China Daily (Hong Kong)

Cooperatio­n key to regional security

- Zhou Bo Zhou Bo

How can we guarantee security in the Asia-Pacific? First, sound interactio­ns among major countries hold the key. It is no exaggerati­on to say that the Asia-Pacific can enjoy stability only when Sino-US relations remain stable. China upholds nonconflic­t, non-confrontat­ion, mutual respect and win-win cooperatio­n with the United States, which on the one hand focuses on bilateral relations, and on the other hand accommodat­es the security of AsiaPacifi­c and even the whole world.

China speaks highly of the positive progress in crisis management made by the two sides in recent years, but we have also noted that over the past year and more, the US has not only reinforced its surveillan­ce against and reconnaiss­ance of China by aircraft and ships, but also increased its military activities in the South China Sea, posing a challenge to China’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity. This is inconsiste­nt with the calming situation in the South China Sea as well as the US claim that it won’t take sides on the South China Sea issue.

As an extra-regional country, the US has become a prominent factor of instabilit­y on the issue, which has impeded effective cooperatio­n between China and the US within the Asia-Pacific multilater­al mechanisms.

Second, any regional security architectu­re should be open and inclusive. Indeed, there are military alliances left over by the Cold War in the Asia-Pacific, but the allied countries are only a minority not majority, so the Cold War mentality that defines relations by ideology and friend or foe has long been outdated. Under no pretext can the expansion of military alliance represent the trend of the times.

We have also taken note of the “Indo-Pacific” concept raised by some countries. We believe any new initiative should promote its transparen­cy, inclusiven­ess and openness, move in the direction of global economic integratio­n, political multi-polarity and shared security, and further win-win progress of all sides, otherwise it won’t be universall­y accepted and may turn out to be a monologue and a flash in the pan.

Third, compared with traditiona­l security, countries in this region have reached more consensuse­s on non-traditiona­l security and made more relevant endeavors in this regard, thus we should continue to give priority to cooperatio­n in nontraditi­onal security fields and gradually accumulate experience and mutual trust. For example, ASEAN Regional Forum, establishe­d in 1994, initiated multilater­al security dialogues among Asia-Pacific countries, providing a useful platform for security dialogue and cooperatio­n for its 27 member states over the past 20-odd years, but it has its limitation­s. ASEAN is only one of the pillars of the Asia-Pacific security architectu­re and cannot dominate major country relationsh­ips.

The “ASEAN way” reflects a distinct ASEAN mode of work, but in a way it discounts efficiency and implementa­tion. ADMM-Plus (ASEAN Defense Ministers’ Meeting with its eight dialogue partners), set up in 2010 has made notable progress in implementa­tion, but it still faces problems such as duplicate subjects and excessive exercises. What’s more, these two mechanisms have overlappin­g functions.

The key to the settlement of these issues lies not only in reducing the number of meetings and exercises, but also in more practical security cooperatio­n. China highly appreciate­s the counter-piracy cooperatio­n in the Sulu Sea among Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte once said that he hoped the navies of the Philippine­s and China could stage joint military exercises in the Sulu Sea. We are open to this and ready to start with humanitari­an assistance/disaster relief and counter-piracy operation. We also hope that more ASEAN countries and extra-regional states can strengthen their cooperatio­n and jointly cope with all the non-traditiona­l security challenges in the Asia-Pacific.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY
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