The Philippines and Thailand
are not acting like US treaty allies are supposed to. While the Philippines’
President Rodrigo Duterte seems somewhat of an outlier, his anti-Americanism is
only the latest instalment of instability in the US–Philippines relationship.
Thai–US relations have also suffered since the 2014 military coup and Thailand
now appears to be seeking closer military ties with China. But these countries’
disagreements with the United States do not necessarily mean they want a change
to the status quo in Asia.
Duterte’s
election has thrown perceptions of the US–Philippines alliance into disarray. The
firebrand leader’s policy announcements have included a possible end to joint
US–Philippines naval patrols and the US Special Forces presence in Mindanao.
These, together with intemperate outbursts in response to US criticism of his
campaign against drugs, appear to signal a relationship in serious trouble.
Duterte has confounded expectations that his country would continue to draw
closer to the United States in the wake of the South China Sea dispute.
The Thai–US
relationship has also struggled since 2014, with continuing frustration from
Thai elites towards US policy. After the May 2014 coup there was fury that the
United States would condemn the overthrow of the Yingluck government and mildly
downgrade military cooperation. Since then the relationship has been marked by
bitter spats, especially when US officials have criticised Thailand on human
rights issues.
Meanwhile
Thailand appears to be drifting closer to China. The two countries have
undertaken new joint military exercises and the Thai navy has announced plans
to purchase Chinese submarines.
Thailand’s recent decisions to deport Uighurs, an
ethnic minority population in western China with separatist elements, and block
entry to Hong Kong celebrity activist
Joshua Wong also appear to demonstrate increasing subservience to
China.
Common to
both Thailand and the Philippines is a fear of major powers interfering in
domestic politics or intervening in internal security problems. While outside
criticism is something that most Western states view as merely irritating, for
many developing states it can be interpreted as intent to destabilise,
including by fostering support for opposition forces.
This view of
security circumscribes these countries’ embrace of liberal values, which is why
views of concepts such as human rights and the rule of law can vary. For
example, the right to be innocent until proved guilty is one that considerable
numbers of both Thais and Filipinos seem quite prepared to forego if a threat
to security is perceived. This was demonstrated in former Thai prime minister
Thaksin Shinawatra’s anti-drugs campaign and now is evident in
the Philippines with Duterte’s current crackdown.
All this
means that countries like the Philippines and Thailand can react violently to
criticism of their human rights performance. They are then prepared to make the
political and diplomatic dimensions of their relationships with offending great
powers very unpleasant. This includes through public overtures to alternative
suitors like China and Russia who, being illiberal themselves, are refreshingly
unlikely to offer criticism on the human rights front.
A shifting
international power structure is changing the way Thailand and the Philippines
balance between the United States and China. Cooperation with the United States
offers access to desirable technology and training, as well as a shield against
China, but neither state wants to become the patsy for US–China rivalry nor a
proxy battleground for the United States. Yet neither wants Chinese hegemony
either. To get around this, these states frequently compartmentalise different
components of their bilateral relationships.
For example,
despite Duterte’s bluster, a scheduled joint air force
exercise with the United States recently occurred as planned, and
the threat to cancel Philippines–US maritime patrols applies only to patrols in
the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone and not the territorial sea. The
number of US forces who might be asked to withdraw from involvement in
Philippines counterinsurgency operations is also quite small. And Duterte’s
threat to buy arms from Russia and China
is straight out of the Thai playbook, which is an act of asserting sovereignty
and much less a guide to alignment.
In the case
of Thailand, there is no sign at present that they or the United States wish to
discontinue the flagship regional multilateral exercise ‘Cobra Gold’, despite
threats to institute ‘Panda Gold’. While some military training with China is
occurring, it is on a far smaller scale than that with the United States.
The familiar
separation of economic and security ties — China being the dominant economic
partner and the United States the preferred security partner — appears to now
extend to the politico-security dichotomy, where stormy political relations can
be accompanied by stable military-to-military relationships.
Western
states have a moral imperative to reiterate why liberal democracies offer the
most just societies and are most able to deliver human dignity, freedom and
development of human potential. But the United States and others need to be
aware of the different perspectives of Southeast Asian countries. It is no more
likely that Thailand or the Philippines will want to be entirely beholden to
China than they wish to be beholden entirely to the United States.
Dr Greg
Raymond is a Research Fellow in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the
Australian National University.
No comments:
Post a Comment