Reference Text
Time Left10:00
As
ASEAN
faces
challenge
posed
by
US
China
competition,
gap
between
Delhi's
promise
and
delivery
remains
large.
The
consequences
of
the
unfolding
conflict
between
the
US
and
China
the
world's
most
important
economic
and
military
powers
may
look
somewhat
abstract
at
this
moment
in
Delhi.
But
coping
with
the
Sino
US
confrontation
is
an
existential
question
for
the
10
members
of
the
Association
of
South
East
Asian
Nations
(ASEAN).
No
region
in
the
world
is
so
badly
caught
in
the
crossfire
between
Washington
and
Beijing,
thanks
to
South
East
Asia's
profound
interdependence
with
both
America
and
China.
The
US
has
been
the
ASEAN's
leading
economic
partner
for
decades.
It
is
also
the
principal
provider
of
security
to
a
region
that
has
seen
an
extended
period
of
stability.
A
rising
China,
however,
has
begun
to
eclipse
American
commercial
domination
and
challenge
US
military
primacy
in
the
region.
Last
week's
meetings
of
the
ARF
the
regional
forum
of
the
ASEAN
that
brings
together
all
the
major
powers
to
promote
peace
and
prosperity
in
the
region
in
Singapore
underline
the
region's
continuing
struggle
to
deal
with
the
challenges.
The
ASEAN
expects
India
to
provide
a
measure
of
economic
ballast
and
strategic
balance
in
these
difficult
circumstances.
India
has
its
task
cut
out
on
both
fronts.
As
the
trade
war
between
America
and
China
escalates,
the
ASEAN
has
put
special
emphasis
on
accelerating
trade
liberalisation
through
the
Regional
Comprehensive
Economic
Partnership
(RCEP)
agreement
under
negotiation
for
many
years.
Although
India
has
formally
committed
to
bringing
the
RCEP
talks
to
a
close,
many
issues
remain
to
be
resolved
between
India
and
the
ASEAN.
Unless
there
is
highest
level
political
intervention
in
Delhi,
India
is
in
the
danger
of
being
left
out
of
what
promises
to
be
one
of
the
biggest
trading
blocks
of
the
world.
As
the
US
mounts
pressure
on
China
through
its
new
Indo
Pacific
strategy,
a
more
active
naval
posture
in
South
China
Sea,
and
nearly
US$300
million
in
new
security
assistance
to
the
region,
Beijing
is
showing
a
little
more
flexibility
in
its
maritime
territorial
disputes
with
the
ASEAN
neighbours.
After
nearly
two
decades
of
talking
about
a
code
of
conduct
in
the
South
China
Sea,
ASEAN
and
China
have
agreed
to
start
negotiations
on
the
basis
of
a
common
draft
text.
An
actual
agreement
might
take
years,
but
China
is
winning
some
diplomatic
brownie
points.
China
has
also
conducted
its
first
ever
joint
maritime
exercise
with
the
10
ASEAN
countries
last
week
in
Singapore.
China's
arms
sales
to
the
region
continue
to
rise.
India
has
a
longer
tradition
of
defence
and
security
cooperation
with
the
ASEAN
than
China.
Despite
the
Modi
government's
tall
talk
on
'Acting
East',
the
gap
between