Posted Friday, August 3rd, 2012
Voice of America
Foreign Minister Natalegawa Out Front in Regional Mediation
Indonesia is distinguishing itself as a voice of moderation and mediation in the troubled waters of the South China Sea.
Even as the rival territorial claims over the sea was splitting the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Cambodia last month, Indonesia
refused to quit acting as a mediator.
“The Indonesians have taken it upon themselves in a way that is a
little unusual,” a senior U.S. official told reporters during the ASEAN
meeting in Phnom Penh.
“Usually that process is always left to the chair. Indonesia is
working very constructively behind the scenes to try to rally
consensus,” the U.S. official said. “And Secretary (of State Hillary)
Clinton, in her meeting with Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, thanked
him for that and encouraged that process to continue.”
ASEAN’s failure to agree on a unified statement for the first time in
its history was “utterly irresponsible,” Natalegawa said. But he
quickly regrouped, hitting the diplomatic road to keep the association
from fracturing even further.
He said says the impasse over the South China Sea is an exception.
“It is not the rule. And let’s keep it that way. Let’s keep it as an
exception,” he says. “ASEAN continues to remain united, to be cohesive
on all issues of common concern, not least, and especially on the issue
of the South China Sea.”
Indonesia presses for regional solution
Across Southeast Asia, Natalegawa continues to push a regional
framework to resolve rival claims over the 3.5-million-square kilometer
sea.
“We do actually need a Code of Conduct for the South China Sea,” he
says. “Some kind of rule-of-the-road type of regime so the potential for
conflicts in the region can be managed and, even more, betters the
potential for conflicts to be resolved so the countries of the region
can continue to enjoy the peace dividend that all of us have enjoyed for
many decades now.”
As Southeast Asia’s biggest nation, Indonesia’s neutrality is helping
sooth some of the maritime tensions between China, Vietnam, the
Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Brunei.
“Indonesia certainly has an ambivalence about all of the developments
that have taken place,” says Justin Logan, director of foreign policy
studies at Washington’s Cato Institute policy research group. “They
really are sort of at the fulcrum of this, trying to remain in the
center, wherever the center may be. I imagine that will continue going
forward. But their status, I think, has really risen as a result of
their diplomacy.”
Logan says Indonesian mediation is especially important with the
opening of China’s new Sansha City garrison on an island Beijing calls
Yongxing but Hanoi claims as Woody Island.
“There have been many countries that have historically been clustered
around the center of ASEAN,” Logan says. “I think there is now a
sorting going on where there is a taking-sides process happening.
Indonesia has remained the anchor in the center as other countries have
more or less drifted away from that center.”
From rival claimants Vietnam and the Philippines to Chinese ally Cambodia, Indonesia is working to bridge those differences.
“You have claimant states that obviously have a deeper ambivalence
about China’s growing naval power and about its diplomacy in the region,
both economic and otherwise,” Logan says. “And then you have other
countries that have benefited tremendously from their relationships with
China and are increasingly not inclined to take hard stances
diplomatically or otherwise against China.”
Playing a weak hand
The longer ASEAN fails to resolve South China Sea claims, says Joshua
Kurlantzick of U.S. Council on Foreign Relations, the more powerful
countries such as Vietnam “are going to opt for other solutions.
“ASEAN has played a relatively weak hand relatively weakly,”
Kurlantzick says. “They have, at the same time been able to
pragmatically work with China on economic issues over the last 10 years
and continue to move forward on regional integration while this dispute
has gone on. That does say something about the pragmatism and the
thoughtfulness and prioritization of ASEAN countries.”
Analyst Bonnie Glaser at Washington’s Center for Strategic and
International Studies says the South China Sea dispute is a major
challenge to ASEAN unity, but adds that it might help the group evolve
beyond its primarily economic focus.
“Maybe this is a maturation of ASEAN,” Glaser says. “Maybe it
shouldn’t be portrayed as a weakening or a demonstration of disunity.
Maybe this organization is now beginning to come into its own. So that’s
positive.”
1 comment:
Yes we know Khmer and Thai conflict are insignificant that is why did not work to calm it down.
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