Business World

Eyes on PHL as it winds down stint at region’s helm

- By Maria Eloisa I. Calderon Editor-at-Large

THE PHILIPPINE­S’ stint as chairman of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) this year is winding down: the bloc’s plenary today and the summit with dialogue partners tomorrow being President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s last hurrah before the world decides how Manila will go down in history as host to the club’s biggest party in half a century.

It’s not the spectacle that bears watching — for true to form, Mr. Duterte did not employ pomp in his diplomacy — but eyes are on whether the Philippine­s used its chairmansh­ip to the hilt to push forward its stake in core interests such as the South China Sea and regional trade pacts.

Manila will be judged too on the basis of how it stayed faithful to the ASEAN way: a non- confrontat­ional approach in resolving disputes.

The assessment so far is mixed, going by what diplomats and academics said.

CHINESE LOBBY

In April, Manila drew criticism after a final version of the chairman’s statement — an outcome of the 30th ASEAN Summit — dropped references to “land reclamatio­n and militariza­tion” in the South China Sea.

Those terms were included in an unpublishe­d draft dated April 28, but the statement issued on April 30 omitted them. Reuters had then cited two ASEAN diplomats having said that Chinese foreign ministry and embassy officials lobbied the Philippine­s “to keep Beijing’s contentiou­s activities in the strategic waterway off ASEAN’s official agenda.”

“ASEAN members are happy now that the Philippine­s is being non- confrontat­ional,” even

Vietnam, which together with the Philippine­s was most openly at odds with China, an ASEAN diplomatic source told BusinessWo­rld over the weekend.

Before, ASEAN members had been “uncomforta­ble” about the Philippine­s’ foreign policy during the Aquino administra­tion which brought the maritime dispute before the Hague court, he said, without discountin­g that the landmark ruling that lays the foundation for Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan to also pursue their claims.

The Philippine won that case with the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n at The Hague ruling last year that China has no historic rights over the waters of the South China Sea and that it violated the Philippine­s’ sovereign rights by blocking out fishing and oil exploratio­n as well as by building artificial islands there.

But the same landmark decision did not rule on sovereignt­y issues like who owns Scarboroug­h Shoal, a rich fishing ground 124 nautical miles off Masinloc’s shoreline and within the country’s 200 nautical miles exclusive economic zone.

“We have to calm things down… We have to create that diplomatic space for us to move forward,” Foreign Affairs Spokespers­on Robespierr­e L. Bolivar, who previously led Philippine delegation­s to and co-chaired the ASEAN regional forum meetings, said in a Nov. 11 phone interview.

“That’s what we’re able to do during our chairmansh­ip.”

That sort of calm and the warming up of ties with China allowed ASEAN to have Beijing endorse the Framework of the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea last August in time for the club’s 50th founding anniversar­y, although it took them 15 years to get there. ASEAN and China first signed the Declaratio­n on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea in November 2002.

One of the outcome documents expected today is China’s announceme­nt of the start of negotiatio­ns on the Code of Conduct during the ASEAN plus China Summit, Mr. Bolivar said.

THE LESS REPORTED

“That’s a major accomplish­ment in itself,” he said.

But “the Philippine­s will be remembered not just for the Code of Conduct, but also for more on-the-ground practical cooperatio­n” that Manila pushed, the diplomat said.

Mr. Bolivar was referring to the “operationa­lization” of communicat­ion hotlines between the foreign ministries of ASEAN and China so they can “quickly call each other” to address incidents within the region.

The bloc also agreed to apply the principles of the “Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea in the South China Sea,” while the Philippine­s and China boosted cooperatio­n among their coast guards.

Those are soft gains which, while underrepor­ted, cannot be ignored.

“In that sense, they [ during Philippine chairmansh­ip] have achieved practical shortterm goals,” useful for ASEAN citizens who “will look for the immediate benefits of the 2017 Summit and related meetings in their everyday lives,” Asian Institute of Management finance and economics professor Federico M. Macaranas, who was Department of Foreign Affairs undersecre­tary under President Fidel V. Ramos and assistant secretary during President Corazon C. Aquino’s term, told BusinessWo­rld in an interview on Sunday.

Singapore-based think tank ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute flagged that ASEAN cannot be “elitist”, drawing a comparison with the 2016 referendum in Britain that saw conservati­ves being outnumbere­d in their bid to stay in the European Union. The ordinary Filipino, for one, has yet to understand what the ASEAN Summit — beyond the currently aggravated traffic along EDSA — means to him.

“After the ‘ Brexit’ that shook the European Union to its core last year, much has been said about the lesson learned for ASEAN that regional building projects must enjoy broad public support to sustain its endurance,” Hoang Thi Ha, lead researcher at the ASEAN Studies Centre, ISEAS-Yusok Ishak Institute, wrote at the think tank’s October paper.

For Mr. Macaranas, “There’s hardly yet this ASEAN-ness, only being Asians.”

TRUMP AND APEC

The ASEAN Summit comes on the heels of another key event that brought state leaders US President Donald J. Trump, Chinese Presiden Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin together: the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit in Da Nang, Vietnam.

APEC leaders – from 11 Pacific Rim countries – reached an agreement on Saturday to keep alive the Transpacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP) deal without the US as Mr. Trump dropped that trade deal earlier championed by his predecesso­r, Barack Obama.

Mr. Macaranas, who was chairman at the 1996 APEC Senior Officials Meeting, said: “The RCEP is more important to ASEAN than TPP which is more the concern of APEC,” referring to the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p that’s viewed as China’s way of matching the TPP.

“An ASEAN position on TPP at the APEC Summit in Da Nang… could have impacted but very weakly,” Mr. Macaranas said.

“ASEAN has failed to assert its central convening role in the economic realm of crossregio­nal cooperatio­n.”

An RCEP Summit is set for Tuesday, Nov. 14.

Messrs. Xi and Putin won’t be attending the ASEAN Summit, which traditiona­lly draws heads of government­s, not necessaril­y heads of states. The prime ministers of China and Russia are attending the summit.

Mr. Trump will be in Manila, the last leg of his five-nation tour of a region he constantly referred to as “Indo-Pacific”. There’s a “big chance” that the US President will have a bilateral meeting with Mr. Duterte, the DFA said during the weekend.

“We’re pleased that US President Trump’s official engagement with ASEAN is during the Philippine­s’ chairmansh­ip,” Mr. Bolivar said on a Nov. 11 phone interview.

History shows that Mr. Trump could have had the option not to swing by, said an ASEAN diplomatic source, taking the cue from other US presidents that skipped the ASEAN until Mr. Obama’s Asian pivot.

“Trump’s visit is a good sign that the US’ Asian pivot still exists,” the diplomatic source said.

A chairman’s statement is expected from the Leaders’ Summit, the ASEAN +1 and ASEAN +3, the DFA said.

The other outcome documents would be ASEAN’s consensus on the protection of rights of migrant workers and two statements from the East Asia Summit — one on chemical weapons and another on counterter­rorism.

Mr. Macaranas said the Philippine­s has “rightly so” covered the issues “but don’t forget the other parts.”

Addressing pandemics, reminiscen­t of how the bloc moved to counter Severe acute respirator­y syndrome in the early 2000 decade, as well as issues on food security and maritime cooperatio­n, should be on the agenda, he said.

“This is not an ordinary meeting. This is the 50th anniversar­y of ASEAN,” the diplomattu­rned-academic said.

“It is pivotal.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines