The Borneo Post

SE Asia wary of China’s BRI sceptical of US — Survey

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SOUTHEAST Asia is increasing­ly sceptical of US commitment to the region as a strategic partner and a source of security, while China’s reach is seen as growing both politicall­y and economical­ly, the study also showed.

“The convention­al wisdom that China holds sway in the economic realm while the United States wields its influence in the political- strategic domain will ... n,eed to be revisited in light of the survey results,” it said.

The survey by the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, affiliated with the Singapore government, polled 1,008 respondent­s from all ten nations of the ASEAN grouping, drawn from government, academic and business communitie­s, civil society and the media.

Nearly half of the respondent­s said President Xi Jinping’s hallmark Belt and Road initiative would bring Asean “closer into China’s orbit,” while a third said the project lacked transparen­cy and 16 per cent predicted it would fail.

A large majority, or 70 per cent, said their government­s “should be cautious in negotiatin­g BRI projects, to avoid getting into unsustaina­ble financial debts with China,” a view strongest in Malaysia, the Philippine­s, and Thailand

Some Western government­s have accused China of pulling countries into a debt trap with the initiative, an accusation China has denied.

China was seen by 73 per cent of the respondent­s as having the greatest economic influence in the region and was also believed to have more influence politicall­y and strategica­lly than the United States.

Six out of ten respondent­s said US influence globally had deteriorat­ed from a year ago and two-thirds believed US engagement with Southeast Asia declined. About a third said they had little or no confidence in the US as a strategic partner and provider of regional security.

Fewer than one in 10 saw China as “a benign and benevolent power,” with nearly a half saying Beijing possessed “an intent to turn Southeast Asia into its sphere of influence”.

The study’s authors wrote, “This result ... is a wake-up call for China to burnish its negative image across Southeast Asia despite Beijing’s repeated assurance of its benign and peaceful rise.”

There was a call for the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to play a more active role in Myanmar’s Rohingya crisis, although a majority of the respondent­s sought mediation rather than diplomatic pressure.

The United Nations says 730,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar’s Rakhine State to Bangladesh since the military’s crackdown on insurgent attacks.

UN-mandated investigat­ors have accused Myanmar’s military of carrying out killings, gang rape and arson with “genocidal intent,” an allegation the military has denied. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? About a third said they had little or no confidence in the US as a strategic partner and provider of regional security. — Reuters photo
About a third said they had little or no confidence in the US as a strategic partner and provider of regional security. — Reuters photo

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