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ASIA, SAY NO TO NATO: THE PACIFIC HAS NO NEED OF THE DESTRUCTIVE MILITARISTIC
CULTURE OF THE ATLANTIC ALLIANCE

By Kishore Mahbubani
Kishore Mahbubani, a Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Research Institute, NUS,
is the author of Has China Won? (Public Affairs, 2020).

Jointly published with the Straits Times:
https://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/asia-say-no-to-nato



JUNE, 28, 2021

“America is back,” U.S. President Joe Biden has announced to the world—but in
Southeast Asia, the United States is playing catch-up again. And it has much to
recover. The last four years witnessed Washington’s dwindling diplomatic and
political capital in the region.

The United States has no regional initiative of significance. It has excluded
itself from two economic groupings: the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans Pacific
Partnership. In 2017, then-President Donald Trump did attend the ASEAN–U.S.
summit in the Philippines, but missed out on all four East Asia summits during
his term. U.S. embassies in four ASEAN countries (Singapore, Brunei, Thailand,
and the Philippines) have been operating without ambassadors, and the United
States is the only major country that does not have a permanent representative
to the ASEAN Secretariat. In the Philippines and Indonesia, getting too close to
Trump was seen as a political liability—which explains why Indonesian President
Joko Widodo, the leader of Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, never visited Trump
at the White House. U.S. support for the region during the COVID-19 crisis has
been modest at best.

The Biden administration is now undertaking steps to reverse course, repair the
damage, and restore U.S. credibility. His first step in foreign policy, Biden
has said, is to win back allies and partners while pushing back adversaries.
Policies are being recalibrated across the board.

ASEAN countries would certainly welcome a robust U.S. engagement in the
region—but in the right way.

First, they do not want to see a heightened U.S.-Chinese rivalry in Southeast
Asia, a region that has been a cockpit of conflict between major powers in the
past and could well become that again. ASEAN countries do not want to be
polarized, pulled in different directions by different powers, and see the
cohesion of the ASEAN community undermined. ASEAN countries are hoping that the
Biden administration will lower the temperature, tone, and tension of
U.S.-Chinese relations and keep the rivalry manageable.

Second, it is in the national interest of ASEAN countries to maintain good
relations with both the United States and China. They all want to extract
benefits from both powers. They believe that Southeast Asia, and the
Indo-Pacific, have ample space for engagement for both superpowers. As such,
ASEAN countries would not like to see a repeat of the aggressive anti-China
rants that former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo uttered in his final
months in office.

Indeed, Southeast Asia’s perspective on China is different from that of the
United States. While ASEAN members remain rightly anxious about China’s moves in
the South China Sea, they have also recognized that China will be a big part of
their future—bilaterally and regionally. Of course, they have no illusions about
their relationships with China, which will be complex and challenging. Still,
while the bipartisan view in Washington sees China as a threat to the United
States’ long-standing supremacy, Southeast Asians generally accept China as an
important partner for their development plans. 

Southeast Asians hear the alarm sounded by the Biden administration on the
danger democracy is facing from autocracy, explicitly referring to China. Yet
the reality on the ground is that no Southeast Asian country particularly minds
China’s political system, mainly due to the principle of non-interference, but
also because they simply have no interest in China’s domestic politics.

Not a single ASEAN country has echoed the U.S. State Department’s claim that
China is committing “genocide” against Muslims in Xinjiang. Not one Southeast
Asian country—not even Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim
country—considers China an ideological foe.

In fact, ASEAN’s leaders would sympathize with Chinese President Xi Jinping’s
statement that every country has a right to choose its own path of development,
because this is being practiced in ASEAN itself.

Third, Southeast Asian countries do not want to see the erosion of ASEAN
centrality—the principle that ASEAN, which unites an increasingly cohesive group
of nations, should take charge of affairs in the region. ASEAN centrality
presumes that the major powers have a strategic trust in ASEAN and are willing
to let the organization lead on some aspects of regional affairs. ASEAN’s
credibility depends on its ability to maintain good relations with all the major
powers: the United States, China, Russia, Japan, the European Union, and India.
This is why ASEAN does not want to choose sides and does not want to be
pressured to do so. Choosing one side will automatically mean alienating the
other. Doing so will reposition ASEAN away from the center of complex
relationships.

The ASEAN countries noticed with curiosity that Biden’s first foreign policy
move in Asia was to convene the Quadrilateral meeting of the United States,
Australia, Japan, and India—and elevate it to a leader-level summit. While the
Quad leaders strongly endorsed ASEAN centrality, questions are being asked
within ASEAN regarding the Quad’s strategic objective and whether it will
undertake measures that may be incompatible with ASEAN’s goals.  To date, the
relationship between ASEAN and the Quad remains fluid, unclear, and uncertain.

The Quad also inevitably invites questions whether Biden’s Indo-Pacific strategy
will be any different from Trump’s. Beijing was not entirely wrong to suspect
that the Trump administration’s version of the Free and Open Indo-Pacific
contained an anti-China bias. 

The Biden administration should convincingly demonstrate that its Indo-Pacific
vision—indeed its strategy for Asia—is not intended to marginalize, let alone
contain, any resident power. It is a good sign that U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken has increasingly used the phrase “free, open, and inclusive
Indo-Pacific”—”inclusive” is a code word in the ASEAN Outlook on Indo-Pacific
for keeping the door open for China to come in.

Finally, Southeast Asians want to see the United States and China cooperate in
their region. A few years ago, Xi called for a “new type of great power
relationship” with the United States based on ”win-win solutions.” Biden has
confirmed that his administration wants “competition, not conflict” with China
and ”is ready to work with Beijing when it is in America’s interest to do so.”
Blinken also said that the U.S. “relationship with China will be competitive
when it should be, collaborative when it can be.”

Given these encouraging words, can either side overcome its strategic ego and
start exploring avenues for cooperation? Can Southeast Asia be the place where
some form of concrete U.S.-China cooperation takes place? This is, after all, a
region that has seen a long list of seemingly intractable conflicts turn into
lasting cooperation: between Indonesia and Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore,
Malaysia and Singapore, Indonesia and Timor Leste, Malaysia and the Philippines,
Vietnam and Cambodia—the list goes on. Countries in this region have
demonstrated that enmity can be turned to amity.

There is no shortage of issues for Washington and Beijing to explore cooperation
on: industry, infrastructure, maritime security, piracy, climate, environment,
green energy, natural disasters, COVID-19, youth exchanges, and so on. While
this will not change their rivalry on a global scale, it might just change the
texture of U.S.-Chinese relations in Southeast Asia. That would be good enough
for ASEAN. It really comes down to whether there is political will and
diplomatic guile to do so.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and
do not necessarily reflect those of the Asia Research Institute, National
University of Singapore.

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