http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2723&Itemid=367


Southeast Asia's nerves over China 


Written by Martin Ott   
Tuesday, 28 September 2010 
 
Shoring up: President Barack Obama with Philippines President Benigno Aquino 
III and Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, at the US-ASEAN summit meeting in 
New YorkWorried about China, Asean nonetheless remains wary of the US's role in 
the region 

The second Asean-United States leaders' summit on Sept. 24 in New York may have 
conveyed the impression of an emerging alliance. 

To be sure, after years of keeping a low profile on Southeast Asian problems, 
the United States is more engaged than ever. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton 
angered Beijing by taking a public position supporting Association of Southeast 
Asian Nations efforts to seek peaceful resolution of territorial disputes with 
China through multilateral diplomacy and for status of the South China Sea as a 
"maritime commons" rather than a territorial sea. 

The image of Chinese expansion and US resistance has been reinforced by events 
to the immediate north in the East China Sea, after a Chinese fishing boat 
rammed a Japanese Coast Guard vessel off the disputed Senkaku-Diaoyu islands. 
China demanded release of the arrested captain, reparations and an apology from 
Tokyo. 

Japan agreed to the release, but declared acquiescence to the latter two 
demands "unthinkable." Japan has been bolstered by Clinton's assertion that 
Japanese "administration" of the islands falls under the purview of the 
US-Japan Security Treaty and Defense Secretary Robert Gates' terse observation 
that the US "would fulfill our alliance obligations."

However, it would be a mistake to construe the New York summit as the beginning 
of a new Asian-American alliance against China. Despite anxieties about China's 
growing power, no Asean countries would be willing to put their money where 
their mouths are. Suddenly the US is seen as standing athwart Chinese strategic 
ambitions in Southeast Asia - with Asean governments apparently lining up in 
support of Washington against Beijing. 

While much is valid in this characterization, it's crucial that US policymakers 
and strategists not over-read Clinton's comments in Hanoi, particularly when it 
comes to ASEAN support.

Beijing's strategic ambitions in Southeast Asia are real. From China's 
perspective, Southeast Asia is its southern doorstep - China has deep roots in 
the region derived from geography (a common border with Vietnam, Laos and 
Burma), ethnicity (large, economically powerful urban Chinese communities 
throughout the region) and history (the "tribute system" that expressed 
Southeast Asian deference to China over millennia).

In terms of strategic outlook, Chinese leadership evokes the classic realists 
of 19th century Europe - vitally concerned with prerogatives of sovereignty and 
the sanctity of borders, animated by calculations of power and influence. From 
the standpoint of the Chinese regime, Southeast Asia is properly understood as 
a natural and rightful Chinese sphere of influence, a region where China's 
interests are paramount. When these are properly acknowledged, China is 
prepared to adopt policies that benefit Southeast Asia as well as China - a 
dominion of Confucian harmony and benevolence. Since the mid-1990s China has 
emphasized the latter with a sophisticated diplomatic "charm offensive" 
designed to portray a good neighbor dedicated to the economic advancement of 
Chinese and Southeast Asians alike.

The South China Sea is central to this ambition, but in a special category. 
China presented an ox-tongue-shaped dotted line, calling it historic waters, 
effectively encompassing the entire South China Sea and cutting across the 
major sea lanes. Until recently Chinese officials have cloaked the Chinese 
claim in a shroud of ambiguity, epitomized by careful avoidance of the key word 
"sovereignty." Yet careful examination of Chinese statements and actions over 
the years left no room for doubt that China viewed the South China Sea as 
Chinese sovereign territory. Because China lacked the military capacity to 
enforce this assertion, it made strategic sense to obfuscate rather than 
clarify intentions. Deng Xiaoping often reminded his countrymen of a 
traditional Chinese aphorism: "Bide your time and conceal your capabilities 
until you are ready to act." 

Clinton's statement at the Asian Regional Forum in Hanoi was delivered in the 
context of growing concern among Southeast Asian governments regarding China. 
For months Vietnam had complained publicly and through diplomatic channels 
about Chinese "bullying" of Vietnamese fishermen and international oil company 
crews that want to prospect off Vietnam's coast. Other Asean governments, while 
less overt, showed signs of disquiet over China's buildup of its armed forces, 
particularly those designed for offshore power projection. China's dam building 
on the upper Mekong, giving it control over that vital river system, has 
alarming implications for downstream states. The willingness of several Asean 
ministers to speak out in support of Clinton in Hanoi was testimony to US 
diplomatic preparatory spadework and growing unease.

There's no question that the US willingness to stake out a position in support 
of a maritime commons, not a territorial sea, and multilateral diplomacy, vice 
China's determination to deal with the Southeast Asian countries one at a time, 
was welcome in many regional capitals. It provided a vital, long overdue signal 
that ASEAN governments did not have to cope with China alone. In that sense 
Clinton's initiative has provided a dose of courage and self-confidence for 
ASEAN in its relationship with China.

That said, US policymakers must have a healthy respect for the limits of what 
Southeast Asian governments are able and willing to do. To employ an overused 
metaphor, at least some ASEAN members may be prepared to show up and hold 
America's coat if Washington duels Beijing. But don't expect them to get into 
the arena in any but carefully circumscribed ways - for a number of compelling 
reasons.

First, it's long been a truism that the Southeast Asian governments fear being 
forced to choose between China and America. No Southeast Asian country wants to 
make such a choice, but no less an authority than Singapore's widely respected 
ambassador to Washington, Chan Heng Chee, has observed that, if forced, the 
Southeast Asians would generally opt for China. There's a consensus in the 
region that the US-China relationship is vital to all concerned. When asked 
what kind of relationship best protects Southeast Asian interests, the answer 
is the proverbial Goldilocks principle - "not too hot and not too cold." A 
cooperative but not deeply collaborative relationship is just right.

Second, as previously noted, China's "influence and strategic reach into 
Southeast Asia is deep, powerful and growing. This is particularly evident in 
the economic sphere. As the global financial crisis weakened the credibility of 
the US and European economies, China emerged as the largest trading partner of 
Asean. Between 2009 and 2010, aggregate trade is up roughly 50 percent year on 
year. Not coincidentally, the China-Asean Free Trade Area entered into force at 
the beginning of 2010.

Third, despite significant investments in military modernization, no Southeast 
Asian country is prepared to confront China militarily. The only country that 
has done so in recent decades is Vietnam in response to China's 1979 invasion 
across its northern boundary. Vietnamese forces acquitted themselves well in 
that encounter, but Hanoi is under no illusion that such success could be 
replicated today. The only naval and air forces that can credibly face off 
against China in the South China Sea are American - and if it came to that, US 
commanders should expect little or no operational support from Asean, with the 
possible and limited exception of Vietnam.

Fourth, Asean is not the feckless cave of winds that some Westerners describe. 
But it's also not a unified, purposeful actor regarding the South China Sea. 
Several Asean governments, including Laos, Cambodia and Burma are highly 
responsive to Chinese interests and have no proverbial dog in the South China 
Sea fight. The best Washington can expect - and only if assiduously nurtured - 
is cautious diplomatic support along the lines of what was seen at the Asean 
forum. It's an important shift from the past that Washington should welcome, 
with realistic expectations. 

Martin Ott is a public policy scholar with the Woodrow Wilson International 
Center for Scholars and adjunct professor and visiting research scholar with 
Johns Hopkins University. This is reprinted with the permission of the Yale 
Center for the Study of Globalization



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