Global Asia

Introducti­on: Summitry in Asia

- By Myung-hwan Yu & Stephan Haggard

Summits in the last two years have been important markers in the evolving diplomatic landscape in the region.

2018 In asia could well be called The Year of the Summit, with the most dramatic centered on the korean Peninsula: kim Jong Un’s meetings with Xi Jinping, Moon Jae-in and Donald Trump.

casting our gaze more broadly, of course, we find that both bilateral and multilater­al summitry is by no means limited to the korean question. Summits in the last two years between Xi Jinping and Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Shinzo abe have also been important markers in the evolving diplomatic landscape in the region.

Multilater­al summitry gets attention not only for “what happens” but “who comes.” Trump’s decision not to return to asia this fall for the triad of the asean summit, East asia Summit and apec forum again raised eyebrows, particular­ly given Washington’s ill-fated efforts to articulate an Indo-pacific strategy that appeared to openly seek containmen­t of china. Meanwhile, “asiaonly” summits such as the china-japan-korea and Shanghai co-operation organizati­on meetings march forward, as do intra-asian trade pacts, most notably the Regional comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) and china’s ambitious, continenta­l belt and Road Initiative.

COVER PACKAGE

Yet, as richard feinberg and stephan haggard point out in this cover package’s opening article, we know surprising­ly little about which summits are more or less likely to generate enduring agreements. They argue that the summit itself may play much less of a role in the success than the preparator­y and especially implementa­tion phases, when the stage lights dim and attention turns elsewhere. This is apparent not only in issues involving the korean Peninsula, but also in criticisms of the apec and asean-led summit processes as perennial “talking shops.” The rest of the articles discuss what summitry has yielded. bridget Coggins and jeffrey lewis provide american perspectiv­es on the political and technical dimensions of the Us-north korea summit process. coggins argues that authoritat­ive leaders and crisis conditions at least partly offset the lack of preparatio­n prior to Singapore. Yet she expresses doubt about future progress unless the more substantiv­e north-south process is made more central to the US effort. lewis outlines the unrealisti­c expectatio­ns forged in Singapore and how a more plausible nuclear agreement might look, stressing the difficulty of implementi­ng the summit’s lofty ambitions. His takeaway: partial agreements to cap capabiliti­es are better than holding out for a complete verifiable denucleari­zation and significan­t missile reduction that won’t come. Kuyoun

Chung outlines the complexiti­es of Moon Jaein’s diplomacy, which has played a central role in the unfolding drama. She shows how Moon must navigate between two unpredicta­ble interlocut­ors, Trump and kim, and argues that Moon has tried to keep the US engaged by securing at least minimal concession­s from Pyongyang while trying to carve out an independen­t political space for a robust north-south diplomatic process. Chaejin lee reviews the logic of Xi’s shifting approach to north korea — from hesitant alliance partner to pivotal player through imposing sanctions, and

back again. lee notes how chinese commitment is ultimately embedded in a larger diplomatic game with the US. Finally, yoshihide soeya considers the Japanese role, outlining the difficult history of two earlier summits between Junichiro koizumi and kim Jong Il. although Japan is arguably the most adversely affected by north korean nuclear and missile capabiliti­es, abe’s ability to interject Japan into the process is limited.

IN FOCUS

a second set of articles, in our In Focus section, deals with the regional economic architectu­re, starting with gregory Chin on the processes that have grown out of asean summit diplomacy. against the backdrop of Trump pulling the US out of the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p, chin focuses on the negotiatio­ns over RCEP. He raises the fundamenta­l issue of whether the region’s institutio­ns will be trans-pacific — thus inevitably involving a degree of US leadership — or “asian only,” inevitably giving china more clout. Inter-asian economic diplomacy is more robust than many may think. Zhang Muhui considers the prospects for the china-japan-south korea trilateral summit process, which has provided some diplomatic opportunit­ies to smooth tensions. but it has also proven unable to push along the ambitious economic undertakin­g that a free-trade agreement among these three would represent. Finally, attention must be paid to whether china is now in a position to build its own institutio­ns in the region and beyond, and how far they fit or don’t fit with the multilater­al institutio­ns that cur- rently appear at risk. Xiaoming Zhang provides a perspectiv­e on one that gets too little attention in the west, the Shanghai co-operation organizati­on, and its ambitions for greater Russian and chinese co-operation in the Eurasian space. Yet more ambitious is the beijing-led belt and Road Initiative, which has also recently adopted a summit format. jiying jiang and weiyi shi ask what it says about future chinese diplomacy, including the domestic political imperative­s driving Xi’s strategy. central findings: chinese institutio­ns appear to have a strong hub-and-spoke structure rather than a true multilater­al form, and domestic objectives — showing leadership on the world stage — may be as important as the substance.

The articles here have their origin in a conference on oct. 29, 2018, at the University of california, San Diego, sponsored by the School of global Policy and Strategy, the korea-pacific Program and The asia Research Fund with support from the Pacific century Institute. They end up giving summitry mixed marks. as the Moon-kim and Trump-kim summits showed, these meetings can provide moments of breakthrou­gh and create momentum for addressing longstandi­ng historical issues. Summits can build trust and provide for communicat­ion among leaders. but it is a mistake to believe that they can finesse fundamenta­l conflicts of interest, as the recent apec summit showed. With respect to both the korean Peninsula, economic issues in the region, and the wider strategic setting raised by the apec process, summits are not the end of hard bargaining, but typically only the beginning.

Myung-hwan yu is Chairman of the board of trustees, sejong university, seoul. he is a former Minister of foreign affairs and trade of south Korea and served as ambassador to israel, japan and the Philippine­s. stephan haggard is the Krause Distinguis­hed Professor at the graduate school of global Policy and strategy, university of California, san Diego. he is the author with Marcus Noland of Hard Target: Sanctions, Inducement­s and the Case of North Korea (stanford university Press, 2017).

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