Monday, July 30, 2012

China reveals its hand on ASEAN in Phnom Penh

July 28th, 2012
Author: Ernest Z. Bower
CSIS, Washington

For the first time in its 45-year history, ASEAN’s foreign ministers failed to issue a joint communiqué following their annual meeting in Phnom Penh, which ended 13 July.

What happened? And what does it mean for ASEAN and others with strong interests in the Asia Pacific?

The meeting appeared to be running smoothly. Delegates reportedly spent hours reviewing a substantive agenda that touched on a broad array of concerns ranging from economic integration to political and security alignment, as well as social and cultural cooperation. Even politically sensitive issues such as North Korea, bilateral tensions between ASEAN countries, and the disputes in the South China Sea were discussed.

Problems arose when the time came to draft the joint communiqué. The Cambodian chair, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, delegated the drafting to a committee of four colleagues: Marty Natalegawa of Indonesia, Anifah Aman of Malaysia, Albert Del Rosario of the Philippines, and Pham Binh Minh of Vietnam. The Philippines insisted that the communiqué should reflect the ministers’ discussion of the confrontation between the Philippines and China at Scarborough Shoal, while Vietnam wanted the declaration to address exclusive economic zones (EEZs). The draft submitted to the chair reflected both the Philippines’ and Vietnam’s will.

After taking the draft under consideration, Hor Namhong left the meeting room to consult with outside advisers. He came back rejecting references to the Scarborough Shoal and EEZs, despite multiple attempts to find a compromise. Cambodia argued those were bilateral issues and therefore could not be mentioned in an ASEAN joint statement. Reports — possibly circulated by Chinese sources and later substantiated by those present — suggested that Cambodian officials shared drafts of the statement with Chinese interlocutors.


In the end, ASEAN announced there would be no joint communiqué following the meeting. This was a spectacular failure for the regional grouping and an outcome that seemed to be in none of the 10 nations’ interests.

Superficial analyses of the failure have pointed to internal conflict within ASEAN, particularly between the chair, Cambodia, and the Philippines, which is seeking ASEAN’s support in its rejection of Chinese ‘creeping assertiveness’.

A deeper look reveals an important trend beneath the surface. In fact, what happened in Phnom Penh is critical to understanding what China wants and what China wants to become. The disagreements at both the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting and the ASEAN Regional Forum appear to be an outcome manipulated by China, which considers a weak and divided ASEAN to serve its own national interests.

China seemed surprised when Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen, in his opening to the ASEAN meetings last week, emphasised that ministers need to work together to resolve disputes in the South China Sea. Consequently, it seems clear that pressure on Cambodia increased. China had pushed ASEAN countries — particularly the Cambodians — to keep the South China Sea off the agenda at the ASEAN Regional Forum, which was held concurrently with the Ministerial Meeting. China has repeatedly stated that it wishes to deal bilaterally with the South China Sea claimants and does not want these territorial disputes discussed in multilateral fora.

For its part, ASEAN recognises that in addition to advancing ASEAN’s economic integration, member states must work together on issues including the South China Sea to effectively compete with regional giants such as China and India in the coming decades. ASEAN and almost all other members in the East Asia Summit have recognised the importance of the grouping as the foundation of new regional architecture advancing security, political and economic dialogue.

China has revealed its hand on the question of ASEAN unity. It seems to have used its growing economic power to press Cambodia into the awkward position of rebuffing its ASEAN neighbours on one of the association’s most important security concerns. The most important news to come out of Phnom Penh is not about the spat over the joint statement but the indication that China has decided that a weak and splintered ASEAN is in its best interests.

ASEAN must take a clear-eyed view of the message that China sent in Phnom Penh. The organisation should stay the course laid out in the ASEAN charter and strive for political, economic and social integration by 2015.

In the next four years Brunei, Myanmar, Malaysia and Laos will each chair ASEAN. China has clearly focused on these upcoming chairs, and reports suggest that two of those countries were the only ones to support Cambodian efforts to keep the mentions of Scarborough Shoal and EEZs out of the joint statement.

