logo
America's Pacific demands and the limits of fiscal reality in Asean — Phar Kim Beng

America's Pacific demands and the limits of fiscal reality in Asean — Phar Kim Beng

Malay Mail2 days ago

JUNE 2 — At the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth delivered what sounded like a strategic imperative: Asian allies and partners should raise their defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP to match the scale of the threat posed by China.
US allies and partners in Asia continue to spend well below 5 per cent of GDP on defence. In 2024, Singapore allocated 2.8 per cent of its GDP to defence, followed by South Korea (2.6 per cent), Taiwan (2.1 per cent), Australia (1.9 per cent), Japan (1.4 per cent) and the Philippines (1.3 per cent), according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
South-east Asian defence officials also attending the Shangri-La Dialogue broadly welcomed Hegseth's speech and his reaffirmation of Washington's commitment to the region, but some voiced serious concerns about the feasibility of increasing defence spending.
Indeed, such a request, framed as a measure of deterrence, struck a discordant note across the hall — particularly in Southeast Asia, where economic resilience, not military escalation, defines the essence of regional security.
What Hegseth articulated is, in effect, a revival of the Guam Doctrine of 1969 — a proposition that allies and partners should do more for their own defence.
This time, however, the request is wrapped in a populist 'America First' narrative shaped by President Trump and championed by figures like Vice President JD Vance, placing fiscal responsibility squarely on the shoulders of others.
The contradictions are glaring. While demanding higher defence spending from its Asian allies, the US is simultaneously imposing tariffs on their exports, especially targeting South-east Asia's key sectors in steel, semiconductors, and electronics. These economic burdens reduce the very fiscal space needed for the type of defence buildup the US envisions.
Countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, and Cambodia — who welcomed Hegseth's speech — have quietly signalled that matching European-style defence budgets is not only unrealistic, but contrary to the region's developmental priorities.
As Maj Gen Kristomei Sianturi of Indonesia noted, even allocating 1 per cent of the national budget to defence is a stretch. For these states, security stems from stability, diplomacy, and economic growth — not from entering an arms race that benefits American defence contractors more than their own people.
South-east Asia, led by Malaysia as Asean Chair, has long championed a policy of 'active nonalignment,' a concept Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim reiterated at the summit.
This is not mere fence-sitting. It is a deliberate strategy to remain outward-facing, independent, and free from being co-opted by rival power blocs. In practice, it means cooperating with both the US and China, while aligning with neither.
This stance resonates with Asean's ethos. In contrast to Nato, Asean has never been a military bloc. Its primary tools have been multilateral diplomacy, economic interdependence, and non-interference.
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth attends a trilateral meeting between Japan, the US and Australia, at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore, May 31, 2025. — Reuters pic
The success of the Asean-led Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA) show that integration — soft, not hard — remains Asean's preferred path to resilience.
Hegseth's call to emulate Europe's 5 per cent military commitment also fails to appreciate the deep differences in historical experience. Europe, after Ukraine, faces an existential threat along its eastern frontier.
Asia, while navigating tensions in the South China Sea and over Taiwan, has not suffered a major interstate war in decades. The threshold for panic — and for reordering budgets on such a scale — is simply not comparable.
Moreover, there is a structural contradiction in America's own Indo-Pacific engagement. While Trump's administration threatens to reduce troop levels in South Korea and possibly Japan, the same administration is demanding more contributions from these states.
This contradiction does not go unnoticed in Asia. Some, like Professor Da Wei of Tsinghua University, question America's credibility in maintaining regional balance while leveraging tariffs and troop withdrawals as bargaining chips.
Hegseth touted new initiatives like the NMESIS deployment to the Philippines and repair facilities for P-8 patrol aircraft in Australia. These are steps in the right direction. But if strategic cooperation is to be meaningful, it cannot be built on pressure and paternalism. A sustainable regional security architecture must be based on mutual respect, tailored to local fiscal realities and political contexts.
To this end, Asean countries should not allow themselves to be strong-armed into military buildup under the guise of collective deterrence.
Rather, they must invest in security as they define it — through stronger coast guards, cyber defence, humanitarian assistance, and multilateral maritime cooperation with frameworks such as the Combined Maritime Forces (CMF).
These align better with regional threats such as piracy, illegal fishing, and transnational crime than Cold War-style militarisation.
Ultimately, the U.S. must understand that in Asia, partnerships are earned — not enforced. Trust is not built through military might alone, but through consistency, trade equity, and respect for strategic autonomy.
As the Indo-Pacific becomes the fulcrum of 21st-century geopolitics, America's ability to remain a trusted partner will depend on how well it listens — not just how loudly it speaks.
* Phar Kim Beng is a professor of Asean Studies, International Islamic University Malaysia.
** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bursa ends lower amid US tariff concerns
Bursa ends lower amid US tariff concerns

