Nan Yang
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Rise of China and the future of small nations
29 Oct 2019
By George Yeo
Senior Advisor, Kuok Group and Kerry Logistics Network
Who is benefiting from the China-US conflict? How should small nations like Singapore find their place in a world in flux? What is the Chinese way of statecraft? And the real reason for American's concern with Huawei and the 5G technology. Singapore's former Foreign Minister George Yeo shared his insights at the "Chairman's Forum" which was organised by the Sohar International in Oman on 8 October. This is an extract of his speech.
George Yeo speaking at the 4th edition of Sohar International's Viewpoints forum. (Sohar International/Twitter)
Until the end of May, I was the chairman of a logistics company. At any one time, there are hundreds of thousands of containers floating across the Pacific. Because of the trade war, sometimes we are not sure, when the containers arrive, what the tariff rates would be. For the business world, the China-US trade tension has created enormous confusion and anxiety. And there's a very significant trade and investment diversion. Countries like Vietnam are benefiting hugely. In fact, the whole of Southeast Asia is benefiting from the China-US conflict. So do parts of South Asia, like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Africa, too, is benefiting.
But, if the two clash, it is not good for the world. And direct conflict may well hasten the arrival of another global financial crisis. When these things happen, they happen. And it begins sometimes from the most unexpected corner (of the world).
Military vehicles carrying DF-41 intercontinental ballistic missiles drive past Tiananmen Square during the military parade marking the 70th founding anniversary of the People's Republic of China. (Thomas Peter/REUTERS)
The Chinese are sending signals: “We don’t want a war. But don’t be so sure that if there’s a war you will win.” If you have followed the October 1st 70th Anniversary parade in Beijing recently, the Chinese very deliberately opened a few cards – very deliberately. And for specific reasons: to signal to the US that, in their strategic thinking, do not be too sure that – over the South China Sea, over Taiwan – that you will win without doing great harm to yourself. And that is a question mark the Chinese want to put in the minds of US strategic thinkers.
If you follow Edward Snowden and why he blew the whistle, it was because they were creating an incredible system called PRISM, which enabled them to listen to (German) Chancellor (Angela) Merkel’s private conversation on her mobile phone.
As Huawei expands, as the Chinese becomes significant in the 5G world, the ability of the US NSA (National Security Agency) to penetrate international information systems becomes more difficult. They believe that China has been benefiting from US openness. The large numbers of Chinese students who study in the US, the professors who teach in the US, that they have been siphoning knowledge to China. The FBI is now obsessed with this.
And in top universities in the US, they have asked for a listing of ethnic Chinese scientists. In other words, not only PRC passport holders but also Hong Kong Chinese, Taiwanese Chinese, even Singapore Chinese.
Christopher Wray, the director at FBI, in his testimony to Congress, he said, “China’s efforts in taking intellectual property from the US is not an all-of-government effort, it is all-of-society”. All-of-society. So the American response must also be all-of-society. Now, this is very close to ethnic profiling! But the US is in such a frame of mind now.
Recently, when Houston Rockets’ manager, in a tweet, supported Hong Kong democracy, there was a furious response in China. And then the manager removed the tweet, apologised – but his apology in Chinese was much more fulsome than his apology in English, and this was noticed by the Chinese. And now the (US) politicians are jumping in and saying, “Why are you apologising? Why are you being intimidated by the Chinese?” So, big hoo-hah.
How will it end?
It can end in war – I hope not. Because war between China and the US will be devastating for the entire world. But it may lead to proxy wars, proxy conflicts, in various parts of the world.
I don’t believe that China is expansionist. In Chinese history, the preoccupation of the leaders of China is domestic because it is a huge country. And managing a country of that size is not easy. When they are organised, their productivity is awesome. But when they dissolve into conflict, the conflicts are also awesome. And that’s why you have these long cycles in Chinese history. What we’re seeing today is a continuing rise of China. It will continue for another ten, twenty, thirty years, but after that, it will plateau. China is ageing. This will have a big impact on the economy. But, in the meantime, as China adds two Saudi Arabias to its economy every year, it will benefit its neighbours more and more.
In July this year, McKinsey produced a report with a simple but profound conclusion. It is that the world’s exposure to China is growing – because the Chinese economy is growing rapidly – but China’s exposure to the rest of the world is reducing. The reason is that the growth of the Chinese economy is increasingly driven by its internal economy, not by its external economy. Because of its size, because of the size of its market, in the years ahead, China will be a more important market than the US for many countries and companies. Even for US companies, China may become a more important market than the US market.
