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21st ASEAN Summit in Cambodia (from Nov. 18 to 20)

Asean Summit: Obama thrust into South China Sea debate

Phnom Penh, Cambodia: President Barack Obama’s attendance at an annual summit of Southeast Asian leaders on Tuesday thrust him right in the eye of the region’s most stormy dispute: the long-raging rivalry between China and five neighbors for control of strategic and resource-rich waters in the South China Sea.

The inability to resolve these territorial conflicts has become a major impediment to the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations as it tackles ambitious dreams like a plan to turn the economically vibrant region of 600 million people into an EU-like community by the end of 2015.

Neither the US nor China is a member of ASEAN, but each has strong supporters in the group. Summit host Cambodia, an ally of China, has tried at this week’s summit to shift the focus to economic concerns, but Beijing’s territorial disputes with its ASEAN neighbors — including staunch US ally the Philippines — have yet again overshadowed discussions.

The disagreement sparked a tense moment Monday when Philippine President Benigno Aquino III challenged Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, who had tried to cut off a discussion of the territorial disputes.

Into this heated atmosphere came Obama, who flew to Phnom Penh for Tuesday’s expanded East Asia Summit, in which the 10 ASEAN countries were joined by eight other nations, including China and the United States. Behind closed doors, the Chinese and Philippine leaders pressed their territorial claims while others called for restraint. After the summit, the exchange shifted to the chandelier-lit lobby, where diplomats of the two countries reiterated their positions.

Senior Chinese diplomat Fu Ying expressed dismay that the disputes again got the spotlight. “We do not want to bring the disputes to an occasion like this and we do not want to give over-emphasis to the territorial disputes and differences,” she said.

Washington has reiterated that it takes no sides in the territorial disputes but would not allow any country to resort to force and block access to the South China Sea, a vital commercial and military gateway to Asia’s heartland.

Washington has also called for the early crafting of a “code of conduct” to prevent clashes in the disputed territories, a call backed by Australia and Japan, but it remains unclear if and when China will sit down with rival claimants to draft such a legally binding nonaggression pact.

The potentially oil- and gas-rich South China Sea islands and waters are contested by China, Taiwan and four ASEAN members — Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

The last fighting, involving China and Vietnam, killed more than 70 Vietnamese sailors in 1988, and fears that the conflicts could spark Asia’s next war have kept governments on edge.

Vietnam and the Philippines, backed by Washington, have been loudest on the issue, and want China to negotiate with the other claimants as a group. China wants one-on-one negotiations — which would give it an advantage because of its sheer size and economic clout — and has warned Washington to stay away from an issue it says should not be “internationalized,” a position echoed by Cambodia at the Phnom Penh summit.

There have been several recent standoffs involving boats and other shows of force, particularly between China and the Philippines, which both claim ownership of the Spratly Islands, a spray of tiny South China Sea atolls.

Their latest diplomatic confrontation occurred a few hours before Obama touched down Monday in the Cambodian capital, when Hun Sen announced as he was closing a meeting that all ASEAN leaders have struck an agreement to limit discussions of the divisive issue within the 10-nation bloc’s talks with China.

Alarmed, Aquino raised his hand, stood up and objected to Hun Sen’s statement, saying his country, which plans to bring the disputes before a UN tribunal, was not party to any such agreement. It was a blunt gesture in the usually servile ambiance of the conservative bloc, an unwieldy collective of rigid, authoritarian regimes and nascent democracies.

After a brief lull, Hun Sen recovered and said Aquino’s remarks would be reflected in the record of the meeting. Still, Cambodian and Chinese officials insisted that the agreement stood. Tensions intensified Tuesday when the Philippines was joined by Vietnam and Singapore in objecting to a plan by Cambodia to state in a post-summit statement by the host country that there was indeed such an agreement, Philippine diplomats said.

An objection from the Philippines, or any ASEAN nation, ought to be enough to thrash any agreement because the bloc decides by consensus, meaning just one veto from any member kills any proposal.

“The bottom line is they can talk all they want but if we said we’re not with it, there’s no consensus, finished,”
Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario told reporters.

The dispute, and Obama’s presence here, highlights how ASEAN has become a major battleground for influence in Asia, just like the South China Sea. The US is pushing its “Pacific pivot” to the region following years of engagement in Iraq and Afghanistan. China, the Asian superpower, has acted to protect its home ground.

Southeast Asia is clearly pinned in between, and the lack of consensus among the group over the maritime disputes has pushed much of the bloc’s other work to the sidelines.

