Qatar Tribune

Trump And Southeast Asia: What Would A US-ASEAN Special Summit Do?

The meeting would be both a vivid demonstrat­ion of US commitment to the region, which is facing a more assertive China, as well as a useful outlet to deepen ties with various US stakeholde­rs

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ON November 4, White House national security adviser Robert

’Brien relayed US President Donald Trump’s invitation to Southeast Asian leaders to attend a special US-ASEAN summit in the United States next year. While this constitute­s the first public disclosure of a previously considered idea and it is still early days in its considerat­ion, it is nonetheles­s worth taking a closer look at what a US-ASEAN Special Summit would mean for the developmen­t of the Trump administra­tion’s Southeast Asia policy.

The idea of a US-ASEAN Special Summit is not new. A similar summit was held under administra­tion of then-US President Barack bama back in 201 at Sunnylands to cap a series of moves that had raised Southeast Asia’s profile in US Asia policy. US officials had also previously considered a repetition of this under the Trump administra­tion, both in recognitio­n of the subregion’s importance as well as the difficulty of getting the president to maintain the annual attendance at ASEAN summitry that Washington had committed to when the bama administra­tion joined the East Asia Summit starting in 2011. While Trump attended in 201 , Vice President Mike Pence attended in his stead in 2018, and this year saw the lowest-ranking US delegation to Asian summitry since Washington had joined the EAS. In turn, most Southeast Asian states correspond­ingly downgraded their level of representa­tion at the US-ASEAN Summit as well, which attracted headlines thereafter.

Earlier this week, the idea was in the spotlight again with ’Brien’s public conveying of Trump’s invitation to Southeast Asian leaders. Per ’Brien’s reading of the letter, Trump offered Southeast Asian leaders an opportunit­y to join him in the United States for a special summit at a mutually convenient time “in the first quarter of 2020,” adding that the summit would provide “an excellent opportunit­y” for leaders to “broaden and deepen our cooperatio­n on matters of great importance.” The invitation was one of a series of items the United States had brought to the table to this year’s ASEAN summitry, with another notable one being a progress report on the developmen­t of the F IP vision released by the State Department.

Nonetheles­s, if held, a new special USASEAN summit would not be without significan­ce. For the United States, it would provide an opportunit­y for the Trump administra­tion to reinforce the importance given to Southeast Asia in general and specific Southeast Asian states in particular within its broader Free and pen Indo-Pacific (F IP) vision after this year’s summit performanc­e, and also showcase that importance to the wider US public domestical­ly given the fact that the subregion is less of a focus in the American mind relative to big Asian powers such as China or Japan.

For Southeast Asian states, irrespecti­ve of concerns they have about the Trump administra­tion, it would be both a vivid demonstrat­ion of US commitment to the region, which is facing a more assertive China amid uncertaint­y about Washington’s role, as well as a useful outlet to deepen ties with various US stakeholde­rs

which include nongovernm­ental actors that relate to their interests including businesses, educationa­l institutio­ns, and Southeast Asian diaspora communitie­s.

At the same time, the summit would not be without its challenges. Getting all 10 ASEAN leaders to the United States during a US election year would in and of itself not be an easy task. f course there will be administra­tive issues such as coordinati­ng schedules amid other priorities on all sides. But also there will be substantiv­e issues raised by some US domestic stakeholde­rs such as the US Congress and rights groups about the presence of certain ASEAN leaders in the United States amid issues in bilateral ties, be it Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen’s drift toward China, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war, or Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi’s approach to the Rohingya.

Carrying out this summit during a US election year could also be an additional complicati­ng factor such an environmen­t can heighten the risk of aspects of the summit being politicise­d and also intensify ‘America First’ tendencies within the administra­tion that can shape the summit’s conduct and its outcomes.

Even if these challenges were to be successful­ly managed, there are limits to what a summit can do for the Trump administra­tion’s Southeast Asia policy. A single summit cannot be expected to fully address the substantiv­e policy concerns that Southeast Asian states have about the United States, many of which go beyond summit scorekeepi­ng and extend to other considerat­ions such as the changing balance of power in the region and Trump’s own personal ‘America First’ tendencies on issues such as trade and alliances. And relative to the Sunnylands Summit, this would be less a celebratio­n of the heightened emphasis on diplomatic engagement and more of an opportunit­y for the United States to recover lost ground in this area of its approach to Southeast Asia in spite of gains in other realms.

All this is not to detract from the potential upsides of a special US-ASEAN Summit for either the United States or Southeast Asian states, whether it be on symbolic or more substantiv­e grounds. But it does reinforce the fact that the considerat­ion of the potential significan­ce of the engagement needs to be viewed in the context of the Trump administra­tion’s broader approach to the region thus far, and that any perceived opportunit­ies need to be weighed against the challenges and limitation­s that exist.

President Trump’s invitation was one of a series of items the United States had brought to the table to this year’s ASEAN summitry. If held, a new special US-ASEAN summit would not be without significan­ce

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