China’s statecraft is not to use military force lightly but to conduct diplomacy in such a way that there’s no need to fight. If you are China’s neighbour and they find you difficult, what do they do? All they do is to add a little friction to the trade. Just a little friction. You will feel it because your economy is much smaller than China. China will just reduce friction for the other countries. It has no impact on China, but it has an excruciating impact on you.
In the same way, if China wants to favour a particular country, all it needs to do is to reduce friction for that country. And that country will be delirious! But, again, the cost to China is minimal because all it needs to do is to tighten up a little all around and to feed that country. This has been Chinese statecraft – practised statecraft – for a very long time.
So, in some respects, China’s behaviour is predictable. But many countries don’t believe this. They say, no, all this is just talk. Well, we’ll see. Both sides have to prepare for war – I don’t think it will happen because it’ll be disastrous. There’ll be trials of strength. And this has enormous implications for the rest of us.
In the Middle East, in recent years, the entanglement is with the Western powers. I remember having a conversation with the previous Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad. We were discussing the book by David Fromkin, A Peace to End All Peace. The first World War was supposed to be the war to end all wars. It was a phrase by (Field Marshall Archibald) Wavell. But in the end, it became a peace to end all peace. Many of the problems that we see in the region today, whether it is the Turkish problem with the Kurds, Yemen, the tension with Iran, have their roots in the period of Western dominance when the Ottomans were in decline.
But if we cast our eyes 20, 30 years ahead, China will become a factor in the Middle East. And if you add up the economies of Southeast Asia and South Asia, that’s one more China. So the gravitational pull affecting geo-economics and geopolitics in the (Middle East) region will change. And the countries in the region which anticipate these changes, which prepare for them, and which adjust to them, I think will enjoy a great advantage.
You remember in 2016, January-February, China’s President Xi Jinping made a visit to Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt. I followed it closely because I thought it would be quite interesting how China managed its external affairs with countries that don’t have good relations with each other.
When Xi arrived in Tehran, he met the President, he met the spiritual leader; hugs and professions of strategic friendship. Then he went to Riyadh, and again Saudi Arabia and China professed their strategic friendship. The same in Cairo. And also with the Arab League.
Three months later, Chinese vice premier Liu Yandong visited Israel and Palestine. The Israelis said, “Never before has the relationship between Israel and China been at such a peak!” And so too with the Palestinians.
Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (R) meets with China's special envoy for Middle East affairs Zhai Jun in Tehran, on 22 October 2019. (Atta Kenare/AFP)
Now, is it because the Chinese are more brilliant? That they can find a way to solve equations which other countries cannot solve? No! It’s because they have a very different view of statecraft from Western powers. And their approach is: I have enough problems of my own; I have enough headaches of my own. If we can work together, help one another, let’s do that. Let’s be friends. Your problems? Well, good luck to you. If I can help you, I’ll help you. But they’re your problems; they’re not mine. There’s no attempt to convert you to their system. There’s no attempt to have a preference that Arab societies or Iranian society or Muslim society should be organised in one way or another. And this is the import of the Belt and Road.
The Americans are very unhappy about Belt and Road because they think the connections which China is building would reduce their power and influence in those countries. But for China, this is nothing new because when the water tower goes up – by which I am referring to the Chinese economy – it is natural that the water will flow down. It will not flow down in a straight line – sometimes it meets a mountain, sometimes it runs into a canyon, it follows the lay of the land. Countries which welcome the China trade will get more of it. Countries which are opposed to the China trade will find it flowing around them. And after a while, they realize that they are missing out and find their neighbours benefiting more than them. And so they make adjustments.
We see all this in Southeast Asia. Because China has complex relations with Vietnam, with Myanmar, with Laos, with Bangladesh, with India, with Pakistan. For countries which oppose the Belt and Road, the Chinese response is, “Well, it’s up to you! But in the meantime, we will work with your neighbours.” And then gradually they erode your position.
Well, of course, from the viewpoint of engineering, it is nothing to the Chinese. From the viewpoint of politics, it seems unimaginable today. Unimaginable today. Ten years from now? Twenty years from now? Is it possible? We don’t know. It depends on how the politics change. Both Oman and Singapore are small countries. We cannot change the world. We accept the world for what it is.
