Asia | Banyan

The Quad is finding its purpose, at last

An informal defensive coalition of four democracies has to prove its mettle

ON AGAIN, OFF AGAIN for years, the security grouping known as the Quad appears in recent months to be gaining purpose at last. Not least, the two members who are not part of the G7, Australia and India, have been invited to attend that club’s summit in Britain between June 11th and 13th, joining the two who are, America and Japan. A virtual gathering of the Quad’s leaders organised by Joe Biden in March was one of the American president’s first foreign-policy moves. There is talk of the group’s first in-person summit later in the year. Meanwhile, Congress has thrown its weight behind legislation designed to counter China. Among other things, it gives backing to the Quad by boosting co-operation in military and tech matters.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Quad wrangle”

Bunged up: How the green boom could get stuck

From the June 12th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

An illustration of two eyes with binary code with the China flag between them. A wavy strip of blue runs along the top whilst below is a smaller US flag, three Yuan symbols, a cursor symbol, wifi symbol, dollar sign and circuit-board patterns along with mo

America v China: who controls Asia’s internet?

Amid an explosive data and AI boom the superpower contest hots up

Taiwan Navy Commander Tang Hua

China is using an “anaconda strategy” to squeeze Taiwan

Taiwan’s navy commander warns that his forces are increasingly strained


U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken exits aeroplane via steps with 'Seal of The President of the United States of America' emblem.

America is losing South-East Asia to China

President Joe Biden will not attend this year’s East Asia Summit


India has a unique opportunity to lead in AI

Its development will be unlike China’s or America’s

Japan’s new prime minister is his own party’s sternest critic

This could make it harder for Ishiba Shigeru to govern effectively

Ishiba Shigeru will become Japan’s next prime minister

The maverick won his fifth bid for leadership of the ruling party