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Not much substance behind the fanfare and show of unity after all? Is Cambodia [ASEAN Chair] dancing to China's tunes over this debacle, or ASEAN member states not singing from the same hymn book as usual? - School of Vice
The Philippine Star - July 15, 2012
“China realizes that it will be much more difficult to deal with the issue against ASEAN,” said Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a professor at Kyoto University’s Center for Southeast Asian Studies. “The tactic is to divide and rule.”
Manila, Philippines - Despite the lack of a joint statement
at the conclusion of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign
ministers’ meeting, a government official maintained that there was no need to
review diplomatic ties with Cambodia.
“That may be too drastic... There are things that can still
be hammered out without going down that way,” deputy presidential spokesperson
Abigail Valte said.
The foreign ministers had earlier agreed to key elements of
a code of conduct in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) but for some
reason, no joint statement was issued at the end the meeting.
“We share the disappointment of the other foreign ministers.
I believe they have been (expressing it), we have seen several statements from
different foreign ministers who attended the meeting in Cambodia. And correct
me if I’m wrong, but I think in 45 years this is the first time that it
happened that a communiqué has not been issued despite the fact that the ASEAN
has dealt with contentious issues in the past,” Valte admitted.
During the ASEAN leaders’ summit in Cambodia in April, the
West Philippine Sea issue was stricken off the ASEAN agenda by the chairman,
sources said, although Manila insisted on it.
“ASEAN has been through many contentious issues and it has
always come out with a communiqué. But we will respect their assessment in the
same way that our country has its own assessment...along with other neighboring
countries,” Valte said.
It was also in Cambodia where the Philippines called on
ASEAN to come up with a united stand on the matter before talking to China,
which had been espousing a bilateral solution to the problem.
“The issues we raised about territorial claims and
rules-based mechanisms for dispute resolution are relevant from multilateral
perspectives,” Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning
Office secretary Ricky Carandang said.
Valte also belied reports that the Philippines was alone in
its stand on the West Philippine Sea issue.
“I don’t think that’s accurate…. (just) scan all of the
reports that have come out on the movements in the meetings in ASEAN,” Valte
said.
As to the next steps to be taken by the Philippines, Valte
said she would have to defer to Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario.
She said the issue would be discussed when Del Rosario comes
back from Cambodia.
Valte added there was no indication that President Aquino
would no longer attend the ASEAN summit in Cambodia in November.
Based on reports, days of heated talks ended in failure on
Friday as deep splits over China prevented the ASEAN grouping from issuing its
customary joint statement for the first time.
Foreign ministers from the 10-member bloc have been
wrangling since Monday to hammer out a diplomatic communiqué, which has held up
progress on a separate code of conduct aimed at soothing tensions in the
flashpoint South China Sea.
China claims sovereignty over nearly all of the
resource-rich sea, which is home to vital shipping lanes, but ASEAN members the
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei have overlapping claims in the area.
The long-stalled code of conduct, strongly supported by the
United States, is seen as a way of reducing the chances of a spat over fishing,
shipping rights or oil and gas exploration tipping into armed conflict.
China described the meeting as “productive” while the
Philippines lambasted the failure to issue a statement.
The Philippines and the US called this week for a unified
ASEAN that could use its collective clout to negotiate with China, while
Beijing had always wanted to deal with its smaller neighbors individually.
“China realizes that it will be much more difficult to deal
with the issue against ASEAN,” said Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a professor at
Kyoto University’s Center for Southeast Asian Studies. “The tactic is to divide
and rule.”
On Friday, Chinese state media reported that a 30-vessel
fishing fleet had been sent to the sensitive Spratly Islands in the South China
Sea.
Vietnam, Japan and the Philippines have all recently
complained about perceived Chinese aggression in the sea over separate disputed
seas.
Diplomatic sources, speaking anonymously to AFP, referred to
angry exchanges at the ASEAN forum this week, with an emergency meeting called
for early Friday morning also failing to break the deadlock on the joint
statement.
“I think it would be fair to say that tempers in some of the
private meetings have run hot. There have been some very tense back and forth,”
one US official said on Thursday.
China is a key bank-roller of the host Cambodia and some
diplomats said Beijing had twisted arms in Phnom Penh to prevent any reference
to the South China Sea disputes in the communiqué.
Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong expressed regret at
the discord within ASEAN, but said he could “not accept that the joint
communiqué has become the hostage of the bilateral issue (between the
Philippines and China).”
Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, who played a
key role trying to broker a compromise, expressed “deep, profound
disappointment” at the lack of consensus within the bloc.
“There is still a common view that we must, if anything,
reinforce our efforts to work on the COC (code of conduct), to begin our talks
with the Chinese on the COC,” he added.
