Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Who Will Be Indonesian President in 2014?
- The Seventh Plenum of the Communist Party of Vietnam:The Gains of the Central Committee
- The Struggle to Amend Thailand's Constitution
- Whither China's Myanmar Stranglehold?
- Malaysia's BN Stays in Power, But Deep Changes Have Nevertheless Occurred
- The Significance of China-Malaysia Industrial Parks
- Steadily Amplified Votes Decide Malaysian Elections
- The Rise of Chinese Power and the Impact on Southeast Asia
- The China-Myanmar Energy Pipelines: Risks and Benefits
- Moving ASEAN+1 FTAs towards an Effective RCEP
- Ethnic Insurgencies and Peacemaking in Myanmar
- Japan's Growing Angst over the South China Sea
- Taking the Income Gap in Southeast Asia Seriously
- Indonesian Parties Struggle for Electability
- Rohingya Boat Arrivals in Thailand: From the Frying Pan into the Fire?
- APEC's Model of Green Growth is a Move Forward
- China's FDI in Southeast Asia
- Hidden Counter-Revolution: A History of the Centralisation of Power in Malaysia
- The Dominance of Chinese Engineering Contractors in Vietnam
- RCEP and TPP: Comparisons and Concerns
- Implications of Demographic Trends in Singapore
- Big Power Contest in Southeast Asia
- The Resurgence of Social Activism in Malaysia
- Pivoting Asia, Engaging China—American Strategy in East Asia
- Towards a Code of Conduct for the South China Sea
- List of ISEAS Perspective Issues
Towards a Code of Conduct for the South China Sea
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Who Will Be Indonesian President in 2014?
- The Seventh Plenum of the Communist Party of Vietnam:The Gains of the Central Committee
- The Struggle to Amend Thailand's Constitution
- Whither China's Myanmar Stranglehold?
- Malaysia's BN Stays in Power, But Deep Changes Have Nevertheless Occurred
- The Significance of China-Malaysia Industrial Parks
- Steadily Amplified Votes Decide Malaysian Elections
- The Rise of Chinese Power and the Impact on Southeast Asia
- The China-Myanmar Energy Pipelines: Risks and Benefits
- Moving ASEAN+1 FTAs towards an Effective RCEP
- Ethnic Insurgencies and Peacemaking in Myanmar
- Japan's Growing Angst over the South China Sea
- Taking the Income Gap in Southeast Asia Seriously
- Indonesian Parties Struggle for Electability
- Rohingya Boat Arrivals in Thailand: From the Frying Pan into the Fire?
- APEC's Model of Green Growth is a Move Forward
- China's FDI in Southeast Asia
- Hidden Counter-Revolution: A History of the Centralisation of Power in Malaysia
- The Dominance of Chinese Engineering Contractors in Vietnam
- RCEP and TPP: Comparisons and Concerns
- Implications of Demographic Trends in Singapore
- Big Power Contest in Southeast Asia
- The Resurgence of Social Activism in Malaysia
- Pivoting Asia, Engaging China—American Strategy in East Asia
- Towards a Code of Conduct for the South China Sea
- List of ISEAS Perspective Issues
Summary
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
• In discussing a code of conduct for the South China Sea, some facts have to be taken into account and certain issues addressed. For example:
1. How to overcome the obstacles, pertaining to the area of application of the proposed code, that caused the downgrading of the initially proposed code of conduct to the eventual “Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea” in November 2002;
2. Whether the proposed code is to be negotiated bilaterally or in an international or ASEAN-centred forum;
3. Whether or not ASEAN member-states should consult among themselves, and at what stage China should be involved;
4. How early is early when ASEAN repeatedly calls for the “early conclusion” of a code of conduct;
5. The interests of non-claimants in regional peace and stability, the prevalence of the rule of law, and freedom and safety of navigation and overflight;
6. The national interest as against the rule of international law. • Since neither ASEAN nor the ASEAN-China senior officials consultations is an adjudicating body, sovereignty and other legal issues cannot be resolved anytime soon. The most that can be achieved is that the national interest can be peacefully pursued, but not at the expense of those of others.
INTRODUCTION
On 20 July 2012, foreign ministers of the Member States of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) called for “the early conclusion of a Regional Code of Conduct in the South China Sea”. The statement that the Cambodian foreign minister, as chairman of the 9 July ASEAN Ministerial Meeting, issued on behalf of his colleagues also invoked past ASEAN agreements pertaining to the rule of international law, self-restraint, the non-use of force, and the peaceful resolution of disputes. Based entirely on an Indonesian draft cleared with all ASEAN member-states, the statement laid down what were veritably the positions of ASEAN countries, claimants and non-claimants alike, on the South China Sea and their interests in it.
In thinking about or discussing or deciding upon a proposed Code of Conduct for the South China Sea, some facts ought to be taken into consideration and certain issues have to be resolved — or fudged over — or, in any case, addressed.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- ISEAS PerspectiveSelections 2012-2013, pp. 253 - 259Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2014