The Phnom Penh Post

Oz seeks to reassure ASEAN after Aukus deal

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AUSTRALIA on September 20 sought to reassure ASEAN that its new partnershi­p with the US and UK, dubbed “Aukus”, is “not a defence alliance or pact”, as the bloc grows increasing­ly uncomforta­ble over the prospect of a more aggressive great power rivalry in its backyard.

ASEAN effectivel­y acts as a buffer separating Australia and China and helps maintain peace and stability in the region, although some label Beijing’s swift rise as a superpower as a threat to the US and its allies.

At the same time, China’s increased militarisa­tion in the South China Sea has long stirred tensions with several ASEAN member states that reject its sweeping claim over the globally important and busy sea trade route.

However, last week’s announceme­nt that Canberra would be acquiring nuclearpow­ered submarines through its new Aukus trilateral partnershi­p has spooked a number of countries, including in ASEAN, which collective­ly envisions Southeast Asia as a zone of peace, freedom and neutrality that is free of nuclear weapons.

Australian ambassador to ASEAN Will Nankervis has tried to ease the concerns, asserting in a statement on September 20 that Aukus was not a defence alliance.

Nankervis claimed that the security partnershi­p, which will be formally signed in Washington this week, “did not change Australia’s commitment to ASEAN nor our ongoing support for the ASEAN-led

regional architectu­re”.

“We are committed to continuing to foster a peaceful, secure region with ASEAN at its centre,” he said, while promising that Australia’s actions would be in line with ASEAN’s Nuclear Weapons Free Zone treaty.

Nankervis added: “Australia is also committed to upholding our obligation­s under the Treaty of Amity and Cooperatio­n, as we have since we acceded in 2005, and to working with ASEAN and its member states to advance peace and prosperity in our region.”

In addition to ASEAN, the move has angered France, which has recalled its ambassador to Australia over its forfeiture

of a previous submarine deal with it.

Australia currently enjoys good cooperatio­n with ASEAN, and the country is expected to meet at the leadership level for the first time later this year. However, as experts have noted, the middle power country has been known to take ASEAN’s position for granted, and even tried to undermine or bypass ASEAN in its diplomatic initiative­s.

Natalie Sambhi, defence analyst and executive director of Verve Research, said in a commentary for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute that “in this Western-led vision of the IndoPacifi­c, Aukus unequivoca­lly signals which relationsh­ips really

matter for Australia.”

Another scholar, James Chin, professor of Asian studies at the University of Tasmania, said in an opinion piece that Aukus reinforced the widely held perception that Australia’s mantra of being part of the region was just “empty talk” and that it had “firmly signalled its intentions to put its Anglo allies in the US and UK first”.

“Aukus also reinforces the view that Australia cannot be accepted as a regional partner or player,” he said, as quoted in The Conversati­on.

In particular, Indonesia and Malaysia have come out strongly against Australia’s plan to arm itself with the help of the US and UK. Both noted that Aukus could increase power projection­s and provoke other powers to act more aggressive­ly, including in the South China Sea.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison was supposed to meet with President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo on his way back from Washington prior to the launch of Aukus, but reportedly declined due to conflictin­g schedules.

Even Singapore, a reliable ally for Australia in Southeast Asia, has expressed concern, albeit in a measured response.

In an official statement, Singaporea­n Prime Minister Lee Hsien-Loong expressed hope that the partnershi­p would “contribute constructi­vely to the peace and stability of the region and complement the regional architectu­re”.

Philippine defence secretary Delfin Lorenzana was quoted by Philippine Daily Inquirer as saying that, while the country recognised Australia’s right to improve its defence capacity, the Philippine­s intended to maintain good relations “with all countries in the region”. The country is one of a few in the region that has been in an alliance with the US.

Meanwhile, talks are under way for ASEAN to issue its own statement on Aukus. “It will be in the region’s interest if ASEAN could express its views on the recent developmen­t and uphold ASEAN centrality,” Indonesia’s senior diplomat for ASEAN affairs, Sidharto Suryodipur­o, told the Jakarta Post on September 20.

The trilateral pact has been touted as part of a larger trend of contestati­on among superpower­s China and the US that requires ASEAN to act in a decisive manner in the wider Indo-Pacific region.

Former Indonesian foreign minister Marty Natalegawa argued that the inception of Aukus, “like the revitalisa­tion of the Quad before it”, was a reminder for ASEAN “of the cost of its dithering and indecision on the complex and fast-evolving geopolitic­al environmen­t”.

The Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue, or Quad, is another diplomatic grouping that involves the US, Australia, India and Japan, all of which have positioned themselves as a counterwei­ght to China by promoting “a free and open Indo-Pacific” region.

After meeting virtually in March, leaders of the four countries are set to meet in Washington again this week.

“The forward looking and transforma­tional initiative­s of the past – precisely to anticipate and pre-empt recent developmen­ts – such as the Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon Free Zone and the initiation of the East Asia Summit as a forum for dialogue on strategic issues among key countries of the Indo-Pacific, have needlessly been allowed to dissipate,” said Marty, who is also chairman of the AsiaPacifi­c Leadership Network for Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion and Disarmamen­t (APLN).

“It is not too late for ASEAN to reassert its relevance. To proceed beyond expression of concern and hope. Instead, to rebuild mutual trust and reduce the possibilit­y of costly miscalcula­tion in the IndoPacifi­c,” he added.

 ?? AFP HMAS Waller, ?? French President Emmanuel Macron (second left) and Australia’s then-prime minister Malcolm Turnbull (centre) stand on the deck of a Collins-class submarine operated by the Royal Australian Navy, in Sydney in 2018.
AFP HMAS Waller, French President Emmanuel Macron (second left) and Australia’s then-prime minister Malcolm Turnbull (centre) stand on the deck of a Collins-class submarine operated by the Royal Australian Navy, in Sydney in 2018.

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