STRATFOR.COM's Global Intelligence Update - November 30, 1999


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STRATFOR.COM Global Intelligence Update
November 30, 1999


The Other Summit: Asia Meets in Manila

Summary:

While much of the West's attention is focused on the meeting of the
World Trade Organization in Seattle, the informal summit of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) ended on Nov. 28. In
its wake, much of Asia is attempting an unprecedented level of
regional coordination. China, South Korea and Japan also attended.
Shortly after the meeting, China even made a surprising concession.
The region still has a long way to go. What keeps today's loose
association of Asian countries from acting as a concerted bloc of
Asian nations is a lack of unified purpose. The region only needs a
spark - a compelling reason - to transform itself.


Analysis:

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) concluded its
informal summit in Manila on Nov. 28. Along with the leadership of
the 10 members of ASEAN, the leaders of China, South Korea and
Japan attended. At the meeting, Asia pressed an
unprecedented drive toward greater regional cooperation. Needing to
export beyond its own region, Asia is attempting to fashion itself
into a bloc that can effectively compete against both the United
States and the European Union.

For the first time, ASEAN is considering establishing a permanent
troika of member nations that will take the lead in dealing with
urgent economic and security crises. Though the details are still
vague, ministers from three nations would take initial
responsibility for containing rapidly emerging trouble spots and
dangers. Thailand, Singapore and Vietnam are reported to be likely
candidates for leadership of the troika. ASEAN has experimented
with a triad just once before, in dealing with  Cambodia.

At the Manila meeting, ASEAN also accelerated its move toward free
trade among its founding members, shifting the deadline forward
from 2015 to 2010. The free trade area would do away with tariffs
between the region's six founding members: Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Brunei. The four newest
members - Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia - also would speed up
the process. They would drive their own deadlines forward by three
years -- from 2018  -- to eliminate tariffs.

Both moves signal that Asia is moving with greater urgency toward
regional cooperation and even behavior as a cohesive economic bloc.
Both initiatives were approved unanimously. The discussion of a
troika demonstrates that the region is moving away from its
decidedly non-interventionist policy, which has precluded the
region from interfering in any one nation's matters. The recent
crisis in East Timor caught the region flat-footed. Without a
cohesive regional response, the West rushed in to fill the vacuum
in Timor. Accelerating the timetable for lifting tariffs suggests
that Asia is also anxious to find some way to spark a larger
economic recovery, while offsetting the influence of the West.

In the wake of the Manila meetings, China has also made a
significant gesture toward the region. At the summit, the Chinese
delegation refused to sign a code of conduct that would have halted
any new occupations of the contested Spratly Islands. But shortly
afterward, Beijing made a surprise announcement on Nov. 29, saying
that it would agree to joint development of the islands. Beijing
has not laid aside its claim of sovereignty, but the Chinese are
attempting to drive regional cooperation forward, even in the face
of an important security dispute.

But Asia is still hedging its bets by postponing important
decisions. Revealing its remaining reluctance, ASEAN has put forth
its traditionally Western-oriented members for the troika. They
would not just deal with possible crises but also the resultant
Western pressures to resolve those crises. ASEAN also studiously
avoided a clear definition of how this triumvirate would work,
declaring that such specifics are unnecessary until an emergency
actually arises. The movement toward a free trade area, as well,
doesn't solve the region's most pressing problem. Its economies
cannot afford merely to continue swapping exports among themselves.

Beyond ASEAN, the larger region must overcome -- or put aside --
far more significant barriers to become a viable bloc. In
particular, the security concerns of Northeast Asia will continue
to pit one player against another. China's increasingly warm
relations with North Korea will continue to harm more substantial
ties with Japan and South Korea. The South Korean newspaper
JoongAng Ilbo reported on Nov. 25 that China had just sold North
Korea "massive" quantities of military equipment.

Asia is now at a critical juncture. Increasingly, economic
necessity propels the region toward greater cooperation. The region
must find a way to counter the power and influence of the United
States and Europe. Yet the speed with which Asian nations move
toward one another is constrained by traditional security disputes
and divisions.

More than anything, Asia ultimately lacks a compelling reason to
present a unified front to the rest of the world. Blocs form in
reaction to threats. They did so at the end of World War II when
the United States and the Soviet Union shaped their initial,
respective alliances - and then re-shaped them throughout the Cold
War in response to differing threats around the world.

All that is now missing from Asia's economic and political equation
is a threat or, at the very least, a catalytic event. Two examples
present themselves. A truly regional emergency, such as a currency
crisis, might be such an event. Or if Aceh erupted into full
rebellion and threatened to finally unravel Indonesia, the region
would be forced to adopt a common stance. ASEAN even went so far at
the summit as to issue a statement expressing "full respect for the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Republic of
Indonesia."



(c) 1999, Stratfor, Inc. http://www.stratfor.com/


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