By Dr. James M. Minnich

Honolulu, Hawaii — March 6, 2026

The Indo-Pacific is not becoming unstable by accident. Across the region, a series of overlapping shocks—from the fragile connectivity of undersea data cables to the rapid acceleration of dual-use technologies—is reshaping how states assess security, resilience, and cooperation. The era of episodic crisis is over. We have entered a period in which instability is structural, access is conditional, and competition is the primary mode of strategic positioning.

In our recent discussion during Episode 3 of Strategic Voices at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, Professors Shyam Tekwani, Andrea Malji, and I examined what this evolving environment means for regional strategy. Our conclusion was clear: the Indo-Pacific is undergoing an adaptive realignment that renders legacy strategies of “stable engagement” increasingly inadequate.

To understand this transition, policymakers must focus on three interlocking dynamics: disruption exposes vulnerability, division reorganizes access, and competition determines advantage. Together, these forces are quietly redefining how power operates across the region.

The End of Episodic Shock

Disruption has always existed in international affairs, but its frequency and accumulation have transformed it into a persistent condition. As Professor Tekwani observed, disruption is no longer something states can simply absorb and recover from; it is the environment within which governments must now operate. States can no longer plan around temporary turbulence; they must plan through disruption.

Recent testimony before the U.S.–China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC) illustrates this. Experts warned that severing just three undersea cable clusters near the Bashi Channel could reduce Taiwan’s international bandwidth by as much as 95 percent. This is the essence of structural disruption: a gray-zone vulnerability capable of paralyzing a high-tech economy without a single missile being fired.

Whether it is maritime coercion in the South China Sea or the demographic pressures affecting military recruitment in advanced economies, these accumulated shocks compress decision-making timelines and erode the predictability upon which traditional diplomacy depends.

The Rise of Conditional Access

As disruption exposes systemic vulnerabilities, it triggers a reorganization of the regional order. This is where division emerges—not primarily along geographic or ideological lines, but through the architecture of modern systems. Today’s divisions run through networks of technology, capital, supply chains, and security cooperation.

Access to these systems is increasingly conditional and differentiated, shaped by judgments of reliability and trust under stress. Strategic language emphasizing “critical but limited support” reflects a broader shift toward shared responsibility.

Security partnerships are evolving accordingly. From semiconductor friend-shoring to minilateral arrangements such as AUKUS and the Quad, the region is organizing into a multi-tiered network. Division today does not necessarily exclude states; rather, it differentiates expectations and levels of access across an increasingly complex strategic ecosystem.

Advantage in a Fragmented System

If disruption reveals vulnerabilities and division restructures access, then competition becomes the mechanism through which states seek advantage. Professor Malji emphasized that the Indo-Pacific is increasingly shaped by multipolar dynamics, which heightens the risk of miscalculation. Crises could escalate not through deliberate intent, but through the speed and complexity of interactions among multiple actors.

Competition today often unfolds below the threshold of open conflict. It manifests through industrial policy and the race to secure critical minerals—lithium, cobalt, rare earth elements, and nickel—that underpin the next generation of manufacturing.

States across the region are not simply choosing sides. Many are practicing a form of strategic hedging, balancing security cooperation with the United States while maintaining economic engagement with China to maintain strategic flexibility.

A Durable Realignment

The Indo-Pacific is neither collapsing into disorder nor stabilizing into a clearly defined new order. Instead, it is undergoing an adaptive realignment. For policymakers, the implication is straightforward: the challenge of the coming decade will not be managing a single flashpoint. It will be maintaining strategic advantage in an environment defined by frequent shocks and conditional trust.

This condition is not temporary. It is the operating environment.

Referenced in this Episode:

This article reflects the author’s analysis and does not represent the views of any institution or individual.