Foreign ministers said on Sunday that they had agreed on
“key elements” of a draft code to be presented to China, but these were not
released to the media.
China was also cool to the idea of starting negotiations,
almost 10 years since the idea of creating a code was first agreed, saying it
would only negotiate “when conditions are ripe.”
Last Friday, del Rosario reported in a press briefing what
he discussed in the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting, East Asia Summit and the ASEAN
Regional Forum in Cambodia.
He explained the Philippine position in terms of Panatag
(Scarborough) Shoal, challenges and the events that have occurred in the area.
“We were in a de-escalation mode and we wanted to keep a
lower profile in the hope that we could negotiate quietly a solution to the
impasse that we had encountered there for quite a long time,” he said.
At the three regional meetings, del Rosario brought up the
matter of Panatag Shoal and indicated that it has a direct bearing on the
future direction of the East Asia Summit and the ASEAN Regional Forum.
“And mostly there was a considerable amount of discussion on
Panatag Shoal in all of the forums that were held there and I think we were
successful in being able to bring to the fore the challenges that the
Philippines faces in that area,” del Rosario added.
During the special meeting on the draft joint communiqué,
several ASEAN member-states and the ASEAN Secretariat supported the Philippine
position that the fact that the Scarborough Shoal issue was discussed in the
Ministerial Meeting should be reflected in the joint communiqué.
However, del Rosario said the chair, Cambodia, had
“consistently opposed any mention of the Scarborough Shoal at all in the joint
communiqué and today announced that a joint communiqué ‘cannot be issued’.”
Del Rosario had discussed the situation in Panatag Shoal,
also called Bajo de Masinloc, in several ASEAN Ministerial Meetings in Phnom
Penh starting last July 9, and the Philippines simply wanted the fact that the
issue discussed should be reflected in the joint communiqué.
“The issue discussed, which was Scarborough Shoal, should be
reflected in the joint communiqué, no more, no less. Just a recognition that
the Scarborough Shoal was in fact discussed and shown some concern,” he said.
China-friendly Cambodia took the position that it does not
want to mention bilateral issues of the Scarborough Shoal and the dispute
between Vietnam and China.
When asked if Cambodia could have been pressured by China,
Del Rosario said such question should be directly asked and answered by
Cambodia, but he noted that “at one point he (chairman) indicated that he had
‘political reason’.”
The Philippines further maintained that since the competing
claims in the West Philippine Sea involve four ASEAN member-states – namely the
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Brunei – this dispute is not a mere
bilateral conflict with a northern neighbor but a multilateral one and should
therefore be resolved in a multilateral manner.
“It also is not true that ASEAN does not discuss or does not
include bilateral matters in their joint communiqué and the most recent example
of this is the problem between Cambodia and Thailand that was brought up in
every meeting as a matter of discussion with no reservation,” he said. – Aurea
Calica, Pia Lee-Brago
7 comments:
All these years of Preah Vihear conflict between Cambodia-Thailand,there is no single country in ASEAN member stands up to support Cambodia. All of them are quiet. Indonesia act very caustious and reluctant to Thailand's bully and aggressive behaviors. China has sent support both military and others support.
Time to resolve South China Sea conflict, they want easy way out, thinks and try again, pals.
ASEAN think we are a fool to go against china.454 good one. Now how they feel when we lost koh tral to the damn yuon
China should wipe out of Vietnam, so Cambodia can have a Kampuchea krom land back.
9:03 AM
So you don't mind killing 90 million Vietnamese ?
A lots of innocents Cambodian get killed because of the enemy invasion and no countries in the world have the morality and guts to stand up and help Cambodia . this is the deja vu and the lessons those countries should learn it really big deals for Philippines and some countries but let make it frank no body get kill yet the matter are being assess.
During the Preah vihear conflict no Asian countries dear to say something negative against the invasion how hurt was Cambodian during that time no body known only Cambodian people. now it time for those countries to experiences the suffer and fear when they deal with the biggest boy in the neighborhood they can dance and can cry foul all they want and the American not going to war with China because it isn't American problem beside American owe China considerable amount of money.
This is the good drama and it will not going away any time soon the arm confrontation is inevitable and see if those countries dear to fight the mighty China in the event happen .
No country dare to fight China,not event the mighty America,they prefer diplomacy not war...Trust me my fellow friends..
Asean is waste of time, the preah vihear conflict is casing point about how ineffective the group is. the group is lack of moral strength to act what is right and what is wrong. it does not take much to realise that Cambodia is no match against Thailand. it was a claer case of bullying by a bigger and richer member of asean against one of the poorest asean member.the ethical behaviour standard of any organisation would do what is right and solve the problem. Asean did not do anything but talk and more talks.
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