http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/NG27Ae03.html

Jul 27, 2012 


Behind the scenes of ASEAN's breakdown
By Carlyle A Thayer 

Indonesia's Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa recently conducted an intense 
round of shuttle diplomacy, visiting Cambodia, Vietnam, the Philippines, 
Singapore and Malaysia in order to secure agreement on the Association of 
Southeast Asian Nations' (ASEAN) Six-Point Principles on the South China Sea. 
When asked by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation to sum up the results of 
his efforts he replied it was "back to business as usual". 

Natalegawa meant that he had managed to overcome the appearance of ASEAN 
disarray when the grouping's foreign ministers were unable to reach agreement 
on four paragraphs on the South China Sea to be included in a draft joint 
communique to summarize the results of their meeting. The Cambodia-hosted event 
represented the first time in the bloc's 45-year history that an ASEAN 
Ministerial Meeting (AMM) failed to agree on a joint statement. 

Natalegawa stood alongside Cambodia's Foreign Minister Hor Namhong when he 
issued ASEAN's six-point statement. Hor Namhong, however, could not resist 
laying the blame for ASEAN's failure to issue a joint communique on Vietnam and 
the Philippines, the two ASEAN countries that have clashed most openly with 
China on contested claims to the South China Sea. Brunei, Malaysia and 
Indonesia also have disputes with China over particular bits of the maritime 
area. 

The record of the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting (AMM) Retreat, however, tells a 
different story. According to notes of the discussions drawn up by a 
participant which this author has reviewed, Cambodia twice rejected attempts by 
the Philippines, Vietnam and other ASEAN members to include a reference to 
recent developments in the South China Sea. Each time Cambodia threatened that 
it would withhold the joint communique. 
The South China Sea issue was discussed during the plenary session of the AMM 
Retreat. The Philippines spoke first and was followed by Thailand, Vietnam, 
Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore and Cambodia. 

Philippine Foreign Minister Albert Del Rosario described past and current 
examples of Chinese "expansion and aggression" that prevented "the Philippines 
from enforcing its laws and forcing the Philippines to retreat from its own 
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)." 

Del Rosario asked rhetorically, "what would be the real value of the Code of 
Conduct (COC) if we could not uphold the DOC [Declaration on Conduct of 
Parties]?", which was first agreed to with China in 2002. Del Rosario ended his 
intervention stating it was "important that ASEAN's collective commitment to 
the [DOC] be reflected in the joint communique of the ASEAN Ministerial 
Meeting." 

Four other countries directly addressed this point. Vietnam described China's 
recent creation of Sansha City over contested South China Sea islands and China 
National Offshore Oil Company's invitation for foreign exploration bids in 
other contested maritime areas as "serious violations of Vietnam's sovereignty 
and jurisdiction over its EEZ and Continental Shelf". 

Vietnam argued that the joint communique should reflect this. Indonesia 
underscored the importance of ASEAN acting with one voice and noted that recent 
developments were of concern to all ASEAN members. Indonesia endorsed 
concluding a Code of Conduct and promised to "circulate a non-paper on possible 
and additional elements of the COC". 

Malaysia endorsed the comments by Indonesia and stressed "We must talk with a 
single voice; ASEAN must show [its] united voice; [otherwise] our credibility 
will be undermined." Malaysia concluded, "We must refer to the situation in the 
South China Sea, particularly any acts that contravene the international law on 
EEZ and continental shelves. It is totally unacceptable that we can't have it 
in the joint communique. It is important that ASEAN has a clear expression of 
our concerns on the South China Sea in the joint communique." 

Singapore noted that "recent developments were of special concern" because they 
raised "novel interpretations of international law that could undermine the 
entire UNCLOS regime." Singapore concluded by arguing "it is important that 
ASEAN has a clear expression of our concerns on the South China Sea in the 
joint communique ... [It would be] damaging to us if we don't say anything." 