In July, after a foreign ministers’ meeting also hosted by Cambodia, the group failed to publicly issue a traditional after-conference communique — an embarrassing failure that was a first in ASEAN’s 45-year history. Vietnam and the Philippines had insisted that the joint statement simply state that the South China Sea rifts were discussed, but Cambodia adamantly refused, echoing China’s line to keep a lid on public discussions of the disputes.

Ernest Bower of the Center for Strategic & International Studies in Washington, DC, said the imbroglio in July showed that as long as any ASEAN country remains weak and vulnerable to muscling from a major power, the entire group could be compromised.

“ASEAN learned a hard lesson from the event,” Bower said, “namely, that they should never again allow a fellow ASEAN member country to feel so isolated, exposed or dependent on any foreign power that the country feels compelled to step beyond ASEAN protocols … in a way that damages the organization’s interests and profile.”
 
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Asia tensions loom as Obama meets Japan, China leaders
Nov 20, 2012 | Straitstimes.com

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United States President Barack Obama (right) walks behind Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao as they arrive for the plenary session of the 21st Asean and East Asia summits in Phnom Penh on Nov 20, 2012. n his first meeting with a Chinese leader since his re-election, Mr Obama said on Tuesday Washington and its chief economic rival must work together to "establish clear rules of the road" for trade and investment. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

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Japan's Prime Minister Noda (right) is followed by President Obama as they arrive for plenary session of 21st ASEAN and East Asia summits in Phnom Penh (Photo: Reuters)

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U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, center, shakes hands with her counterparts Pham Binh Minh, right, of Vietnam, and Surapong Tovichakchaikul, left, of Thailand during the photo session of the ASEAN-U.S. Ministerial Meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Thursday, July 12, 2012. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
 
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Philippine President Benigno S. Aquino III reviews his papers during the 15th ASEAN Japan Summit at the Champa Room, 3rd Floor, Peace Palace

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President Aquino exchanges views with His Excellency Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of the Republic of India, during the Bilateral Meeting at the sidelines of the 21st ASEAN Summit and Related Summits.

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US President Barack Obama (2nd L) smiles at the start of a bilateral meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda (R) on the sidelines of the East Asian Summit at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh on November 20, 2012.

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President Barack Obama (L) with Cambodian PM Hun Sen (C) and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao at the ASEAN/ East Asian Summit.
 
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PHL hits Cambodia on 'ASEAN consensus' on territorial disputes

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According to Reuters, as Hun Sen began to conclude the meeting between Noda and the ASEAN leaders, Aquino “abruptly raised his hand and tersely interjected” :bounce: that no such “consensus” had been reached.


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PHL hits Cambodia on 'ASEAN consensus' on territorial disputes | News | GMA News Online | The Go-To Site for Filipinos Everywhere

Aquino behaves like a fool: so rude and reckless, a clown with no diplomatic etiquette whatsoever.
 
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I like to remind you before trashing Cambodia the country is merely acting in their self interest like any other country would do in this situation. Most investment in Cambodia is funded by the Chinese. So let me ask you, would you tell Cambodia to bite the hand that feed them?
 
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Well its Cambodia fault for being the dog of the chinese
First, We don't consider Cambodia as a dog of whoever, Cambodia is China's important partner in ASEAN.
Second, Do not ever try to kidnap the other ASEAN countries to be a cat's paw for your own interests.
Third, Your leader behaves like a clown, you should have taught him the diplomatic etiquette before attending such international conferences.
 
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I am lying? Do a search for yourself and find out, or keep living in your own bubble. Do you look up the your failed country's GDP compared to Beijing. Even our capital is richer than your entire third world crap hole put together. Your role in the international stage are nothing more than clownish at best, and nearly irrelevant.

Bejing GDP: $247.7 billion
Philippines GDP: $224.75 Billion

We'll continue to shred all your joke motions at ASEAN as we please. Run back to your American daddy and cry some more.

You stress your maids so much
 
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I like to remind you before trashing Cambodia the country is merely acting in their self interest like any other country would do in this situation. Most investment in Cambodia is funded by the Chinese. So let me ask you, would you tell Cambodia to bite the hand that feed them?

What I would tell Cambodia is to do what is RIGHT. What Cambodia has done is totally wrong. Cambodia used her position in ASEAN to gain something from China.

I fully support Pnoy's objection to Hun Sen's statement.
 
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First, We don't consider Cambodia as a dog of whoever, Cambodia is China's important partner in ASEAN.
Second, Do not ever try to kidnap the other ASEAN countries to be a cat's paw for your own interests.
Third, Your leader behaves like a clown, you should have taught him the diplomatic etiquette before attending such international conferences.

*Whether you call Cambodia China's dog or not, it doesn't matter. We still see Cambodia's as China's dog, and the world now knows that Cambodia is China's dog.


