|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
East Asian Summit plagued by tension and rivalry
By John Chan
23 December 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The first East Asian Summit (EAS) held in the Malaysian capital
of Kuala Lumpur on December 14 left a big question mark over whether
the project for an East Asian Community will even
get off the ground.
The EAS meeting is an extension of the ASEAN+3 groupingthe
10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations plus Japan, China
and South Koreaestablished following the Asian financial
crisis of 1997-98. The aim was to move towards an Asian trade
bloc against the US and Europe, but sharp tensions between the
two major economic powers in the regionChina and Japaneffectively
stalled the process at the first meeting.
For the first time since the end of World War II, the dominant
Asian Pacific power, the United States, was not even asked to
participate in what was billed as a major regional forum. Australia,
New Zealand and India were only invited after sharp divisions
within ASEAN over who should attend. Russia was present only as
an observer.
The EAS was the last of three consecutive gatherings held in
Kuala Lumpur in the same weekfollowing the ASEAN summit
and then the ASEAN+3 summit. The relative importance of the three
summits can be gauged by their respective communiqués.
ASEAN was declared to be the regions driving force
and ASEAN+3 the main vehicle for regional integration,
but EAS was simply described as a forum for dialogue
on broad issues of common interest and concern.
The EAS will convene regularly and be chaired by an ASEAN member
state. While the situation could change, it appears highly likely
that EAS will be relegated to be another ineffectual talk shop,
alongside the existing Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC)
group. The main vehicle for economic cooperation will
continue to be ASIAN+3, which excludes the US as well as Australia,
New Zealand and India.
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad first advanced
the idea of an East Asian caucus without Caucasians
in early 1990s to counter the rise of European and North American
trade blocs. The plan, largely reflecting the interests of Japan,
was effectively stymied by the US, with the assistance of Australia,
by the formation of an all-inclusive and therefore ineffective
APEC.
Over a decade later, a regional forum without the US present
has finally taken place. But relations in East Asia have profoundly
altered with the emergence of China as a major factor in global
economy. As a result, the EAS proposal has been plagued from the
outset by rivalry between China and Japan, as well as the vexed
question of the relationship of such a bloc to the USthe
key export market and dominant military power.
In a speech prior to the EAS summit on his Asian Strategy,
Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso made a bid for the leading
role, declaring Japans ambition to be a thought leader
in Asia. He emphasised the importance of the US-Japan alliance,
saying Japan was a stabiliser, whose readiness enables it
to provide security, the cornerstone for Asian prosperity, in
the areas of both economic and regional security.
Chinas Prime Minister Wen Jiabao responded by refusing
to even attend the annual three-way meeting with Japan and South
Korea on the eve of the ASEAN+3 summit. The diplomatic snub was
nominally to protest the recent visit by Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi to the Yasukuni shrine, but it reflected deeper
tensions between the two countries.
Commenting on the rivalry, Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi publicly warned: We are concerned about the
developing dichotomy in Japanese-Chinese relations, which we considered
one of the main pillars of East Asian cooperation.
The EU comparison
The formation of an East Asian community is often compared
with the European Union (EU). The EU, however, developed out of
a post-war rapprochement between France and Germany, encouraged
by the US and under its hegemony, that came to embrace other European
countries. Following the end of the Cold War, there are growing
tensions both within Europe and with the US.
There is no parallel in East Asia. China and Japan were rivals
during the Cold War, even after the US established relations with
Beijing in the early 1970s. Japan played a key role in fostering
the so-called Asian Tigers and the economic dynamism of the region.
Now, however, Tokyo has to confront the fact that China with its
vast reserves of cheap labour has become crucial to the functioning
of the Japanese and global economy.
With the backing of Washington, Tokyo is seeking to reestablish
itself as a major military power and to put its stamp on Asia.
China, on the other hand, is also seeking to use its economic
clout to enhance its security and stake out a greater political
and strategic role in the region. The two countries are already
at loggerheads over the control of key small islands, and therefore
oil and gas reserves, in the East China Sea.