Free Malaysia Today

time22 minutes ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Bursa ends lower amid US tariff concerns

KUALA LUMPUR : Bursa Malaysia erased early gains to close lower for the sixth consecutive day today, weighed down by selling pressure in regional emerging markets due to concerns over the ongoing US tariff conflict, said an analyst. Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd equity research vice-president Thong Pak Leng said key regional indices closed mixed amid uncertainties surrounding US president Donald Trump's tariff war, prompting cautious investor behaviour. European equities slipped at the open due to weak sentiment and in anticipation of upcoming eurozone inflation figures. In contrast, markets in China and Hong Kong rallied on hopes of renewed US-China trade talks. On the domestic front, market sentiment remains subdued as investors adopt a wait-and-see stance amid ongoing foreign selling and escalating global trade uncertainties involving the US. The benchmark index is currently near its psychological 1,500 support level. 'Despite these challenges, we view this as an opportunity to pick up blue-chip stocks at lower prices due to their strong fundamentals, attractive valuations, and appealing dividend yields. 'As such, we anticipate the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) to trend within the 1,490-1,520 range for the week,' Thong told Bernama. Meanwhile, UOB Kay Hian Wealth Advisors Sdn Bhd head of investment research Sedek Jantan said market caution has intensified amid growing fears of a tariff-driven global slowdown and weakening external demand. Although the US has extended a pause on tariffs for certain Chinese goods until Aug 31, tensions have flared after Beijing rejected US accusations of breaching the existing tariff truce, instead blaming Washington for backtracking. 'A potential call between Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping this week may offer much-needed clarity on the future direction of trade relations,' he said. Locally, Malaysia's manufacturing purchasing managers' index edged up to 48.8 in May from April, but remained below the 50-point threshold, signalling continued contraction. 'Weak new orders and declining output reflect persistent demand weakness. 'As a trade-reliant economy, Malaysia remains vulnerable to global trade disruptions, with export-oriented sectors, particularly industrial products, technology, and small-cap stocks, most exposed to downside risks,' Sedek added. At 5pm, the FBM KLCI eased 5.10 points, or 0.33%, to 1,503.25 from last Friday's close of 1,508.35. The benchmark index opened 4.37 points higher at 1,512.72 and moved between 1,497.42 and 1,514.12 throughout the trading session. Market breadth was negative with decliners thumping gainers 705 to 297, while 423 counters were unchanged, 921 untraded and 15 suspended. Turnover fell to 3.04 billion units valued at RM2.20 billion compared with last Friday's 3.21 billion units worth RM5.04 billion. Bursa Malaysia was closed yesterday in conjunction with the official birthday of Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Ibrahim. Among the heavyweights, Petronas Chemicals dipped 14 sen to RM3.28, QL Resources fell 10 sen to RM4.40, IHH Healthcare eased 15 sen to RM6.75, Press Metal dropped nine sen to RM4.95, and Hong Leong Financial Group lost 28 sen to RM16.30. Among active stocks, Permaju Industries eased 0.5 sen to one sen, ACE Market debutant ICT Zone Asia, Tanco, and Harvest Miracle Capital were flat each at 20 sen, RM1 and 18 sen respectively, and MyEG slipped three sen to 89 sen. On the index board, the FBM Emas Index trimmed 45.35 points to 11,254.45, the FBMT 100 Index lost 38.28 points to 11,022.72, and the FBM ACE Index sank 69.22 points to 4,481.81. The FBM Emas Shariah Index decreased 46.10 points to 11,210.15, while the FBM 70 Index retreated 59.35 points to 16,142.16. Sector-wise, the financial services index slid 77.90 points to 17,762.63, the industrial products and services index shed 2.57 points to 150.08, and the energy index fell 9.08 points to 698.96, but the plantation index increased 11.03 points to 7,218.88. The Main Market volume declined to 1.21 billion units worth RM1.90 billion against Friday's 1.88 billion units valued at RM4.82 billion. Warrants turnover expanded to 1.50 billion units valued at RM201.92 million from 1 billion units worth RM111.49 million previously. The ACE Market volume advanced to 323.10 million shares worth RM94.99 million versus 318.43 million shares worth RM107.68 million on Friday. Consumer products and services counters accounted for 270.72 million shares traded on the Main Market, industrial products and services (184.66 million), construction (76.45 million), technology (139.98 million), SPAC (nil), financial services (85.81 million), property (164.11 million), plantation (29.49 million), REITs (11.64 million), closed/fund (3,400), energy (106.55 million), healthcare (57.20 million), telecommunications and media (43.34 million), transportation and logistics (18.57 million), utilities (31.21 million), and business trusts (20,700).

