Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Security
Cooperation
- Milestones
- ZOPFAN '71
- Call for regional
autonomy in managing
great power intervention
- Lacked a clear,
concise definition
- Soft and open-ended
agreement on broad
principles previously laid out
in the '67 Bangkok
Declaration; not a framework
of legalistic measures
- Need to reconcile different
security perspectives
before security cooperation
could take place
- P & T concerned with
implications on their
Alliance relationship with US
- I security complex; more
concerned with devt of
'regional resilience' through
national resilience instead of
seeking guarantee from
major powers
- S convinced her interests
best served by maintaining
involvement of all powers in
the region
- TAC Feb '76
- Authoritative affirmation of
ASEAN's principles and policies on
interstate behavior
- High Council of Ministerial
Representatives set up
- Never been used
- Aversion against raising acrimonious
issues within ASEAN framework;
avoidance of legal and formal
procedures under ASEAN Way
- S M referred PB to ICJ '94
- M's preference to refer
Ligitan and Sipadan
dispute to ICJ '97
- ARF '94
- Loss of US as a regional
counterweight; power vacuum,
strategic uncertainties
- Pursue security framework
based on multilateralism and
engagement of external powers
- Forum for political
consultations on the new
security situation in SEA
- Question ARF's
real impact on
regional security
- Focus on dialogue and
confidence-building rather than
concrete military cooperation
- Not meant as a military
alliance; forum for consultation
and confidence-building
- Intended to be a talk shop;
promote mutual
understanding, create
channels of communication
- Turn towards ASEAN's
engagement of major powers and
new multilateralism; huge leap
from old modalities (ZOPFAN)
- Relevance of ASEAN's
leadership in ARF
- Dialogue could stagnate
- ASEAN Way ie. conflict
avoidance and management
insufficient to address real
security problems which cannot
be swept under the carpet
- Lack of capacity to resolve
more intractable regional
conflicts ie. South China Sea
- SEANWFZ '95
- Mooted in '71 with
ZOPFAN Declaration
- Twenty
years lag
- Lack of common
perspective and
interests; delay ASEAN
cooperation
- Turning point in
ASEAN's approach
to regional security
- Hitherto reluctance to
embrace formal and legalistic
mechanisms for arms control
- Case Studies
- Sabah '68
- March '68: Eruption of
the 'Corrigedor Incident';
suspension of P-M
relations in Oct '68
- Bilateral tensions
continued to escalate
- Late Nov '68: M and P
Ambassadors withdrawn
from each other's capitals
- Dec '69: 3rd Ministerial
Meeting; Tunku Abdul
Rahman announced
resumption of P-M
bilateral relations
- ASEAN used as a platform for
'informal discussions' and
diplomatic efforts vs. bilateral
dispute in official ASEAN forum
- Aug '68: Second ASEAN
Ministerial Meeting; issue
not officially raised in
meeting; agreed to a
"cooling-off period"
outside of meeting
- Failed to prevent
escalation of tension and
withdrawal of
Ambassadors in Nov '68
- Could not and did not
resolve the dispute; did
not play the role of conflict
mediator in a formal sense
- Succeeded in preventing any
further escalation of the crisis
to armed hostilities and
destroying the organization
through indirect measures
- Important milestone in
ASEAN's early approach
to conflict avoidance
- V Reunification
- Implications
on ASEAN
- Prospects for regional peace
and security + possible major
power intervention
- Indochinese
Asylum-seekers
- Illegal immigrants issue; security
concern; potential of communist
subversion by agents in the exodus
- Concerted ASEAN stand based on
"human considerations" to give
shelter and assistance; but ruled
out granting permanent settlement
- Explicitly requested V to "discourage the
illegal outflow of its people; to accept the
return of those who do not meet international
criteria for refugee status; and to expand the
Orderly Departure Programme"
- VK Invasion
- Diplomatic
efforts
- Official collective stand deplored; called
for "the immediate and total withdrawal
of the foreign forces from K territory"
- Active collective diplomacy for a
political settlement throughout the 80s
- Jakarta Informal
Meetings
- Proposals for
"cocktail meetings"
discussed 86-88
- Internationalized the conflict;
lobbied for international
diplomatic opposition to Vietnam
- Supported CGDK
at international
forums
- Lobbied for diplomatic
support from official
dialogue partners
- Divergent
interests
- Different perceptions of threat
among member states; yet still
need to maintain common
collective diplomatic response
- T and S hardliners; T
directly threatened because
of shared borders; S small
state and predominantly
concerned with upholding
ASEAN principles of
non-aggression and
non-intervention
- M and I softliners; more
concerned with the
involvement of major
powers; perceived the
threat to emanate from
major power involvement
- Kuantan Principle; crack
in ASEAN's collective
position; dropped upon
strong T opposition to
legitimacy of V's K claim
- Difference in
approach
- March '83: Five-Plus-Two
Talks; proposed by Malaysia;
rope in Vietnam and Laos
for discussions towards
settlement of imbroglio
- Resulted in
nothing; opposition
from T and Chinese
that CGDK would
not be represented
at the talks
- T policy to pursue ec
opportunities with V;
hoped to enhance T
influence wrt K issue
- Seen negatively by
other ASEAN members;
worried softening of
stance might lead to
further V intransigence
- Severe test of ASEAN's informal
conflict management
mechanisms, accommodation of
various interests, norm-building
and community-building in SEA
- Remarkable solidarity underlying
the firm position it steadfastly
took; collective diplomacy pursued
in spite of moral pressures
- Ultimately the UN
which negotiated
the way out of the
imbroglio
- South China Sea
- Produced the ASEAN Declaration on the
South China Sea; ascertained ASEAN
norms wrt peaceful settlement of disputes
- Limitation in
applicability to
China
- ARF Meeting '95; China rejected
role of ARF in the dispute; spoke
of China's "indisputable
sovereignty over the islands"
- Brought the dispute into
international limelight; diplomatic
cost for Beijing should it use force
- Limits to how far ASEAN
was willing to push the PRC