Business World

SE Asia wary of China’s Belt and Road project, skeptical of US — policy survey

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SINGAPORE — Southeast Asian countries should be cautious in negotiatin­g with China on its flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to avoid being trapped in unsustaina­ble debt, 70% of respondent­s said in a policy survey released Monday.

Southeast Asia is increasing­ly skeptical 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… need to be revisited in light of the survey results,” it said.

The survey by the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, affiliated with Singapore’s government, polled 1,008 respondent­s from all 10 Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries drawn from government, academic and business communitie­s, civil society and 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% predicted it would fail.

A large majority, or 70%, 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% of 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 twothirds 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 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 estimates that 730,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar’s Rakhine State to Bangladesh since the military’s crackdown on insurgent attacks.

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

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