George Yeo with Omani Foreign Minister Yusuf bin Alawi. (Facebook)
I had the pleasure of a reunion with the minister responsible for foreign affairs, Yusuf bin Alawi, yesterday. I’ve always appreciated his wisdom. When I speak to him, he gives me a clinical view of politics in the region. There’s no subjectivity. There’s no preference for one course of action or the other. It is the world as it is. Kissinger… in his book said, “Singapore has a cold-blooded view of the world.” As a small country, as small countries, we cannot afford to be subjective. If we are subjective, we’re dead!
You are a remarkable people with a long history, with a seafaring tradition. You can’t change the weather – when there’s a cyclone, there’s a cyclone. You’ve got to accept it. When you build your boats, they have got to take this into account. You have to be utterly realistic.
During my last visit to Oman in 2006, we had just acquired an old wreck south of Singapore: an Arab dhow carrying a treasure of Tang Dynasty. Chinese porcelains intended for the Middle East. We know because half the pieces had Islamic motifs. The wreck was well preserved because the dhow sank in shallow waters and sand quickly covered it.
When I passed by the circus outside this hotel, I saw the Sinbad ship of Sohar. I asked Sayyid Badr, who was sitting next to me, “Would you be able to rebuild this 9th-century wreck that we bought?” I didn’t have the money, neither did I have the intention, but I was just curious. He said, “Yes, of course. We have this ship building tradition in Sur; I’m sure they can do it.” I didn’t ask him how much it would cost because I didn’t have the money.
Three months later, to my astonishment, he told me that Sultan Qaboos would rebuild the ship, sail it to Singapore, and donate it as Oman’s gift to the people of Singapore.
Mind you, this is not the Sinbad ship; this is a 9th-century ship. They had to do DNA analysis on the wood, and they found that the wood was mostly from Africa, except for the teak, which came from the Malabar Coast. And it had the square stitching pattern, which is still the square stitching pattern used in Sur today. When the analysis came to me, I said, “Yes, that dhow must have from the Omani coast.”
When it finally set sail, I suddenly felt very worried. Because, what if the boat were to sink? I told my wife we better pray. We knelt down and we prayed for the safety of the boat. About two weeks later, the crew reported a green turtle alongside. They had reached the Lakshadweep continental shelf. So we knew it was safe. The dhow arrived in Kochi, and then Colombo. At Colombo, they had to repair the masts because they had cracked. Two teak trees were fell and new masts built.
But when the boat crossed the Bay of Bengal, it met a cyclone. The waves were 30 feet high. The crew thought they were going to die. When they arrived in Penang, there was a sigh of relief. And when they arrived in Singapore, I went out to meet them at sea in the rain. Captain Salleh did not know that we had arranged for his son to be in Singapore. Prayers of thanksgiving were said, followed by traditional Omani dancing. We had a wonderful party that night.
The Jewel of Muscat in port in Singapore. (SPH)
Why did Sultan Qaboos make this effort? I think he knew that China trade would become more important in the coming years. And between Oman and Singapore… we’re both seafaring peoples. It was an utterly realistic assessment of the future, adjusting with the flow and ebb of international trade and international politics.
This friendship which we have is not an ostentatious friendship. It’s quiet and unspoken, a friendship which, in critical moments, can only become more important. And it’s in this spirit that I speak to you today and wish you a future which anticipates the re-emergence of Asia on the global stage. A replay of history which the Omani people have seen many times before in your history and which you will again respond to.
Thank you.
Prof Tan Kong Yam on ASEAN: The ultimate winner of a China-US rivalry (Part I)
29 Oct 2019
By George Yeo
Senior Advisor, Kuok Group and Kerry Logistics Network
Who is benefiting from the China-US conflict? How should small nations like Singapore find their place in a world in flux? What is the Chinese way of statecraft? And the real reason for American's concern with Huawei and the 5G technology. Singapore's former Foreign Minister George Yeo shared his insights at the "Chairman's Forum" which was organised by the Sohar International in Oman on 8 October. This is an extract of his speech.
George Yeo speaking at the 4th edition of Sohar International's Viewpoints forum. (Sohar International/Twitter)
Until the end of May, I was the chairman of a logistics company. At any one time, there are hundreds of thousands of containers floating across the Pacific. Because of the trade war, sometimes we are not sure, when the containers arrive, what the tariff rates would be. For the business world, the China-US trade tension has created enormous confusion and anxiety. And there's a very significant trade and investment diversion. Countries like Vietnam are benefiting hugely. In fact, the whole of Southeast Asia is benefiting from the China-US conflict. So do parts of South Asia, like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Africa, too, is benefiting.
