Gulf News

Japan takes the lead in pan-Asianism

With Washington pulling out of TPP, Tokyo has the potential to shape the entire East Asian alignment

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t a time when Japan is doing more than ever to uphold the post-war internatio­nal system, it is an extreme historical irony that Imperial Japan’s Greater East Asia CoProsperi­ty Sphere is finally being achieved. The Japanese leadership’s attempt at getting, on March 8, signatures on the final agreement of the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (CPTPP), also known as TPP 11, is a big step towards Asian regionalis­ation — without the United States. By default, Japan’s Second World War ambition of Asian cultural and economic unity, free of western powers, looks close to fruition. Yet, Japan’s core plan had always been for TPP, and the Asia-Pacific, to include America — until US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from TPP.

Since the Second World War, Japan has for the most part conceived the ideal regional framework to be an Asia-Pacific fusion in partnershi­p with the US. Refusal to participat­e in initiative­s excluding the US, such as the East Asia Economic Caucus (EAEC), has been paired with support for US-inclusive frameworks, such as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) and East Asia Summit (EAS). The guiding principle has always been to keep the US in Asia. However, the inaugurati­on of TPP 11 marks the creation of a new, Japan-led pan-Asianism.

The Japanese government is still hoping for a multilater­al Asia-Pacific fusion order including the US. Japanese Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso confided in US Vice-President Mike Pence earlier this month that Japan encouraged a US return to TPP. However, Pence’s response to Aso’s solicitati­on was to bring up the Trump administra­tion’s wish for a US-Japan bilateral free-trade agreement — something unwelcome in Japan.

In reality, opposition to US reintegrat­ion among CPTPP members is germinatin­g. The Trump administra­tion has made clear that its possible interest in returning to TPP is premised upon renegotiat­ion of the deal favouring US interests beyond the original agreement. That would necessitat­e concession­s that member countries would flatly refuse.

Were the US to find the original agreement terms palatable and attempt to return, that, too, would be tough. CPTPP has suspended 22 TPP clauses that were swallowed by developing countries in exchange for US market access, such as investor-state dispute mechanisms and intellectu­al property and labour laws. It is possible the Trump administra­tion would push for extra clauses, for example concerning currency, when returning to the TPP framework. But with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe adamantly opposed, that is a lost cause.

Incorporat­ing India

The US is highly unlikely to return to the deal during Trump’s first term in the White House. CPTPP countries look set to ratify the deal by next year. After reaching an agreement in principle last year, Japan and the European Union are aiming for their Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (EPA) to come into force by early next year. Japanese focus will then most likely turn to the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), a free-trade agreement between Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) countries and Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea. Japan’s mission is to incorporat­e India through RECEP into the trade liberalisa­tion of Asia.

If successful, the economic gains of both the CPTPP and RCEP will be significan­t. But their real value is providing the frameworks to uphold the liberal internatio­nal order and realise a free and open Indo-Pacific region. Rule-making, rule of law, multilater­alism and internatio­nal cooperatio­n are vital elements to support those two visions, facilitate market access and conversely counteract market-distorting trade practices and state capitalism.

Neverthele­ss, Japan’s lurking fear is that pan-Asianism excluding the US could push America to be further inward-looking. Deeper US engagement in Asia is indispensa­ble to balance China. TPP desperatel­y needs the US market to have strategic significan­ce. Opinion in Tokyo is polarised on whether the US should be tethered to TPP by whatever means — even a bilateral deal with Japan or rebranding TPP to placate Trump as part of a ‘Trump Pacificati­on Plot’.

The turmoil over US involvemen­t is enough to tilt the Japanese government to hedge. Motivated further by the tensions on the Korean Peninsula, Abe has been pushing to improve Sino-Japanese relations. The concentrat­ion of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s power in China has unexpected­ly facilitate­d Beijing’s acceptance of friendline­ss towards Japan. What becomes less clear in this emerging panAsianis­m is security. With the existentia­l threat on the Korean Peninsula and a confident, assertive China, there is need for a more robust Japanese national security. Yet, Japan’s central vision here, too, has and remains to be anchored in Asia-Pacific fusion through the US-Japan alliance.

For now, Japan’s independen­t internatio­nal leadership is an unpreceden­ted post-war developmen­t with potential to shape the entire regional alignment in East Asia. Yoichi Funabashi is chairman of Asia Pacific Initiative, a Tokyo-based think tank.

 ?? Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News ??
Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

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