ASEAN ready for post-2015 blueprint
Tuesday, 18 January 2011
The Jakarta Post
ASEAN’s foreign ministers welcomed Indonesia’s idea that association
should produce a blueprint for a common platform to tackle global issues
when it becomes a community in 2015.
After chairing the meeting, Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa
said that although the grouping and individual members were involved in
efforts to be a part of solutions to a number of global problems, the
policies were scattered.
He said ASEAN needed to further refine, sharpen and consolidate so that
over the next few years it had a clear trajectory for an increased and
enhanced role in global matters.
“Now, we must visualize the world not of today but rather how the world
may look like in say 10 years’ time and to ensure that ASEAN is ready to
address that kind of world when the time comes,” Marty told a press
briefing.
He said in 2003 Indonesia came up with ideas to tackle ASEAN challenges
in 2015 or 2020 by envisioning a blueprint for a community, and that now
it was time for the grouping to think ahead of that time so that there
was a common platform to tackle future problems.
“Other ASEAN countries did not object to our proposal [during the
meeting]. So we will begin working on the blueprint if ASEAN leaders
agree on that,” he said.
Indonesia proposed that this year the ASEAN Community should start
playing a role on the global stage by tackling global issues such as
climate change, development and conflict and security problems under the
banner of ASEAN Community in a Global Community of Nations.
Marty has said that ASEAN countries must be outward looking and not
self-absorbed, clarifying that a common platform was not a common
foreign policy as ASEAN was not a supranational organization.
In regard to handling the inclusion of the United States and Russia in
the East Asian Summit (EAS), ASEAN foreign ministries said that the
grouping would maintain itself as the driving force in the EAS.
Marty said that ASEAN’s centrality was a must within any regional
architecture. “Our focus on EAS will be on geopolitics. We want the EAS
to help create a peaceful, stable and secure area. Indonesia always uses
common security, common prosperity and common stability to refer to
conditions we want to create,” he said.
Analysts warned that Indonesia’s ASEAN chairmanship would be challenged
by problems faced by member countries, and that it had been pushed to
balance its position between the US and China, both looking to make the
region their sphere of influence.
Border disputes among member countries and outsiders, notably China in
the South China Sea, will test Indonesia’s leadership. For instance, if
it mediated in the South China Sea dispute between China and four ASEAN
countries, Indonesia as a non-claimant state to the territory would be
expected to show impartiality.
China has been at loggerheads with Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia
and Brunei over the control of the Spratly and Paracel Islands in the
South China Sea for decades.
Some observers feel the administration of US President Barack Obama is
exploiting these tensions to undermine China’s growing regional
influence.
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