But, if the two clash, it is not good for the world. And direct conflict may well hasten the arrival of another global financial crisis. When these things happen, they happen. And it begins sometimes from the most unexpected corner (of the world).
But what is much more serious is not the trade conflict. It is the political conflict, because the US now worries whether China poses a significant security threat to itself. The US is used to acting freely after the collapse of the Soviet Union. It is used to operating freely everywhere in the world. It has its aircraft carrier battle groups in the Gulf, in the Baltics, in the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, in the South China Sea, everywhere. In the air, on land, sea surface and underwater. Now, especially in the Western Pacific, they meet the Chinese – underwater, on land, in the air, in outer space. And they are now not so sure if there is a clash in the South China Sea, whether they will be able to prevail over the Chinese.The Chinese are sending signals: “We don’t want a war. But don’t be so sure that if there’s a war you will win.”
Military vehicles carrying DF-41 intercontinental ballistic missiles drive past Tiananmen Square during the military parade marking the 70th founding anniversary of the People's Republic of China. (Thomas Peter/REUTERS)
The Chinese are sending signals: “We don’t want a war. But don’t be so sure that if there’s a war you will win.” If you have followed the October 1st 70th Anniversary parade in Beijing recently, the Chinese very deliberately opened a few cards – very deliberately. And for specific reasons: to signal to the US that, in their strategic thinking, do not be too sure that – over the South China Sea, over Taiwan – that you will win without doing great harm to yourself. And that is a question mark the Chinese want to put in the minds of US strategic thinkers.
The US doesn’t like this because it is not used to this. And they’re going after companies like Huawei. The reasons they give are not the real reasons.As Huawei expands, as the Chinese becomes significant in the 5G world, the ability of the US NSA (National Security Agency) to penetrate international information systems becomes more difficult.
If you follow Edward Snowden and why he blew the whistle, it was because they were creating an incredible system called PRISM, which enabled them to listen to (German) Chancellor (Angela) Merkel’s private conversation on her mobile phone.
As Huawei expands, as the Chinese becomes significant in the 5G world, the ability of the US NSA (National Security Agency) to penetrate international information systems becomes more difficult. They believe that China has been benefiting from US openness. The large numbers of Chinese students who study in the US, the professors who teach in the US, that they have been siphoning knowledge to China. The FBI is now obsessed with this.
And in top universities in the US, they have asked for a listing of ethnic Chinese scientists. In other words, not only PRC passport holders but also Hong Kong Chinese, Taiwanese Chinese, even Singapore Chinese.
Christopher Wray, the director at FBI, in his testimony to Congress, he said, “China’s efforts in taking intellectual property from the US is not an all-of-government effort, it is all-of-society”. All-of-society. So the American response must also be all-of-society. Now, this is very close to ethnic profiling! But the US is in such a frame of mind now.
Recently, when Houston Rockets’ manager, in a tweet, supported Hong Kong democracy, there was a furious response in China. And then the manager removed the tweet, apologised – but his apology in Chinese was much more fulsome than his apology in English, and this was noticed by the Chinese. And now the (US) politicians are jumping in and saying, “Why are you apologising? Why are you being intimidated by the Chinese?” So, big hoo-hah.
This is now the phase of history we’re entering, where Sino-US conflict will be extended for years to come, maybe even decades to come. And many of us may be caught in between. It is much more important than trade conflict.It is that the world’s exposure to China is growing – because the Chinese economy is growing rapidly – but China’s exposure to the rest of the world is reducing.
How will it end?
It can end in war – I hope not. Because war between China and the US will be devastating for the entire world. But it may lead to proxy wars, proxy conflicts, in various parts of the world.
I don’t believe that China is expansionist. In Chinese history, the preoccupation of the leaders of China is domestic because it is a huge country. And managing a country of that size is not easy. When they are organised, their productivity is awesome. But when they dissolve into conflict, the conflicts are also awesome. And that’s why you have these long cycles in Chinese history. What we’re seeing today is a continuing rise of China. It will continue for another ten, twenty, thirty years, but after that, it will plateau. China is ageing. This will have a big impact on the economy. But, in the meantime, as China adds two Saudi Arabias to its economy every year, it will benefit its neighbours more and more.