The governments in both countries are stirring up nationalist
sentiment against each other. Koizumi has been particularly brazen
in his efforts to revive Japanese militarism, giving approval
to school texts that falsify Japans wartime atrocities and
visiting the Yasakuni shrine. Beijing has responded by encouraging
Chinese patriotism that led to racist attacks on Japanese in China.
Summing up the prospects for an East Asian bloc, the Financial
Times editorial on December 14 declared: Unlike France
and Germany at the heart of the European Union, China and Japan
have not managed to put the Second World War behind them or create
a community where political collaboration can reflect their economic
interdependence. Until they do, the US will have little fear from
Mahathirs dreams of Asian unity. Nor will Asians have anything
resembling a community of which they can be proud.
Last year China proposed holding the EAS summit in Beijing
but the plan was effectively vetoed by Japans strong opposition.
Beijing has been a strong supporter of Malaysias plan to
keep the EAS largely confined to the ASEAN+3 bloc, in which China
wields considerable economic clout. Japan, on the other hand,
has sought to expand the EAS to include, if not the US, then its
supportersAustralia, India and New Zealand.
An editorial in Japans Yomiuri Shimbun on December
4 commented: China is now placing more emphasis on the ASEAN
plus Three meeting because it considers it will be possible to
marginalise Japan there by asserting its economic power over ASEAN
members and forming a united front with South Korea over the history
issue. South Korea, like China, has protested against distorted
Japanese history texts.
Japan made a pitch to ASEAN members with a donation of $70
million and a pledge of $135 million to help fight the danger
of bird flu. Japan also promised to help finance infrastructure
in Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, three of the most economically backward
countries in the grouping.
Tokyos efforts to marginalise China clearly have Washingtons
backing. The Washington Post commented on December 14 that
the inclusion of Australia, New Zealand and India in the EAS showed
there was plenty of weight to balance Chinese influence
and, particularly through Australia, a ready channel for US concerns.
But the presence of US allies has only compounded the problems
in forming a viable bloc.
Australia, which is heavily dependent on exports to North East
Asia particularly to China, lobbied hard for a seat at EAS. Canberra
was compelled to back down on its earlier refusal to sign ASEANs
Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, which Prime Minister John Howard
described as an irrelevant relic of the past.
Having gained a place at the table, however, Australia immediately
confronted further obstacles, in part because the Howard government
is widely regarded as a lackey of the Bush administration. Malaysian
Prime Minister Badawi bluntly declared at the close of the meeting
that Australia and New Zealand were not really East Asians.
India received a slightly warmer response by Badawi, who commented,
[A]lthough not really East Asian, [India] is our immediate
neighbour. Last month New Delhi supported the admission
of both Japan and China as associate members of the South Asian
Association for Region Cooperation (SAARC). India is pushing for
closer economic ties with ASEAN, but a bilateral trade deal has
yet to be agreed.
While Australia and New Zealand received the cold shoulder,
the EAS declared Russia to be a candidate member and Russian President
Vladimir Putin was invited to a special session. Both China and
Japan have their eye on Russia as a major source of oil and gas.
The Russian energy ministry forecast last month that by 2020,
30 percent of Russias oil exports would go to Asia, compared
with the present 3 percent.
If one decodes the diplomatic language, Malaysias push,
backed by China, for a narrower grouping seems to have prevailed.
Expressing his disappointment at the lack of any significant role
for the EAS, Koizumi declared: The unity of the participants
will be more solid if we make our meetings a framework for real
cooperation, not just a place for dialogue.
At this stage, however, the whole EAS project appears to be
stillborn, with tension and rivalry between the major powers being
far more evident than any cooperation.
See Also:
The implications of Bush's
diplomatic debacle in Asia
[25 November 2005]
Australia and the East Asian
Summit: Howard's diplomatic "success" turn sour
[6 May 2005]
South East Asian summit
seals free trade agreement with China
[20 December 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |