integration, connectivity enhancement, strategic partnerships |
| Key Partnerships | QUAD, IONS, IORA, bilateral naval cooperation agreements | ASEAN, East Asia Summit, RCEP, bilateral trade and investment agreements |
| Operational Mechanisms | Joint naval exercises, information sharing, maritime domain awareness | Trade agreements, infrastructure projects, cultural exchanges, diplomatic engagement |
| Security Dimension | Hard security focus on naval capabilities and maritime threat response | Soft security emphasis on economic cooperation and diplomatic engagement |