In July this year, McKinsey produced a report with a simple but profound conclusion. It is that the world’s exposure to China is growing – because the Chinese economy is growing rapidly – but China’s exposure to the rest of the world is reducing. The reason is that the growth of the Chinese economy is increasingly driven by its internal economy, not by its external economy. Because of its size, because of the size of its market, in the years ahead, China will be a more important market than the US for many countries and companies. Even for US companies, China may become a more important market than the US market.
Throughout Chinese history, the Chinese have been averse to sending military forces far away. You know, in the 8th century, at the peak of China’s development during the Tang Dynasty, they had an army near the Fergana Valley in Central Asia, when the Abbasids were moving eastwards. They clashed. In the famous battle of Talas, the Abbasids defeated the Tang army, and the Chinese never crossed the Tianshan Mountains again in their history.If you are China’s neighbour and they find you difficult, what do they do? All they do is to add a little friction to the trade... You will feel it because your economy is much smaller than China.
China’s statecraft is not to use military force lightly but to conduct diplomacy in such a way that there’s no need to fight. If you are China’s neighbour and they find you difficult, what do they do? All they do is to add a little friction to the trade. Just a little friction. You will feel it because your economy is much smaller than China. China will just reduce friction for the other countries. It has no impact on China, but it has an excruciating impact on you.
In the same way, if China wants to favour a particular country, all it needs to do is to reduce friction for that country. And that country will be delirious! But, again, the cost to China is minimal because all it needs to do is to tighten up a little all around and to feed that country. This has been Chinese statecraft – practised statecraft – for a very long time.
So, in some respects, China’s behaviour is predictable. But many countries don’t believe this. They say, no, all this is just talk. Well, we’ll see. Both sides have to prepare for war – I don’t think it will happen because it’ll be disastrous. There’ll be trials of strength. And this has enormous implications for the rest of us.
In the Middle East, in recent years, the entanglement is with the Western powers. I remember having a conversation with the previous Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad. We were discussing the book by David Fromkin, A Peace to End All Peace. The first World War was supposed to be the war to end all wars. It was a phrase by (Field Marshall Archibald) Wavell. But in the end, it became a peace to end all peace. Many of the problems that we see in the region today, whether it is the Turkish problem with the Kurds, Yemen, the tension with Iran, have their roots in the period of Western dominance when the Ottomans were in decline.
But if we cast our eyes 20, 30 years ahead, China will become a factor in the Middle East. And if you add up the economies of Southeast Asia and South Asia, that’s one more China. So the gravitational pull affecting geo-economics and geopolitics in the (Middle East) region will change. And the countries in the region which anticipate these changes, which prepare for them, and which adjust to them, I think will enjoy a great advantage.
You remember in 2016, January-February, China’s President Xi Jinping made a visit to Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt. I followed it closely because I thought it would be quite interesting how China managed its external affairs with countries that don’t have good relations with each other.
When Xi arrived in Tehran, he met the President, he met the spiritual leader; hugs and professions of strategic friendship. Then he went to Riyadh, and again Saudi Arabia and China professed their strategic friendship. The same in Cairo. And also with the Arab League.
Three months later, Chinese vice premier Liu Yandong visited Israel and Palestine. The Israelis said, “Never before has the relationship between Israel and China been at such a peak!” And so too with the Palestinians.
Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (R) meets with China's special envoy for Middle East affairs Zhai Jun in Tehran, on 22 October 2019. (Atta Kenare/AFP)
Now, is it because the Chinese are more brilliant? That they can find a way to solve equations which other countries cannot solve? No! It’s because they have a very different view of statecraft from Western powers. And their approach is: I have enough problems of my own; I have enough headaches of my own. If we can work together, help one another, let’s do that. Let’s be friends. Your problems? Well, good luck to you. If I can help you, I’ll help you. But they’re your problems; they’re not mine. There’s no attempt to convert you to their system. There’s no attempt to have a preference that Arab societies or Iranian society or Muslim society should be organised in one way or another. And this is the import of the Belt and Road.
The Americans are very unhappy about Belt and Road because they think the connections which China is building would reduce their power and influence in those countries. But for China, this is nothing new because when the water tower goes up – by which I am referring to the Chinese economy – it is natural that the water will flow down. It will not flow down in a straight line – sometimes it meets a mountain, sometimes it runs into a canyon, it follows the lay of the land. Countries which welcome the China trade will get more of it. Countries which are opposed to the China trade will find it flowing around them. And after a while, they realize that they are missing out and find their neighbours benefiting more than them. And so they make adjustments.
