{"id":25461,"date":"2016-03-21T06:00:21","date_gmt":"2016-03-20T19:00:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=25461"},"modified":"2016-03-18T16:36:44","modified_gmt":"2016-03-18T05:36:44","slug":"australia-and-new-zealand-asean-community-partners-part-1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/australia-and-new-zealand-asean-community-partners-part-1\/","title":{"rendered":"Australia and New Zealand: ASEAN Community Partners (part 1)"},"content":{"rendered":"
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A former Secretary-General of ASEAN, Ong Keng Yong, says ASEAN could create a special category of partnership just for Australia and New Zealand.<\/span><\/p>\n Ong says Australia and New Zealand are so important to ASEAN\u2019s Community project that the Association could refashion its structure.<\/span><\/p>\n The former Singaporean diplomat thinks my design for a 10 year effort to get Australia and New Zealand half-in as ASEAN members is too constrained by the existing configuration of ASEAN relationships.<\/span><\/p>\n Better, he thinks, to come up with fresh forms to reflect the mutual importance of ASEAN, Australia and New Zealand.<\/span><\/p>\n The interview with Ong is part of a series of columns on membership of ASEAN for Australia and New Zealand.<\/span><\/p>\n My<\/span> proposition<\/span><\/a> is that Australia should aim for half-in status as a member of ASEAN by 2024\u2014the 50th anniversary of Australia becoming ASEAN\u2019s first national dialogue partner.<\/span><\/p>\n If we want it, the Kiwis will too. So it\u2019s an Oz\u2013Kiwi vision. The half-in step would be for Australia and New Zealand to seek the ASEAN Observer status now held by Timor Leste and Papua New Guinea.<\/span><\/p>\n Ong thinks the Observer idea doesn\u2019t capture the size of the change nor of coming challenges. He says Australia, New Zealand and the Association need to think beyond the existing ASEAN arrangements.<\/span><\/p>\n Dialogue partner already trumps Observer status, he says. Time to create something new to step beyond the Dialogue partnership\u2014not a sideways step to the Observer platform.<\/span><\/p>\n Ong: <\/b>We should not look at this issue purely in the traditional way of the meaning of being a member in the regional grouping. ASEAN and Australia, we are already Dialogue partner. And during my time as ASEAN Secretary-General I have actually asked: How do we go one step further? From Dialogue partner, what is the next level cooperation of association with each other? This is something the ASEAN countries will have to deliberate.<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n Ong served as the Secretary-General of ASEAN from 2003 to 2007, was Singapore’s High Commissioner to Malaysia until 2014 and is now Executive Deputy Chairman of Singapore\u2019s S.Rajaratnam School of International Studies.<\/span><\/p>\n He echoes the analysis of another former ASEAN Secretary-General, Rodolfo Severino, on what would be the \u2018<\/span>No\u2019 case<\/span><\/a> against Australia and New Zealand joining ASEAN.<\/span><\/p>\n As Ong summarises, the two \u2018important constraints\u2019 are ASEAN\u2019S geographic definition of Southeast Asia and the identity and values expressed by ASEAN.<\/span><\/p>\n Unlike Severino, though, Ong says there are persuasive counter arguments on the need for Australia and New Zealand to get closer to the ASEAN Community.<\/span><\/p>\n