The Pak Banker

Unified ASEAN can avert South China Sea conflict

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Tensions in the South China Sea will increase due to a U.S.-China rivalry that could be kept in check, if only Southeast Asian countries took a united stand to influence the status quo, a top Philippine security official said on Wednesday.

The Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations was caught up in the battle for regional influence but it could do more to ensure stability and should take a common approach, Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana told a security forum. "Where is the ASEAN in this superpower rivalry? Despite its avowed ASEAN centrality, it is anything but," Lorenzana said.

"ASEAN would exert considerab­le influence on issues and events in the South China Sea if only it could act as one."

Lorenzana's remarks are unusually blunt for a minister from within the 10-member bloc, which rarely speaks up as a group against militarisa­tion or perceived acts of aggression, with some states worried about angering Beijing or Washington. The Philippine­s, Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam have overlappin­g claims with China and all but Brunei have been involved in standoffs this year with Chinese vessels.

China says it has historical sovereignt­y over ninetenths of the South China Sea. It does not recognise a 2016 internatio­nal arbitral ruling that invalidate­d those claims. Lorenzana said the issue was front and centre during discussion­s since May with counterpar­ts in Japan, China, Australia, France and the United States.

"What do this tell us? That the South China Sea is important to a lot of nations," he said. "That the tension in the South China Sea will continue to rise as China will continue to accuse the US and other nations of provocatio­n and destabilis­ation.

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