We see all this in Southeast Asia. Because China has complex relations with Vietnam, with Myanmar, with Laos, with Bangladesh, with India, with Pakistan. For countries which oppose the Belt and Road, the Chinese response is, “Well, it’s up to you! But in the meantime, we will work with your neighbours.” And then gradually they erode your position.
I remember a startling comment made to me by a Kazakh minister about four years ago. We were having dinner in Singapore. He told me, “You know, the Chinese are talking about building a tunnel below the Straits of Hormuz to connect Iran to the peninsula.” I said, “Really?”Both Oman and Singapore are small countries. We cannot change the world. We accept the world for what it is.
Well, of course, from the viewpoint of engineering, it is nothing to the Chinese. From the viewpoint of politics, it seems unimaginable today. Unimaginable today. Ten years from now? Twenty years from now? Is it possible? We don’t know. It depends on how the politics change. Both Oman and Singapore are small countries. We cannot change the world. We accept the world for what it is.
George Yeo with Omani Foreign Minister Yusuf bin Alawi. (Facebook)
I had the pleasure of a reunion with the minister responsible for foreign affairs, Yusuf bin Alawi, yesterday. I’ve always appreciated his wisdom. When I speak to him, he gives me a clinical view of politics in the region. There’s no subjectivity. There’s no preference for one course of action or the other. It is the world as it is. Kissinger… in his book said, “Singapore has a cold-blooded view of the world.” As a small country, as small countries, we cannot afford to be subjective. If we are subjective, we’re dead!
You are a remarkable people with a long history, with a seafaring tradition. You can’t change the weather – when there’s a cyclone, there’s a cyclone. You’ve got to accept it. When you build your boats, they have got to take this into account. You have to be utterly realistic.
During my last visit to Oman in 2006, we had just acquired an old wreck south of Singapore: an Arab dhow carrying a treasure of Tang Dynasty. Chinese porcelains intended for the Middle East. We know because half the pieces had Islamic motifs. The wreck was well preserved because the dhow sank in shallow waters and sand quickly covered it.
When I passed by the circus outside this hotel, I saw the Sinbad ship of Sohar. I asked Sayyid Badr, who was sitting next to me, “Would you be able to rebuild this 9th-century wreck that we bought?” I didn’t have the money, neither did I have the intention, but I was just curious. He said, “Yes, of course. We have this ship building tradition in Sur; I’m sure they can do it.” I didn’t ask him how much it would cost because I didn’t have the money.
Three months later, to my astonishment, he told me that Sultan Qaboos would rebuild the ship, sail it to Singapore, and donate it as Oman’s gift to the people of Singapore.
Mind you, this is not the Sinbad ship; this is a 9th-century ship. They had to do DNA analysis on the wood, and they found that the wood was mostly from Africa, except for the teak, which came from the Malabar Coast. And it had the square stitching pattern, which is still the square stitching pattern used in Sur today. When the analysis came to me, I said, “Yes, that dhow must have from the Omani coast.”
When it finally set sail, I suddenly felt very worried. Because, what if the boat were to sink? I told my wife we better pray. We knelt down and we prayed for the safety of the boat. About two weeks later, the crew reported a green turtle alongside. They had reached the Lakshadweep continental shelf. So we knew it was safe. The dhow arrived in Kochi, and then Colombo. At Colombo, they had to repair the masts because they had cracked. Two teak trees were fell and new masts built.
But when the boat crossed the Bay of Bengal, it met a cyclone. The waves were 30 feet high. The crew thought they were going to die. When they arrived in Penang, there was a sigh of relief. And when they arrived in Singapore, I went out to meet them at sea in the rain. Captain Salleh did not know that we had arranged for his son to be in Singapore. Prayers of thanksgiving were said, followed by traditional Omani dancing. We had a wonderful party that night.
The Jewel of Muscat in port in Singapore. (SPH)
Why did Sultan Qaboos make this effort? I think he knew that China trade would become more important in the coming years. And between Oman and Singapore… we’re both seafaring peoples. It was an utterly realistic assessment of the future, adjusting with the flow and ebb of international trade and international politics.
This friendship which we have is not an ostentatious friendship. It’s quiet and unspoken, a friendship which, in critical moments, can only become more important. And it’s in this spirit that I speak to you today and wish you a future which anticipates the re-emergence of Asia on the global stage. A replay of history which the Omani people have seen many times before in your history and which you will again respond to.
Thank you.
Prof Tan Kong Yam on ASEAN: The ultimate winner of a China-US rivalry (Part I)