Broken consensus
Until Cambodia spoke, no country took exception to the interventions by the 
Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. When it was Cambodia's 
turn to speak its foreign minister queried why it was necessary to mention 
Scarborough Shoal, where China and the Philippines were recently engaged in a 
two-month stand-off. 

He then abruptly declared, "I need to be frank with you, in case we cannot find 
the way out, Cambodia has no more recourse to deal with this issue. Then, there 
will be no text at all. We should not try to impose national positions; we 
should try to reflect the common views in the spirit of compromise." 

At this point the discussion became heated, with both the Philippines and 
Vietnam continuing to argue their cases. Additional interventions were made by 
Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore. The AMM Retreat was brought to an end by Hor 
Namhong, who declared, "We can never achieve [agreement] even though we stay 
here for the next four or five hours ... If you cannot agree on the text of the 
joint communique; we have no more recourse to deal with this issue as the Chair 
of ASEAN." 

Natalegawa correctly pointed out that although no joint communique was issued, 
ASEAN foreign ministers did reach agreement on the "key elements" of a Code of 
Conduct in the South China Sea. As a result of his shuttle diplomacy, he said 
ASEAN foreign ministers agreed to "the early conclusion of a Regional Code of 
Conduct in the South China Sea". 

Cambodia, in its capacity as ASEAN chair, hosted two informal meetings between 
ASEAN and Chinese senior officials to discuss the way forward on the COC. China 
publicly announced that it was ready to enter into formal discussions with 
ASEAN "when conditions were ripe." 

If all goes to plan, ASEAN and Chinese senior officials will discuss the 
modalities of their forthcoming discussions. They still need to determine at 
what level they will meet, how often, and to whom they will report. Formal 
discussions are scheduled to commence in September and ASEAN officials hope to 
complete negotiations by November. 

Natalegawa's shuttle diplomacy provided a much-needed boost to ASEAN's morale. 
His efforts also helped to dispel the perception outside of Southeast Asia that 
there was disunity among ASEAN members on how to deal with the South China Sea 
issue. 

More importantly, Indonesia's intervention served notice to Cambodia that as 
ASEAN's chair for 2012 it could not unilaterally control ASEAN's agenda. 
Natalegawa's intervention was unprecedented in taking a leadership role that 
normally would fall to the ASEAN chair and signaled that Indonesia is willing 
to play a more proactive role in regional affairs. This is in contrast to the 
Suharto years when Indonesia, viewed as the natural leader of Southeast Asia, 
played a more low-key "softly, softly" role. 

There could, however, be another meaning behind Natalegawa's expression that 
ASEAN is "back to business as usual". This second meaning could be a vague 
reference to China's renewed assertiveness in seeking to exercise its 
jurisdiction over the South China Sea. 

This has taken three forms. First, China has raised Sansha from county to 
prefecture level and given it administrative responsibility over the Paracel 
Islands, Macclesfield Bank and Spratly Islands. Indeed, Hainan provincial 
authorities rushed to appoint local officials to this new unit, and elections 
will be held to select representatives to the National People's Congress. 

Second, China's southern Hainan province soon thereafter dispatched 30 trawlers 
and four escort vessels to fish in the waters in the Spratly Islands. The fleet 
first fished off Fiery Cross Reef before moving to Johnson South Reef, both 
contested areas. 

Third, and most significantly, China's Central Military Commission issued a 
directive establishing a military garrison in Sansha prefecture. This garrison, 
with its headquarters based at Woody Island, will have responsibility for 
national defense of an area covering two million square miles of water. 

Business as usual, in the second sense, thus could mean that while ASEAN 
negotiates a COC with Beijing, China can be expected to simultaneously continue 
to apply pressure and intimidation on both the Philippines and Vietnam and seek 
other ways to sow discord among the grouping's 10 members. 

Carlyle Thayer is Emeritus Professor at the University of New South Wales at 
the Australian Defense Force Academy in Canberra. 

(Copyright 2012 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please 
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