This Week in Asia

Is the 'Asian way' just China's bid to rival US moves in Southeast Asia?

The "Asian way" has been a persistent theme in China's messaging towards its Southeast Asian neighbours in the last decade.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi recently restated it at the Asean Secretariat on July 11 as he called for "settling differences in the Asian way" to "blaze a new path of security that chooses dialogue over confrontation, partnerships over alliances, and win-win over zero-sum game".

What does the "Asian way" mean? Does it exist as an objective reality, or is it a Chinese discursive invention in its strategic contest with America to win over the region?

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The "Asian way" started to gain salience in China's strategic messaging in 2013, when Manila initiated the South China Sea arbitration case against Beijing. Wang then advised his Asean audience that "the most important experience" in Asean-China relations was "to stick to the 'Asian way' and the 'Asean way' and resolve the differences through friendly consultations and equal-footed [sic] dialogue".

In the Chinese construction, Asian neighbours do not bring each other to court because adjudication is deemed to be confrontational and adversarial. Yet, international law experts have debunked this myth by pointing out that Southeast Asian countries "have a positive track record of referring their disputes to the international legal process".

China's invocation of the "Asian way" seeks to discourage Southeast Asian claimant states in the South China Sea from seeking recourse to the dispute settlement system under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. Beijing instead insists that the ongoing Asean-China negotiation on a code of conduct (COC) is more fitting for "Asian values" as it is based on "consultation", "consensus", and "equality".

Such an "equal footing" argument, however, stands on tenuous ground. China has been ramping up its military and para-military power in the South China Sea, jeopardising other claimant states' maritime rights and interests. The idea of "negotiation, not arbitration" ensures that China can take advantage of its power asymmetry with the other claimants, rather than having to face them as legal equals before international law.

In recent years, China has sharpened the "Asian way" discourse as a contrast to US balance-of-power moves - including the strengthening of US alliances in Asia and formation of minilateral arrangements - to counter Chinese influence in the Indo-Pacific.

In China's binary framing, the "Asian way" is "inclusive", "harmonious" and "dialogue-driven", whereas the "small circles" created by America and its allies are "exclusive", "confrontational" and "Cold War mentality-driven".

The obverse, however, is true. While praising the "Asian way" as being "inclusive", the Chinese framing exhibits an exclusivist approach to security governance in Asia, emphasising the distinction between Asia and the West. This, in turn, highlights China's position as a resident power while de-legitimising the presence of any other peer powers, particularly America.

The "Asian way" is joined at the hip with President Xi Jinping's 2014 call for "the people of Asia to run the affairs of Asia, solve the problems of Asia and uphold the security of Asia". This exclusionary vision of the regional order was made starkly clear in Wang Yi's speech at his 2021 special meeting with Asean foreign ministers. He called on the bloc and China to "forge a cooperation circle featuring common development" and to adhere to "independence, self-reliance and self-strengthening". Beijing's parochial regionalism is in effect the inverse of Asean's open regionalism which embraces all powers near and far.

It might be tempting to deconstruct the culturalist underpinnings of the "Asian way" and examine whether there are truly common values shared by the peoples of Asia. China's "Asian way" advocates a culturally deterministic approach to Asia's regional governance by invoking "peace", "mutual understanding" and "harmony" as if these values were intrinsically unique to Asia. It is fallacious and historically inaccurate to postulate that Asians are inherently peace-loving and, by extension, paint Westerners as war-mongering.

While China presents these values as universally Asian, they are essentially drawn from Confucianism which seeks to achieve social and political harmony through respect for hierarchy. Beijing sees this as the ideal modus operandi for the Chinese state as well as for the regional order in both ancient and current times. But these hierarchical precepts are at odds with the principle of sovereign equality in today's inter-state system.

As a matter of principle, harmony should be achieved through respect for international law rather than through deference to a hierarchy of nations based on their respective size and strength. To "harmonise" its relations with Southeast Asian countries, China has focused on amplifying the positive aspects in economic cooperation while suppressing differences, especially over the South China Sea disputes.

The "Asian way" of saying it is to "shelve the disputes" and "build consensus through dialogue and consultation". Suppression of disagreements and obstruction of legal recourse, however, do not present the way to sustainable peace.

The "Asian way" has gained some traction in Southeast Asia. Most recently, at the Shangri-La Dialogue 2022, Indonesian Defence Minister Prabowo praised the "Asian way" as a solution to the region's geopolitical woes. He associated it with the Indonesian way of musyawarah mufakat (discussion to reach a solution) and gotong royong (working together). A Chinese diplomat followed up on Prabowo's remarks at the forum by contrasting the "Asian way" with "the NATO way or the European way".

While maintaining dialogue is critical to prevent disagreements from spiralling into conflicts, it should not preclude a country from other avenues and options to defend itself, including seeking legal recourse, upgrading its deterrence capabilities, and engaging in warfare as a last resort. When dialogue did not work, China engaged in military conflicts with its neighbours in recent history, including India (1962), the Soviet Union (1969) and Vietnam (1979). Historians also point out that "warfare was constant in imperial China" due to its own disunion, foreign invasion and territorial conquests.

Judging by its ongoing muscle flexing in its immediate neighbourhood, it is doubtful that a resurgent China today truly believes in or acts on its "Asian way" rhetoric.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2022. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from This Week in Asia

This Week in Asia5 min read
Japan's Rude Awakening: More Ill-tempered Japanese Lose Their Cool In A Nation Normally Known For Politeness
The plea from a doctor's receptionist came from the heart. In her letter published in the "Troubleshooter" column of the Yomiuri newspaper on April 28, the unnamed woman said she was tired of being "a punching bag" for patients' frustrations. People
This Week in Asia4 min readInternational Relations
South Korea's Political Stability In Doubt As Failed Yoon-opposition Meet Risks 'Igniting Partisan Strife'
A deepening sense of uncertainty surrounds South Korea's political stability after a meeting between the president and the leader of the opposition failed to yield any tangible results, with critics highlighting the continued absence of diplomacy in
This Week in Asia4 min readCrime & Violence
Philippines' Australia, France, Japan Ties Boost Its Middle-power Status Amid South China Sea Rivalry
As the Philippines boosts its security ties with France, Japan, and Australia, analysts say such partnerships are key to bolstering the Southeast Asian nation's defences and its reputation as a middle power amid rising tensions in the South China Sea

Related Books & Audiobooks