ASEAN and its supporters — including the US and other members of the East Asia Summit — must support the upcoming chairs. ASEAN needs institutional confidence to resist efforts by other countries to advance their own sovereign and commercial interests by undermining regional cooperation. The message from Cambodia is not that ‘ASEAN is in disarray’, but that ‘ASEAN unity is not supported by China’.

Ernest Z. Bower is Senior Adviser and Director of the Southeast Asia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Asean is not NATO-like organization. The philippines has been acting like a little brave cowboy because it knew it has the US behind its back. Cambodia never had that kind of assurance from the US. Cambodia did what was best for its own intersests just like all these little high horses in club.

live rich or kill other trying khmer said...

Cambodia is a beggar country. Cambodian people not afraid to die in a traffic accident, (just look how they drive or ride in the streets), but afraid to die in a show of protest in a puppet state.

Cambodia is a coward state. There will never be any democracy.

Anonymous said...

the ones who ride or drive do not want to protest, the ones who long to protest have no resources, nor power to avoid dying stupidly from protesting without back-up.

Anonymous said...

យុវជនខ្មែរ មួយភាគធំកុំពុងឈ្លក់នឹងការសប្បាយបំពុល ដោយ ការកំសាន្ត និង សិល្បះ ពីប្រពន្ធ ផ្សពផ្សាយគាំទ្រអ្នកកាន់អំណាច។
តើេពល ណាទៅ គេភ្ញាក់រលឹកគឹតរឿង វាសនាប្រេទសជាតិ?

Anonymous said...

12:42PM

Cambodia interest was to protect the Chinese and siding with them so more money can go into their corrupted pockets. They are not really protecting the interests of their own Cambodian people and the country

Anonymous said...

THAT'S WHAT HAPPEN WHEN AN EDUCATED PERSON RUNNING THE OFFICE. ALL ASEAN COUNTRY SHOULD HOLD A MEETING AND VOTE TO KICK CAMBODIA OUT OF ASEAN

Anonymous said...

You are an idiot. If you were so brave why aren't you and your family out there sticking your chest out in front of those PM Hun Sen AK-47s. You idiot didn't know that ALL military commanders and police commanders were Hun Sen body guards. It's one thing to be brave but it's absolutely stupid and dangerous ideas for trying to overthrow the ruling CPP.

Most Cambodian had half of their family members slaughters by these kind if regime. Tell me how many countries in the world that their own government tried to genocide their peoples ? Peoples wanted peace and a chance to living alive. Cambodian are not coward they just more cautious than anyone after Pol Pot era. Look what we did to Thai troops at borders. We had less arms and manpowers but after 4 years did Thai troops taken any areas yet. I think not.

Anonymous said...

AH LOP 12:20AM

WHY YOU GOT TO RAISE YOUR BLOOD UP LIKE AH HUN XEN WITH THOSE TOUGH TALKING AH PAKACH. AH HUN XEN YOUN BODYGUARD AIN'T SHIT. THEY ARE COWARD RUNNING FOR INTERNATIONAL HELP WHEN THE THAIS READY TO UNLEASH AN ALL OUT ASSAULT. AH HUN XEN YOUN BODYGUARD ARE NOT BRAVE LIKE THOSE EX-KHMER ROGUE SOLDIERS STANDING IN THE FRONT LINE WITH FLIP FLOP SANDAL

Anonymous said...

To 12:20 AM,

"It's one thing to be brave but it's absolutely stupid and dangerous ideas for trying to overthrow the ruling CPP"

It will not be dangerous to the peaceful Cambodian people trying to overthrow him out of power if ah hun sen regime doesn't use lethal force on them. Stupid coward why gotta use weapon for hurrrrhhhhhh

Anonymous said...

don't get mad, cambodia cannot take filipino side, ok! it's unethical to take side like this, you know!

Anonymous said...

We do not Thanks God before We thanks our Parents. And you don'
t you don't expects any thing from others before you expected from yourself...