India-Australia intelligence pact targets regional terror, Indo-Pacific security

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India-Australia intelligence pact targets regional terror, Indo-Pacific security

Synopsis

India and Australia have formalised one of their most comprehensive bilateral security pacts yet — covering terror intelligence sharing, online radicalisation, maritime security, and HADR — while explicitly naming the US and Japan as partners in building a stable Indo-Pacific. The declaration signals a deepening of Quad-aligned security architecture beyond the four-nation forum itself.

Key Takeaways

India and Australia signed the Australia-India Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation on 9 July 2025 in Canberra .
Both nations committed to enhanced intelligence sharing on regional terrorist entities, individuals, terror financing, and online radicalisation .
The declaration covers cooperation in new and emerging technologies , critical infrastructure , the maritime domain , and crowded spaces .
Both countries pledged to expand cooperation with the United States and Japan toward a stable Indo-Pacific, reinforcing the Quad framework.
Joint HADR exercises and contingency planning — including third-country evacuation operations — are also part of the pact.
Both nations reaffirmed adherence to UNCLOS , freedom of navigation, and support for IORA , ASEAN , and the Pacific Islands Forum .

India and Australia on 9 July 2025 agreed to significantly enhance intelligence sharing on regional terrorist threats, including designated terrorist entities and individuals, as part of a sweeping bilateral defence and security declaration signed in Canberra. The Australia-India Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation marks one of the most comprehensive counterterrorism frameworks the two nations have formalised to date.

Counterterrorism Cooperation: Key Commitments

The joint declaration commits both nations to increased information sharing on terrorist threats across the region. Areas of enhanced collaboration include new and emerging technologies, financing of terrorism, critical infrastructure and crowded spaces, the maritime domain, and online radicalisation.

'We commit to increase information sharing on terrorist threats in our region, including entities and individuals, and explore opportunities for enhanced collaboration to counter violent extremism and terrorism in sectors, including in new and emerging technology; financing of terrorism; critical infrastructure and crowded spaces; the maritime domain; and online radicalisation,' the joint statement read.

This comes amid growing concerns over the use of encrypted platforms and social media for radicalisation across the Indo-Pacific, a challenge that has prompted coordinated responses from multiple Quad-aligned nations in recent years.

Nuclear Disarmament and Non-Proliferation

Both nations reaffirmed their shared vision of a world free of nuclear weapons, reiterating commitment to non-proliferation and the pursuit of global, complete, non-discriminatory, and verifiable nuclear disarmament. The language reflects a longstanding position for both governments, though it carries renewed weight given ongoing regional tensions.

Indo-Pacific Architecture and Multilateral Engagement

The declaration also commits India and Australia to deepening cooperation with other Indo-Pacific partners through trilateral mechanisms and the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative. Notably, both countries pledged to expand cooperation with the United States and Japan — the other two members of the Quad — toward building capability for 'an open, stable, peaceful and prosperous Indo-Pacific region.'

Both nations reaffirmed support for the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), ASEAN and ASEAN-centred regional architecture, and the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) as the primary multilateral forums for addressing regional challenges.

The statement also reaffirmed adherence to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), including freedom of navigation and overflight — language widely understood as a signal toward maritime disputes in the region.

Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief

India and Australia further agreed to deepen collaboration in Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR), with commitments covering information sharing, expert exchanges, and joint exercises — including through the Quad Indo-Pacific Logistics Network, which supports civilian response to large-scale natural disasters.

The declaration also opens the door to joint contingency planning and coordinated response during crises, including support for regional and global evacuation operations in third countries — a significant operational expansion of bilateral engagement.

What Comes Next

The declaration sets a broad agenda, but implementation timelines and specific operational frameworks have not yet been made public. Observers will watch closely for how quickly the two nations translate commitments — particularly on terror financing and emerging technology — into actionable intelligence protocols. With Quad summitry and Indo-Pacific security increasingly interlinked, this bilateral declaration is likely to feed into broader multilateral frameworks in the months ahead.

Point of View

Online radicalisation, and terror financing — the three vectors that intelligence agencies across the Indo-Pacific have flagged as most difficult to monitor and counter. That specificity suggests this is not a routine diplomatic communiqué but a response to identified operational gaps. The inclusion of HADR and third-country evacuation planning also hints at a broadened conception of security that goes well beyond traditional military cooperation. What remains untested is whether the intelligence-sharing architecture will be genuinely reciprocal — India and Australia have historically had asymmetric intelligence relationships, with Australia more deeply embedded in Five Eyes networks. Bridging that gap is the real work the declaration leaves undone.
NationPress
9 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What did India and Australia agree to in their joint defence declaration?
India and Australia signed the Australia-India Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation on 9 July 2025, committing to enhanced intelligence sharing on regional terrorist threats, counterterrorism cooperation across emerging technologies and the maritime domain, and deeper engagement on Indo-Pacific security through Quad and multilateral frameworks.
Which areas of counterterrorism cooperation are covered under the pact?
The declaration covers cooperation on terror financing, new and emerging technologies, critical infrastructure and crowded spaces, the maritime domain, and online radicalisation, in addition to direct information sharing on terrorist entities and individuals.
How does this declaration relate to the Quad?
While the declaration is a bilateral India-Australia pact, it explicitly commits both nations to expanding cooperation with the United States and Japan — the other two Quad members — toward a stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific region, reinforcing the broader Quad security architecture.
What is the significance of the HADR commitments in the declaration?
The Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief commitments include joint exercises through the Quad Indo-Pacific Logistics Network and, notably, contingency planning for evacuation operations in third countries — a significant expansion of bilateral operational cooperation beyond traditional military domains.
What is the India-Australia stance on nuclear disarmament?
Both nations reaffirmed their commitment to a world free of nuclear weapons, supporting global, complete, non-discriminatory, and verifiable nuclear disarmament, along with continued adherence to non-proliferation norms.
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