*Like what Zero_wing said, it's Cambodia's fault. Hun Sen deserves to lose face.
 
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I like to remind you before trashing Cambodia the country is merely acting in their self interest like any other country would do in this situation. Most investment in Cambodia is funded by the Chinese. So let me ask you, would you tell Cambodia to bite the hand that feed them?


Maybe most of investments come from China, like many others we have put money into Cambodia too. China is not a member of ASEAN, but a partner.

Don´t forget, Japan is the biggest donor to Cambodia, as far as I know. Cambodia should stop acting like a marionette. We don´t like that.
 
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You stress your maids so much

See other way to hate you people man do you people every read and learn anything besides the teaching of your god mao? are you telling me that 8million Filipino workers are all maids how stupid can you people get my god please if you can do some research before you speak your stupidity in the forum again majority of them are professionals (teachers, engineers, managers,etc) only a small percentage are maids. Man well this coming from a country who is one of the world leading cheap inhuman labor and great source of drug lords and Transnational crime gangs and cheap hazardous products and prostitutes that are also cheap and ugly come on please do some Independent thinking or do you need to copy that to and cheaply may i add again were is your evidence for your claims (non-chinese propaganda if you please) and again epic fail sirs mag tawag pa kayo mga gago.

*Whether you call Cambodia China's dog or not, it doesn't matter. We still see Cambodia's as China's dog, and the world now knows that Cambodia is China's dog.


*Like what Zero_wing said, it's Cambodia's fault. Hun Sen deserves to lose face.

Salamat kabayan kung kabayan kita again you mean chinese client state (L@P D0gs) is it funny after you people gave them aid that big and big ticket items too maybe they forgot who supported their country's mass killers this what happens if people never learn thank god the new chair will at less be impartial to all Brunei which is the next chair too bad you can bribe them they too rich for you people to do so unlike chinese client state Cambodia finally an end to the madness
 
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21st ASEAN Summit wrapped up in Phnom Penh
21/11/2012 15:15:15 (Vietnam Net)


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VietNamNet Bridge – The 21st ASEAN Summit and related meetings officially closed in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on the evening of November 20.

The 7th East Asia Summit (EAS) - one of the major events at the 21st ASEAN summit - was attended by ASEAN leaders and leaders from partner countries such as US President Barack Obama, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Korean President Li Mieng Pak, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

They all expressed their satisfaction at the outcomes of EAS cooperation in six priority areas namely the environment, energy, education, epidemic prevention, natural disaster control and ASEAN connectivity.

On financial and economic cooperation, the EAS leaders emphasized the importance of strengthening the regional economic integration towards building an ASEAN economic community.

They acknowledged the kick-start of negotiations for a regional comprehensive economic partnership (RCEP) between ASEAN and its partners including Japan, the Republic of Korea, China, India, Australia and New Zealand with which the bloc has signed the Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

The move aims to gather ASEAN and its trade partners in an integrated market with a population of more than 3 billion and an annual GDP of nearly US$20,000 billion.

In his speech, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said the negotiations are starting against the odds of global economic instability. However, East Asian region is seen as a driving force behind the development of the global economy. All countries should maintain growth by expanding their markets and improving their competitive capacity even though it might take a lot of time.

The negotiations between ASEAN and its partners are scheduled for completion by the end of 2015.
 
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What I would tell Cambodia is to do what is RIGHT. What Cambodia has done is totally wrong. Cambodia used her position in ASEAN to gain something from China.

I fully support Pnoy's objection to Hun Sen's statement.

It's ASEAN were an Associate not an ally not a union we all use ASEAN to "gain something" whether its to curry favor with China, settling conflicts & etc. Cambodia done nothing wrong with using its status as the "Head of ASEAN" to gain favor with China.
 
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ASEAN is organized as a cooperation platform that has benefited the region so much in the past few decade.
This is possible because all the nations are willing to set aside their differences and work on common ground.
All the ASEAN countries has this or that dispute with their neighboring countries.
If some country insist on putting thorny and divisive issue on the agenda, it would not be long that ASEAN would lose it constructive function.
 
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Maybe most of investments come from China, like many others we have put money into Cambodia too. China is not a member of ASEAN, but a partner.

Don´t forget, Japan is the biggest donor to Cambodia, as far as I know. Cambodia should stop acting like a marionette. We don´t like that.

Tell your people to invest more in Cambodia then. It is dangerous if any member of the ASEAN is influenced especially if they're dominated by an outside power.

Old Chinese saying if you want to combat poverty build Roads that is just one thing the China help built in Cambodia.
Cambodia is just acting on their best interest it just happen they're best interest coincide with China
 
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