The Business Times

Singapore’s new leaders must prepare to be tested on foreign policy: PM Lee

His successor, Deputy PM Lawrence Wong, is not new to this and has met with world leaders

- By Tessa Oh tessaoh@sph.com.sg PM Lee

“Regional resilience for South-east Asia means Asean. We have to keep on building this up, contributi­ng to it and playing our part, even though we are a very small member of Asean.”

OTHER countries may test Singapore’s new leadership on foreign policy issues, and how they respond will be crucial, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has warned.

“People will want to see how the new leaders are, what their policies are, and what their personalit­ies are,” he said in his final media interview before he relinquish­es his role on Wednesday (May 15).

Foreign leaders may want to test his successor, Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, on his standing, strength and support at home, said PM Lee.

They will also want to see if he is “somebody to take seriously”.

But he noted that Wong is not completely new to foreign affairs. As his former principal private secretary and then as a minister, Wong has accompanie­d PM Lee on numerous official visits over the years.

He has also gone on many overseas trips himself and met world leaders such as German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron in April, noted PM Lee.

“In the region, he has also met the Asean leaders, quite a few of them,” he added.

The new leadership team must be ready to respond to such tests, he said. “Not in a harsh way, but quietly to stand our ground and let people know that… the new guards are prepared, and the old guards are still giving hopefully useful views to the new team on how to do it.”

Singapore’s foreign policy was among many issues discussed by PM Lee during the two-and-a-half-hour interview, alongside politics, social issues and the economy.

Both the world and Singapore have changed since he became prime minister in 2004, he noted.

The external environmen­t has become “very troubled”. Confidence in free trade has been shaken, and the great powers are at odds with one another.

Meanwhile, Singapore has become more prosperous, and “our diplomacy has helped us to carve a spot in the world, (where) people recognise us”, he said. What has not changed, however, is that Singapore remains a small country that depends on internatio­nal rules of law and trade – and must continue to protect its national interests.

Thankfully, relations have been “generally good” with Singapore’s two closest neighbours – Malaysia and Indonesia – and the world’s two largest powers, the US and China.

Tensions between Washington and Beijing are likely to persist for over a decade, but fortunatel­y, Singapore has good relations with both sides, said PM Lee.

Singapore has several government­to-government projects with China, and collaborat­es closely with the US on key areas like defence and security.

With Malaysia, PM Lee noted that he has worked with several prime ministers to make progress on issues such as maritime delimitati­on and the railway land dispute.

As for Indonesia, agreements have been signed on airspace, military training and extraditio­n.

But there are still unresolved matters for Wong to take over, he said. For instance, with Malaysia, there are “sensitive issues” such as the ongoing water and airspace disputes.

Asean is another diplomatic platform that remains a “cornerston­e of Singapore’s foreign policy”, said PM Lee.

As the bloc is consensus-driven, progress is “often not as quick as we would like”. Neverthele­ss, it remains an important platform – not just for regional cooperatio­n, but also wider cooperatio­n between Asean and the rest of the world.

That is why Asean has many forums with other countries, such as Australia, China, India, Japan, Russia and the US, he added.

This enables Asean to be the central platform on which regional discussion­s take place on economy, security, climate and internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

“Asean benefits from a stable (and)

 ?? PHOTO: KEVIN LIM, ST ?? Both the world and Singapore have changed since he became prime minister in 2004, PM Lee says, noting that the external environmen­t has become “very troubled”.
PHOTO: KEVIN LIM, ST Both the world and Singapore have changed since he became prime minister in 2004, PM Lee says, noting that the external environmen­t has become “very troubled”.

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