Due to Indonesia’s Internal Weaknesses, The Situation of ASEAN Leaves a Power Vacuum

https://kabar22.blogspot.com/2015/04/due-to-indonesias-internal-weaknesses.html
BLOKBERITA -- Asean would benefit from stronger
leadership. But Indonesia, best placed to take up that role, appears unwilling
despite the fact that it could be the leader that Asean needs. However, it
intentionally refrains from asserting its influence over the association.
This is due to Indonesia’s internal
weaknesses, Asean’s norms of non-interference and equality among members, and
the remaining antagonism among Asean member countries. While President Joko
Widodo has shown an increasing willingness to play on the international stage
with statements urging the country to become a maritime power, the situation
leaves a power vacuum within the association and intensifies the academic
debate about leadership in integrating regions.
There are three possible and
intertwining explanations of leadership in Asean.
Sectoral leadership refers to
leadership exercised through areas or sectors of competence, or depending on
which country is in a better position to take the lead at the time. Indonesia’s
foreign-policy orientation is frequently concerned with political and security
issues. For example, it greatly influenced Asean positions on the Cambodian
conflict and the South China Sea dispute. Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore like
to push economic issues. These countries played a vital role in moving onto the
path of economic integration. All were notable proponents of the Asean Free
Trade Area. The Philippines is often more concerned with social and cultural
issues, demonstrated by its initiation of Asean Socio-Cultural Community
(ASCC).
Cooperative leadership is formed
among a group of countries that share a common vision and wish to play a
strategic role in the region. This is based on the notion that no single Asean
country can fulfil the leading role, so it should be built on the basis of two
or three countries that are able to forge solid cooperation among their leaders
and consolidate their domestic politics. This form of leadership is perhaps
similar to the case of the European Union where Germany and France appear as a
coalition leader.
Periodical leadership assumes that
leadership is attached to individuality or charisma. This notion is heavily
centered on some notable leaders of Asean, such as Indonesia’s President
Suharto, Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew and Malaysia’s Prime Minister
Mahathir Mohammad.
The sectorial explanation of
leadership may be prevalent because Indonesia still lacks competence, for
example in socio-economic areas. The cooperative model may have emerged because
Asean is actually a collection of weak and vulnerable countries domestically.
The periodical leadership is also visible because Asean is arguably an elitist
organization and very much attached to leader’s charisma. But, without a doubt,
Asean requires the presence of undisputed leadership for which Indonesia seems
to be the only candidate.
Asean requires a clear and dominant
leader that can serve as an institutional focal point and regional paymaster to
facilitate and drive regional projects. Most multi-lateral or regional
organisations include a country with more power relative to its other members.
In every international bargain with competing national interests, there is an
influence of structural powers (derived from material and resource capacity
such as the size of land, population and economy).
Even the European Union, which has
much more solid and effective institutions to drive decision-making, is heavily
influenced by French and German leadership. Regional integration is a scene of
competing national interests and the position of leadership is normally taken
by the governments of large, prosperous and powerful member states.
As the world’s fourth largest state
in terms of population and the region’s largest country, which comprises about
40 percent of Asean’s total population, Indonesia is the elephant in the room.
Indonesia initiated and proposed the foundation of Asean as a means to end
regional conflict. As a consequence of a painful experience of colonization, it
was the country that continued to stress non-alignment, with the hope of
removing the exercise of external powers from the region. While the coercive
action towards East Timor and the severe financial crisis in the late 1990s
spelled the decline of Indonesia’s position in Asean, its recent
democratic consolidation is bolstering its reputation in regional affairs.
The invisibility of leadership
in Asean is a result of Indonesia trying to ensure regional unity. Without
the low-posture politics of Indonesia, the association would not be able to
create multilateralism and a neutral context in which smaller states could feel
more comfortable when dealing with bigger countries. But, considering the
remaining antagonism among members and its considerable institutional
weaknesses, this raises the importance of leadership in Asean.
Asean’s future cannot rely wholly
upon Indonesia’s structural leadership. It has to be invested with some sort of
soft power that could help amplify international images and credibility, as
well as tone down antagonism and resistance within the organisation. Indonesia
should seek to play a more active leading role and exercise more of its power
over the association.
In the foreseeable
future, Asean will continue to be shaped by the politics of
Indonesia. The recent political developments in Indonesia will provide a vital
ingredient in building up confidence and credibility, as well as enhancing the
pursuit of leadership in Asean.
Pattharapong Rattanasevee is
a lecturer at Burapha University, Chonburi, Thailand.This originally appeared on the East Asia Forum,
a platform for analysis and research at the Crawford School
of Public Policy at the Australian National
University.
[ eastasiaforum / wind ]