Since antiquity the Indian Ocean has been the centre of human progress, a great arena in which many civilizations have mingled, fought, and traded on important trade routes criss-crossing the waters around India for thousands of years. The entry and exit is to this vast water body is through four ‘gates’ or choke points: the Strait of Bab-el-Mandeb; around South Africa’s Cape Agulhas; the Strait of Malacca; and past Australia’s Cape West Howe. The bulk of the global energy trade originating in the Persian Gulf needs to traverse yet another ‘gate’, the Strait of Hormuz, before it reaches open waters.
The Rise of the Indian Navy: Internal Vulnerabilities, External Challenges, edited by Harsh V. Pant
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Since antiquity the Indian Ocean has been the centre of human progress, a great arena in which many civilizations have mingled, fought, and traded on important trade routes criss-crossing the waters around India for thousands of years. The entry and exit is to this vast water body is through four ‘gates’ or choke points: the Strait of Bab-el-Mandeb; around South Africa’s Cape Agulhas; the Strait of Malacca; and past Australia’s Cape West Howe. The bulk of the global energy trade originating in the Persian Gulf needs to traverse yet another ‘gate’, the Strait of Hormuz, before it reaches open waters.
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