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What is Quad and what are its objectives?

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, US President Joe Biden, Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese gathered Saturday to attend the fourth in-person Quad Leaders’ Summit. This year, the summit was held in the United States’ Wilmington, Delaware.
The sixth edition of the Quad Leaders’ Summit is a ‘farewell’ summit for both US President Joe Biden and Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida before they step down from their respective offices.
What is QUAD? How was it formed? What’s the focus of this QUAD Summit? Here’s all you need to know
Quad stands for Quadrilateral Security Dialogue. It is a diplomatic partnership between four nations – Australia, India, Japan, and the US.
The partnership is known formally as the ‘Quad’, not the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, “noting its nature as a diplomatic, not security, partnership”.
According to the Associated Press, South Korea earlier expressed interest in joining the Quad, though US officials reportedly said they are not contemplating adjusting the group’s membership. The group has held “Quad-plus” meetings that have included South Korea, New Zealand and Vietnam, which could form the basis for future expansion or partnership in the region.
Quad nations primarily focus on the stability and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific region. The Quad is “committed to supporting an open, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific that is inclusive and resilient,” the Australian government aid on its website.
“The Quad’s positive and practical agenda is focused on delivering outcomes for the Indo-Pacific, in response to the region’s priorities and most pressing challenges, including health security, climate change, infrastructure, critical and emerging technology, cyber security, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, space, maritime security, countering disinformation, and counter-terrorism,” the website read.
The Quad’s origins date back to the collaboration in response to the December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. The four countries had then joined together to provide humanitarian and disaster assistance to the affected region.
It was formalised by former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in 2007. The group met for the first time in 2007 on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).
However, it fell dormant for nearly a decade, particularly amid Australian concerns that its participation in the group would irritate China, the Associated Press reported. Australia withdrew from the forum in 2008, reportedly due to political pressure from the Chinese government.
The group was resurrected in 2017, reflecting changing attitudes in the region toward China’s growing influence. The Quad leaders held their first formal summit in 2021 and met again virtually in March.

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