The organization’s significance is in question during a critical year.
In a
curious turn of events, recent days have seen an enthusiastic discussion
on the option of “joint patrols” by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) members in the South China Sea. In fairness, the concept is not
entirely alien to the region: Since 2004, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, and
Thailand have been jointly involved in the Malacca Strait Patrols (MSP),
collectively guarding one of the world’s most important waterways against
piracy and other non-traditional security threats.
The MPS
has been largely hailed as a successful demonstration of cooperative
security in the developing world, providing invaluable lessons for troubled
waters across the world. But the South China Sea is no Malacca Strait,
especially because it involves no less than China — an extra-ASEAN power, with Mahanian ambitions of
maritime domination in adjacent waters.
Unwilling
to risk direct confrontation with its top trading partner (China), Washington
has largely shunned much-needed “counter-provocation” operations to rein in
Beijing’s sweeping territorial posturing across the Western Pacific. For years,
there have been calls for the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard forces to more
vigorously challenge China’s salami-slicing strategy in adjacent waters.
So far, the Obama administration has even equivocated over
whether territorial disputes in the South China Sea are covered by the 1951
Philippine-U.S. Mutual Defense Treaty, leaving a highly vulnerable Manila in
strategic limbo.
Instead
of directly challenging China’s expanding para-military patrols and
construction activities, Washington has instead encouraged its regional allies
to augment their maritime defensive capabilities, while negotiating greater
“rotational access” to precious maritime outposts in Singapore and the
Philippines. And recently, it has begun to prod the ASEAN to extend its joint
maritime patrol concept to the South China Sea. Unsure of the ASEAN’s resolve
and capabilities, Washington has also requested Japan to join the fray, as
the Abe administration steps up its pivot to Southeast Asia.
Unsurprisingly,
ASEAN has collectively responded
to Washington’s proposal with a mixture of lethargy and skepticism, with the predictable exception of
loyal allies such as the Philippines, which has enthusiastically embraced any
form of external assistance to push back against China’s creeping incursion
into its 200-nautical-miles Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). As the ASEAN
struggles to assert its relevance vis-à-vis the South China Sea disputes,
claimant states have reverted to classical balance of power calculus.
Hollow Regionalism
No wonder
leading ASEAN experts have begun to question the relevance of the regional
organization, bemoaning its lack of resolve before China’s repeated acts of provocation
against ASEAN members, particularly the Philippines and Vietnam.
Bemoaning
the “illusion” of ASEAN unity, Singaporean diplomat Barry Desker has rightfully pointed out the
glaring lack of internal coherence within the regional body: “The ability of
external parties to shape the positions of ASEAN members on regional issues
such as the competing maritime claims in the South China Sea could undermine
efforts to create an agreed ASEAN view. As China exerts its influence on ASEAN
members to prevent any decisions which could affect its preference for bilateral
negotiations, it will be increasingly difficult to reach an ASEAN consensus.”
This
should come as no surprise, veteran analyst Muthiah Alagappa argues, since “The foremost
priority for ASEAN national leaders in the foreseeable future will be making
strong nations and states at home to preserve their hold on power. Regional
community building will be lower priority and likely to succeed only when it can
contribute to or does not hinder realization of the primary national objectives
of incumbent leaders.”
By all
accounts, China has become an honorary ASEAN member, with a de facto
veto over any decision which may directly affect Beijing’s interests both in
economic and security matters. In an explicit rejection of America’s opposition
to the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), all major ASEAN
countries have joined the new regional financial
entity, underlining Washington’s waning influence, especially in the
economic sphere. After all, even America’s European allies have succumbed to
the AIIB temptation, with Australia, South Korea, and Japan now re-considering
their initial boycott of the Beijing-based bank.
Time for Minilateralism
The ASEAN
has proven even more vulnerable to Chinese influence in security matters. Since
the conclusion of the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China
Sea (DoC) in 2002, which laid down the foundation of a more robust,
legally-binding mechanism for the resolution of the territorial disputes, the
ASEAN has failed to even finalize the negotiation of the guidelines of a
Code of Conduct (CoC), let alone the complete agreement.
This is
precisely why some ASEAN countries, particularly the Philippines and Vietnam,
have increasingly been gravitating towards the minilateralist option:
institutionalized coordination among highly like-minded states on specific
areas of common interest. Since its mid-2012 standoff with China over the
Scarborough Shoal, the Philippines has assiduously sought a
quadrilateral, regular high-level meeting among ASEAN claimant states in the
South China Sea. So far, however, only Vietnam has shown sustained and keen
interest.
No
wonder, the Philippines and Vietnam are more interested in augmenting their
defense ties with extra-regional powers. The problem with this balancing
approach, however, is that it highlights the limits of the ASEAN as the
(supposedly) primary mechanism for conflict-prevention/management in the region
– defeating the very purpose of regional integration in Southeast Asia. By
Richard Javad Heydarian
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