The Borneo Post

Divide and rule by Beijing throws Asean into disarray

-

VIENTIANE: Southeast Asian nations are in unparallel­ed disarray over Beijing’s sabrerattl­ing in the South China Sea, analysts and insiders say, with the fractures set to deepen as staunch China ally Laos hosts top regional diplomats this weekend.

US Secretary of State John Kerry and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi are among the delegates due to fly in from Sunday for two days of meetings in Vientiane, the capital of the communist nation.

The South China Sea is set to cast a long shadow over the summit which is hosted by the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).

Earlier this month a UN-backed tribunal found there was no legal basis for China’s claims to most of the strategic and resource-rich seas — a ruling rejected as ‘waste paper’ by Beijing.

Asean prides itself on consensus diplomacy but divisions have never been starker with Beijing blamed for driving a wedge between members.

The Philippine­s brought the internatio­nal arbitratio­n case, while fellow Asean members Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei also have competing claims to parts of the sea.

But Cambodia — and hosts Laos — are Beijing loyalists, with both impoverish­ed nations weaned on Chinese aid and investment.

Shortly after The Hague ruling Beijing announced more than half a billion dollars in soft loans for Cambodia.

“China has succeeded in splitting Asean on the South China Sea issue through its allies Laos and Cambodia,” an Asean diplomat told AFP requesting anonymity.

The bloc’s inability to remain united “will surely weaken Asean not just on the South China Sea problem but as a regional grouping,” the diplomat added.

Asean initially touted itself as the best forum for China to negotiate with rival claimants over the sea, given so many are members.

But Beijing has resisted that approach, insisting that territoria­l disputes must be settled bilaterall­y.

As a result, Beijing has successful­ly moved to divide the bloc.

Chinese pressure was blamed last month for an embarrassi­ng U-turn by the regional bloc as members suddenly disowned an apparent joint statement released by Malaysia that condemned Beijing’s aggression in the seas.

That has led to fears of a repeat of a 2012 summit in Cambodia where the bloc failed to issue a joint communique for the first time in its history because of disagreeme­nts over the waters.

Diplomats are already in Vientiane trying to hash out a response to this month’s tribunal ruling before the foreign ministers arrive.

But insiders say consensus is a long way off.

Critics have long derided Asean as an ineffectiv­e talking shop and in the face of the region’s most pressing security issue, some analysts believe the bloc is struggling for relevance.

“Asean suffers from inherent institutio­nal paralysis,” Richard Javad Heydarian, a regional expert at De La Salle University in Manila, told AFP. — AFP

 ??  ?? This undated photo shows two Chinese jet fighters during a military drill in the South China Sea near China’s Hainan Island. — AFP photo
This undated photo shows two Chinese jet fighters during a military drill in the South China Sea near China’s Hainan Island. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia