China Daily (Hong Kong)

US can’t force ASEAN to help contain China

- Zhai Kun and Yin Ke

As chair of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations for 2022, Cambodia announced on April 18 that ASEAN and the United States will hold a special summit in Washington on May 12-13 to commemorat­e 45 years of ASEAN-US relations. The second special summit since 2016 will be the first in-person meeting of ASEAN leaders since 2017.

In fact, the United States had unilateral­ly announced in February that it plans to host the summit on March 28-29, but the summit was deferred due to an apparent scheduling rift between the two sides. At one point, ASEAN leaders were exasperate­d because of the several changes in schedule.

According to the statements issued by Cambodia and the US, ASEAN leaders and US President Joe Biden will meet to discuss ways and means to deepen cooperatio­n in areas such as COVID-19 response and global health security, climate change, sustainabl­e developmen­t, maritime cooperatio­n, human capital developmen­t, education and people-topeople exchanges, as well as connectivi­ty and economic engagement.

And Phnom Penh said that “during this historic meeting, the leaders of ASEAN and the United States will chart the future direction of ASEAN-US relations”.

In order to understand how the summit will chart the future of ASEAN-US relations and why the US wants to host the summit, it is necessary to review the engagement between their leadership­s. In 2009, Barack Obama became the first US president to meet all leaders of all the 10 ASEAN member states together in Singapore, and hosted the first US-ASEAN summit in the US in 2016.

Former US president Donald Trump attended the 2017 summit in Manila but skipped ASEAN meetings for three consecutiv­e years, signaling Washington’s “disengagem­ent” with Southeast Asia, perhaps, as he saw the ASEAN members as chess pieces in the major-power rivalry.

In stark contrast, China participat­ed in all the meetings with ASEAN members in order to boost stable ties, setting an example in regional cooperatio­n. Last year, President Xi Jinping delivered a speech at the Special Summit to Commemorat­e the 30th Anniversar­y of China-ASEAN Dialogue Relations in Beijing, stressing that China will continue to accord high priority to ASEAN in its regional diplomacy, unswerving­ly support ASEAN unity and ASEAN community building, and always support ASEAN centrality in the regional architectu­re and ASEAN playing a bigger role in regional and internatio­nal affairs. Xi also said China wishes to build a peaceful, safe, secure, prosperous, beautiful and amicable home together with ASEAN member states.

The alliances establishe­d by the Biden administra­tion in the Asia-Pacific region are threatenin­g the ASEAN-led cooperatio­n mechanism. It is clear that Southeast Asia is at the heart of the US’ new IndoPacifi­c strategy, which the Biden administra­tion “updated” in February. It is also clear that Washington has failed to sow the seeds of distrust in ASEAN members in its bid to contain China.

True, the US strategy toward ASEAN has promoted regional prosperity, but it has also raised tensions in the region.

In particular, after a slow start, the Biden administra­tion has sent a number of senior officials to visit Southeast Asia since mid-2021 to improve the US’ ties with ASEAN members. And in line with the US administra­tions’ policy of forcing ASEAN members to choose sides between the US and China, the new US Indo-Pacific strategy doesn’t explicitly endorse the “ASEAN Outlook”.

Take the Australia-UK-US alliance (AUKUS), aimed at strengthen­ing the US’ presence in the Asia-Pacific region, as an example. Many ASEAN members see the enunciatio­n of AUKUS as increasing the geopolitic­al risks and a challenge to ASEAN centrality. So the US could discuss the relationsh­ip between its regional security mechanisms and ASEAN members during the ThursdayFr­iday summit.

On the economic front, perhaps the US will reveal a new Indo-Pacific economic framework at the summit. But ASEAN member states are more concerned about a clear trade and economic agenda for the region rather than rhetoric, which could force the US to rethink its policy of promoting regional economic developmen­t.

As ASEAN aims to build an inclusive regional order and the US leadership believes in an exclusive approach, Washington faces daunting challenges in Southeast Asia. Even though many question the role and importance of ASEAN amid the China-US rivalry in the Asia-Pacific, the regional bloc has been paying close attention to regional and global issues, and striving to build an inclusive regional order.

ASEAN members know it is not easy to establish a peaceful ecosystem given the regional crisis and conflicts, so they have adopted a cautious approach when it comes to dealing with China and the US.

Therefore, the US would do better to heed the concerns of relatively small countries during the summit, especially because ASEAN members are reluctant to take sides on sensitive global issues. And since the US cannot force any major changes in ASEAN, it should support ASEAN to lead regional cooperatio­n and balance the power equation between major countries.

Hopefully, the summit will make new achievemen­ts for the benefit of the AsiaPacifi­c.

ASEAN members know it is not easy to establish a peaceful ecosystem given the regional crisis and conflicts, so they have adopted a cautious approach when it comes to dealing with China and the US.

Zhai Kun is a professor at the School of Internatio­nal Studies and deputy director of the Institute of Area Studies of Peking University; and Yin Ke is a doctoral candidate at the School of Internatio­nal Studies of Peking University.

The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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