Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- The Contributors
- Foreword
- Opening Remarks by Wang Gungwu
- 1 An Overview of ASEAN-China Relations
- 2 Securing a Win-Win Partnership for ASEAN and China
- 3 China's Peaceful Development and Relations with its East Asian Neighbours
- 4 Strengthening Cooperation in the ASEAN Regional Forum: An ASEAN View
- 5 Strengthening ASEAN-China Cooperation in the ASEAN Regional Forum
- 6 ASEAN+3: The Roles of ASEAN and China
- 7 Ways Towards East Asian FTA: The Significant Roles of ASEAN and China
- 8 Japan and the United States in ASEAN-China Relations
- 9 U.S.-ASEAN, Japan-ASEAN Relations and Their Impacts on China
- 10 India's Approach to ASEAN and Its Regional Implications
- 11 The Dragon, the Bull and the Ricestalks: The Roles of China and India in Southeast Asia
- 12 Evolving Security Environment in Southeast Asia: An ASEAN Assessment
- 13 Evolving Security Environment in Southeast Asia: A Chinese Assessment
- 14 China-ASEAN Maritime Security Cooperation: Situation and Proposals
- 15 ASEAN-China Maritime Security Cooperation
- 16 ASEAN-China FTA: Opportunities, Modalities and Prospects
- 17 Building ASEAN-China FTA: Opportunities, Modalities and Prospects
- 18 China's Business Environment: A Macro Economic Perspective
- 19 Business Environment and Opportunities in Shanghai
- 20 Yunnan's Greater Mekong Sub-Region Strategy
- 21 ASEAN-China Cooperation for Greater Mekong Sub-Region Development
- 22 South China Sea: Turning Suspicion into Mutual Understanding and Cooperation
- 23 The South China Sea Disputes after the 2002 Declaration: Beyond Confidence-Building
- 24 China and Ethnic Chinese in ASEAN: Post-Cold War Development
- Index
11 - The Dragon, the Bull and the Ricestalks: The Roles of China and India in Southeast Asia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 November 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- The Contributors
- Foreword
- Opening Remarks by Wang Gungwu
- 1 An Overview of ASEAN-China Relations
- 2 Securing a Win-Win Partnership for ASEAN and China
- 3 China's Peaceful Development and Relations with its East Asian Neighbours
- 4 Strengthening Cooperation in the ASEAN Regional Forum: An ASEAN View
- 5 Strengthening ASEAN-China Cooperation in the ASEAN Regional Forum
- 6 ASEAN+3: The Roles of ASEAN and China
- 7 Ways Towards East Asian FTA: The Significant Roles of ASEAN and China
- 8 Japan and the United States in ASEAN-China Relations
- 9 U.S.-ASEAN, Japan-ASEAN Relations and Their Impacts on China
- 10 India's Approach to ASEAN and Its Regional Implications
- 11 The Dragon, the Bull and the Ricestalks: The Roles of China and India in Southeast Asia
- 12 Evolving Security Environment in Southeast Asia: An ASEAN Assessment
- 13 Evolving Security Environment in Southeast Asia: A Chinese Assessment
- 14 China-ASEAN Maritime Security Cooperation: Situation and Proposals
- 15 ASEAN-China Maritime Security Cooperation
- 16 ASEAN-China FTA: Opportunities, Modalities and Prospects
- 17 Building ASEAN-China FTA: Opportunities, Modalities and Prospects
- 18 China's Business Environment: A Macro Economic Perspective
- 19 Business Environment and Opportunities in Shanghai
- 20 Yunnan's Greater Mekong Sub-Region Strategy
- 21 ASEAN-China Cooperation for Greater Mekong Sub-Region Development
- 22 South China Sea: Turning Suspicion into Mutual Understanding and Cooperation
- 23 The South China Sea Disputes after the 2002 Declaration: Beyond Confidence-Building
- 24 China and Ethnic Chinese in ASEAN: Post-Cold War Development
- Index
Summary
The end of the Cold War in the early 1990s brought about opportunities as well as challenges to the countries in Southeast Asia. It provided the opportunity to establish a new regional order where the countries in the region could coexist peacefully in spite of different ideologies. It also offered the challenge for the establishment of a new security arrangement in order to manage the extra-regional powers, both the dominant and the rising ones.
The United States, the hegemonic power, had played a significant role during the Cold War in guaranteeing the security of the Southeast Asian region. Japan, the United States’ ally, also contributed to the industrialization and economic development of the region through investment and trade. China was then perceived as a menace as she supported the communist insurgencies, while India was looked at with suspicion because she was close to the Soviet Union and sided with the communist regimes in Indochina.
The Sino-Soviet conflict and the subsequent demise of communism in Eastern Europe as well as in Soviet Union altered the strategic landscape in Southeast Asia. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), formed in 1967 of five Southeast Asian nations, saw the opportunity to enlarge and include the communist neighbours so that ten countries in the region belonged to the same regional organization. ASEAN also realized that it must engage the major powers, all extra-regional ones, including the hegemonic United States, the declining Japan, the rising China and the emerging India, so that the region could be secure, and prosper.
The four major powers — different in size and potentials — could become the four engines of the ASEAN plane. The question is how to manage them so as to maximize the benefits and minimize the risks for ASEAN. This chapter will analyse the roles of two major powers — the rising of China and India, in Southeast Asia. The chapter is divided into two parts, the first will focus on the China-ASEAN relations, the second part on the India-ASEAN relations.
THE ROLE OF CHINA IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Southeast Asia has always been considered strategically and economically important for China.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- ASEAN-China RelationsRealities and Prospects, pp. 151 - 163Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2005