8 change pleas to not guilty on charges of extortion, threatening to kill man
8 change pleas to not guilty on charges of extortion, threatening to kill man

Free Malaysia Today

time44 minutes ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

8 change pleas to not guilty on charges of extortion, threatening to kill man

All eight had initially pleaded guilty to the charges in the Johor Bahru magistrates' court on April 25. (File pic) PETALING JAYA : Eight people, including a woman known as 'Bella', changed their pleas from guilty to not guilty at the Johor Bahru magistrates' court today on charges of extorting, confining and threatening to kill a man in Plentong last April. Bella, whose real name is Nuredrianna Balqqisyh Anabella Norazman, 22, and the other seven recorded the change in plea on three charges before magistrate A Shaarmini today, Bernama reported. The other seven are Aqmal Hafifi Mustafa Kamal, 25, Ahmad Rushdi Jumadi, 23, Nur Shafiq Abdullah, 25, Haikal Zulkarnain, 19, Amierul Hakim Shamsuri, 23, Danish Hakim Kamaruddin, 20, and Syamsul Hamiziey Saiful Razali, 19. On the first charge, they were jointly accused of criminal intimidation by issuing death threats to Faris Syahmi Ridzwan, 22. On the second charge, the eight, along with two others still at large, were accused of extortion by threatening Faris to pay them RM3,000 or face further assault by the group. This allegedly led to the victim handing over RM650 in cash and the key to his motorcycle to one of the accused, Amierul. On the third charge, all the accused, along with two others still at large, were jointly accused of wrongfully confining the victim. All eight had pleaded guilty before magistrate Atifah Hazimah Wahab to the three charges on April 25. In separate proceedings before magistrate Nur Fatin Farid today, the seven men also changed their pleas to not guilty on a fourth charge of voluntarily causing hurt to the same victim, along with one other accomplice still at large. The seven men had pleaded guilty to the fourth charge before Atifah on April 25. All the alleged offences were said to have been committed at a flat in Plentong, Masai, between 10pm and 4am, from April 18 to 19. The first three charges were framed under Sections 506, 384 and 342 of the Penal Code respectively, while the fourth charge under Section 323 of the same Code. The offences carry penalties of imprisonment of up to 10 years, or a fine, or both, upon conviction. Syamsul was represented by counsel Nurul Nadia Yunos, Amierul by T Haressh, Aqmal by Khairulazwad Sariman and Rushdi by Syahmi Nawawi. The prosecution was conducted by deputy public prosecutors Nik Noratini Nik Azman and Nur Fatihah Nizam. Both Shaarmini and Fatin fixed July 17 for the next mention of the case, submission of documents, and for the accused who are yet to be represented to appoint counsel.

