Asia’s long peace serves as example Internal affairs
Veteran Chinese diplomat stresses trust, negotiations to avoid conflict
Veteran Chinese diplomat Fu Ying hopes that people would learn to appreciate the long peace in Asia.
A former vice- foreign minister, Fu was speaking at the 60th Munich Security Conference on Saturday in a panel discussion themed “Shoring up Defense: Security in the Indo- Pacific”. Other panelists included Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Ali Sabry, United States Senator Ben Cardin and German Social Democratic Party Co- Chair Lars Klingbeil.
Fu said there has been stability and great economic progress in the past decades in Asia, whose overall GDP accounts for 40 percent of the world’s total, compared with just 15 percent in the 1990s.
She credited the centrality of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations for playing a key role in leading regional cooperation with China’s strong support.
The process started with considerable mistrust in the beginning, she said, but honest and patient discussions over the years have helped boost trust and economic cooperation.
“We grew the habit of discussing the differences in the corridor. We even created retreats,” Fu said, referring to the Asian way of resolving differences. She added that she witnessed the process that started in the years when she was still a young diplomat.
“So, the result now is that in the region, there is a basic consensus about common security,” she told the audience at the MSC, where the two conflicts between Russia and Ukraine and between Israel and Palestine topped the three- day agenda.
Fu emphasized that there is a strong sense of common security in Asia.
Every country is entitled to defend its security and to protect its own interest, she said. But when their interests clash, countries should engage in negotiations or seek consultations to avoid conflict.
On differences that are hard to resolve, such as territorial disputes, Fu said countries have been able to keep the differences aside and keep discussing them while continuing their cooperation on other fronts.
Regarding South China Sea maritime territorial disputes, Fu said China and ASEAN members have managed to reach the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea.
“We are discussing about the COC,” she said, referring to the South China Sea Code of Conduct.
Fu dismissed concerns about freedom of navigation in the South China Sea.
While the shipping safety in the
Red Sea is about civilian ships, the freedom of navigation people talk about is not about commercial ships, but US military vessels that want to go anywhere they want, she said.
“If you want to know the safety of civilian navigation in South China Sea, you could very well check with the industry, the shipping industry, the ( insurance) premium doesn’t go up, never went up because of the tension in the South China Sea.
“Freedom of navigation of civilian ships has never been a problem. So it’s just an excuse.”
China opposes the “minilateral” exclusive security groups not only because they target China but also it will undermine regional common security, she said.
“I don’t think it’s helpful for the regional stability.”
It is “very dangerous” for some people to try to link Taiwan with Ukraine, she said, describing them as “two entirely different issues”.
The Taiwan question is China’s internal affairs, she said, and the Anti- Secession Law states China’s position that the state will do the utmost to achieve peaceful reunification, which is the best for the people on the two sides.
However, the state reserves the right to resort to non- peaceful means and other necessary measures to protect China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity in the event of “Taiwan independence”, or any major incidents entailing Taiwan’s secession from China should occur, or that possibilities for a peaceful reunification should be completely exhausted.
“So, there is a law there,” she said. Fu expressed that many in Asia want to understand what attracted the US back to Asia after it spent 20 years on transforming post- Cold War Eastern Europe and then about another 20 years on War on Terror.
“I think the attraction is the success of the region, including China’s success,” she said.
“Instead of joining the regional peaceful development, the concern is that the US may reverse the trend of peaceful cooperation and progress, that’s the concern for the region.”
Many countries in the region have openly and quietly expressed that they prefer not to choose sides, she said.
She highlighted Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s talk at the MSC on Saturday morning, when Wang talked about how China is going to play a stabilizing role in the world.
“You could see the intention on the part of China to share the regional experience,” Fu said, adding that China’s Global Security Initiative very well sums up the Asian experience and Asian sense of common security.