ASEAN communique stalls amid disagreement on South China Sea stance

News Hour:

Southeast Asian foreign ministers failed to release a customary communique at the end of a high-level meeting on Saturday after what diplomats said was a lack of consensus about how to refer to disputes in the South China Sea.

The South China Sea has long been the most thorny issue for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), with different opinions among its 10 members on how to address China’s assertiveness and its building and heavy arming of its artificial islands in disputed waters.

Philippine foreign ministry spokesman Robespierre Bolivar gave no reason for the delay and said the statement would instead be released at the end of a series of regional events hosted by Manila in the next few days , reports Reuters.

“The communique will be issued together with all the chairman’s statements by the end of all the meetings,” he said.

ASEAN’s problem in agreeing the wording highlight China’s growing influence at a time of uncertainty whether the new U.S. administration will prioritise relations with ASEAN, and try to check Beijing’s controversial maritime activities.

Diplomats from three ASEAN countries said the delay was because Vietnam, which is among four members with competing sovereignty claims with China, wanted the text to mention the need to avoid land reclamation and militarisation.

A working draft of the communique seen on Thursday was a watered-down version of one issued last year and drops references to both.

China is extremely sensitive about ASEAN mentioning its expansion of its military capabilities on those islands and some members are concerned about possible repercussions of upsetting Beijing given its military and economic power.

Three of China’s seven reclaimed reefs have runways several kilometres long, radar, surface-to-air missiles and storage facilities for fighter jets.

“It’s only Vietnam holding out. Maybe, by tomorrow everything will be ironed out,” said one diplomat involved in the drafting process.

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