{"id":27447,"date":"2016-06-30T11:00:23","date_gmt":"2016-06-30T01:00:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=27447"},"modified":"2018-10-30T09:27:53","modified_gmt":"2018-10-29T22:27:53","slug":"brexits-lesson-asias-democracies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/brexits-lesson-asias-democracies\/","title":{"rendered":"Brexit\u2019s lesson for Asia\u2019s democracies"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The United Kingdom, in voting to divorce the European Union, is steering the West into uncharted territory. Will the EU now <\/span>unravel<\/span><\/a>, as other populists and nationalists demand plebiscites on their respective countries\u2019 membership? Will NATO, the grand post-war <\/span>alliance<\/span><\/a> that has guaranteed Europe\u2019s security for almost seven decades, also begin to disintegrate, as its members turn inward (like Britain) or, worse, against each other?<\/span><\/p>\n Many people in Asia will dismiss these questions the way Neville Chamberlain wrote off Central Europe back in 1938: as problems in faraway countries about which they know and care little. But the truth is that the populist surge now rocking the West has its own echoes in Asia.<\/span><\/p>\n Greater disunity here is particularly dangerous, because Asia lacks the West\u2019s connective institutional framework and regional shock absorbers. The recent recall of an agreed statement by ASEAN criticizing China for its actions in the South China Sea is but the latest sad example of the immaturity of Asia\u2019s collective security process.<\/span><\/p>\n Across the region, national rivalries remain raw, and historical memories continue to sow divisions. So all Asians must recognize that their countries and region are equally vulnerable to those who would undermine the rule of law and today\u2019s existing structures of peace and prosperity, flimsy as they may be.<\/span><\/p>\n Asia must thus take note of the message Brexit sends. The ‘Leave’ camp\u2019s ability to scrape together a simple majority by appealing to voters\u2019 basest instincts shows that many people now take their liberties, security, and prosperity for granted. It shows that too many have lost sight of what made the post-war developed world so affluent, free, and safe to begin with.<\/span><\/p>\n For decades, the world\u2019s democracies\u2014in Asia and in the West\u2014have not questioned the foundations of their success. We understood that we needed to stand together, sometimes in formal alliances, sometimes in alliances bound together simply by a shared interest in democracy. We understood that our prosperity was built on the rule of law, the fundamental integrity of our political institutions, and the openness of our societies\u2014to the outside world and to the ‘outsiders’ among us.<\/span><\/p>\n