East Asia club leaves U.S. feeling left out[1]

Michael Vatikiotis[2]

 

SINGAPORE Why are Americans so nervous about the emerging East Asian Community? 
U.S. officials and experts have started wringing their hands over the proposed 
formation of a group uniting East Asian countries, which will be cemented in 
place at a summit meeting in Kuala Lumpur at the end of this year.

What surprises many East Asians is that apparently the United States wants to 
be included in the group. America? A part of Asia? The core members of the 
community - China, Japan, South Korea and the 10 countries in the Association 
of Southeast Asian Nations - are having a tough enough time deciding whether 
India and Australia should be members.

The American nervousness stems from two areas of concern - one rational, the 
other perhaps not.

Early formulations of an East Asian Community were forged when Asia's economies 
were booming and leaders like Mahathir bin Mohamad of Malaysia dreamed of Asia 
for Asians. Mahathir's notion of an East Asian Economic Caucus, first mooted in 
the early 1990s, was deliberately pitched as a counterbalance to America's 
economic dominance. 

Washington didn't like the idea, and urged Asian nations to embrace instead the 
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, or APEC, which fudged the geography 
and included all of Asia's trading partners - including the Pacific rim of 
Latin America.

When the Asian financial crisis struck in 1997, talk of regional financial 
cooperation acquired a new urgency because of the way that Western-dominated 
markets had punished profligate Asian economies using the International 
Monetary Fund. Japan mooted the idea of an Asian Monetary Fund. Hell no, 
America said, entrusting our capital to some kind of Asian monetary fund was 
out of the question - so East Asian cooperation received another body blow.

But as China grew stronger in the late 1990s, the idea of an East Asian 
Community was revived with the help of more subtle Chinese diplomacy. The 
modest marriage of summit meetings in 1999 between Asean and the three 
Northeast Asian powers has since evolved into an ambitious community that China 
wants to see embrace trade, finance, politics and security.

This is where American objections become harder to justify, because they seem 
to be based on old-fashioned hegemonic competition rather than sensible 
economics.

The United States sees itself as an assertive power for the good in the world. 
Implicitly, America questions whether China can or should play the same role. 
"China is becoming a significant power in the region," the new head of the U.S. 
Pacific Command, Admiral William Fallon, told The Associated Press. "I don't 
know what the desired end state is. I'm not sure they do either."

Oh yes they do. "The purpose of the East Asia Community is to realize the group 
rising of East Asia and match the potential of North America, the European 
Union and South America against the backdrop of global competition," says one 
Chinese scholar from a Shanghai university.

The unspoken fear in Washington is that an East Asian Community that excludes 
the United States could become the core of an alliance against it. One senior 
U.S. official described his fear of a wall around Asia "with slots for us to 
put our money in."

To which the Chinese say: nonsense. We'll let you become a member of our club 
if you let us become a member of yours. China is dangling closer ties with the 
new group in return for membership of some of the elite global clubs that 
regulate, for example, weapons technology and nuclear power. 

One way America could start to feel more integrated with East Asia without 
yielding too much strategic ground would be to pay more attention to those East 
Asian forums of which it is already a member. The Asean Regional Forum, a 
security body set up in the early 1990s, has never acquired any teeth because 
Washington neglected it. The APEC process has also languished because of U.S. 
neglect.

While China and America spar over geopolitical pre-eminence, the rest of East 
Asia just wants a more efficient trading area and access to a larger market. 
And right now, the biggest market is China. 

So many East Asians are saying to their American friends: Don't fight this one. 
Let us evolve on our own. Besides, the region can hardly afford to ignore 
America. Despite American fears, East Asia won't stop doing business with 
America after the December summit meeting in Kuala Lumpur.


---------------------------------

[1] International Herald Tribune, Wednesday, April 6, 2005 
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/04/05/opinion/edvati.html 


[2] Michael Vatikiotis is a visiting research fellow at the Institute of 
Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore.




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