When the going gets rough, Myanmar players keep the ‘chinlone' ball rolling
When the going gets rough, Myanmar players keep the ‘chinlone' ball rolling

Malay Mail

time2 hours ago

  • Malay Mail

When the going gets rough, Myanmar players keep the ‘chinlone' ball rolling

YANGON, June 3 — Mastering control of the rising and falling rattan chinlone ball teaches patience, says a veteran of the traditional Myanmar sport – a quality dearly needed in the long-suffering nation. 'Once you get into playing the game you forget everything,' says 74-year-old Win Tint. 'You concentrate only on your touch and you concentrate only on your style.' Chinlone is Myanmar's national game and dates back centuries. Branded a blend of sport and art, it is often played to music, and is typically practised differently by men and women. Male teams in skimpy shorts stand in a circle using stylised strokes of their feet, knees and heads to pass the ball in a game of 'keepy-uppy', with a scoring system impenetrable to outsiders. Women play solo like circus performers – kicking the ball tens of thousands of times per session while walking tightropes, twirling umbrellas and perching on chairs balanced atop beer bottles. Teen prodigy Phyu Sin Phyo hones her skills at the court in Yangon, toe-bouncing a burning ball while spinning a hula-hoop – also on fire. 'I play even when I am sick,' says the 16-year-old. 'It is important to be patient to become a good chinlone player.' But play has plunged in recent years, with the Covid-19 pandemic followed by the 2021 military coup and subsequent civil war. Poverty rates are shooting up and craftsmen face increasing problems sourcing materials to make balls. But the rising and falling rhythm of the game offers its practitioners a respite. 'When you hear the sound of kicking the ball it's like music,' Win Tint, vice-chairman of the Myanmar Chinlone Federation, told AFP. 'So when you play chinlone, you feel like dancing.' 'Play day is happy' Different versions of the hands-free sport known as 'caneball' are widely played across Southeast Asia. In Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia players kick and head the ball over a net in the volleyball-style 'sepak takraw'. In Laos it is known as 'kataw' while Filipinos play 'sipa' – meaning kick. Myanmar's iteration dates back 1,500 years, according to popular belief. Some cite a French archaeologist's discovery of a replica silver chinlone ball at a pagoda built in the Pyu era of 200 BC to 900 AD. It was initially practised as a casual pastime, a fitness activity and for royal entertainment. But in 1953 the game was given rules and a scoring system, as part of an effort to codify Myanmar's national culture after independence from Britain. 'No one else will preserve Myanmar's traditional heritage unless the Myanmar people do it,' said player Min Naing, 42. Despite the conflict, players still gather under motorway overpasses, around street lamps blighted with wartime blackouts and on dedicated chinlone courts -- often ramshackle open-sided metal sheds with concrete floors. 'For a chinlone man, the day he plays is always a happy day. I am happy, and I sleep well at night,' says Min Naing. 'On the days I don't play it, I feel I am missing something.' 'Respect the chinlone' But Win Tint is concerned that participation rates are falling. 'I worry about this sport disappearing,' says master chinlone ball maker Pe Thein, toiling in a sweltering workshop in Hinthada, 110 kilometres (70 miles) northwest of Yangon. 'That's the reason we are passing it on through our handiwork.' Cross-legged men shave cane into strips, curve them with a hand crank and deftly weave them into a melon-sized ball with pentagonal holes, boiled in a vat of water to seal its strength. 'We check our chinlone's quality as if we're checking diamonds or gemstones,' adds the 64-year-old Pe Thein. 'As we respect the chinlone, it respects us back.' Each ball takes around two hours to make and earns business-owner Maung Kaw US$2.40 apiece. But supplies of the best-quality rattan he covets from nearby Rakhine are dwindling. There is fierce fighting in the state between the military and opposition groups that now control almost all of it. Farmers are too fearful to plunge into the jungle battleground to cut cane, says Maung Kaw, endangering his profession. 'It should not be that we have players but no chinlone makers,' says the 72-year-old. 'I want to work as well as I can for as long as I can.' — AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store