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     Jun 21, 2007
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The search for an Asian face
By Chietigj Bajpaee

As the world marks 10 years since the Asian financial crisis, an issue that is lost in the debates over exchange-rate systems, capital controls and corporate governance is the political fallout from the crisis, namely the death of the "Asian values" debate.

However, the discussion over an Asian community is re-emerging as Asia regains its self-confidence and reasserts itself on the international stage. The focal point of the current debate has



shifted from the "Asian Tiger" economies of Southeast Asia in the 1990s to the Dragon and the Elephant - China and India.

The previous debates failed as a result of Asia's ideological divisions and a series of regional crises. However, Asia's economic re-emergence and the region's growing interdependence in the economic, security and political arenas are acting as a glue to forge a stronger Asian identity.

None of this denies the fact that "Asia" is a constructed identity. However, the constructed nature of "Asian values" does not reduce their importance or validity. The identities of most nation-states are based on constructed or "imagined" identities, as Cornell University Professor Emeritus Benedict Anderson refers to them, where the elite or ruling class use symbols such as flags, anthems and a sense of shared history and the technologies of the day, such as the printing press, to forge a national identity. In the present day, cross-border travel and trade, the Internet and popular culture play the same role in forging a regional identity.

Politicians and policymakers have used the concept of an Asian community or identity for cementing national identity, as is the case with Singapore and Malaysia, which espouse Asian identity and values to hold together their multicultural states. States have also relied on the concept of Asian values to project power, as seen with Japan projecting itself as the model for the Asian economic miracle, China projecting itself as the home of Confucian values given the declining legitimacy of communism, and India projecting itself as the home of Buddhism as part of its "Look East" policy.

Asia is not a static, monolithic region that is mutually exclusive from other cultures and civilizations. Multiple identities, civilizations and value systems occupy the same space, as shown by the fact that Asia is a politically, culturally, ethnically, linguistically, and religiously diverse region. However, Asia's heterogeneity does not undermine its regional identity. Numerous nations and supranational states such as India, the United States and the European Union comprise diverse groups. Nonetheless, a common history from the struggle against colonialism, coupled with growing economic interdependence, shared security concerns and political cooperation fueled by the growth of a plethora of inclusive regional forums are helping to forge an Asian identity.

The evolution of an Asian community
The concept of an Asian community or identity has undergone numerous transformations. Trade links in Asia stretch back two millennia to when Chinese silk and porcelain were traded for Indian cotton and Southeast Asian spices and wood products along the Silk Road and Southeast Asia's sea-lanes, with major ports emerging in Calicut in South Asia, Melaka in Southeast Asia, and Guangzhou in China.

Meanwhile, cultural and religious bonds date back to Indian Emperor Asoka's spread of Buddhism beyond the subcontinent in the 3rd century BCE and Melaka emerging as a center for the practice of tolerant Sufi Islam in Asia in the 13th century.

The first attempt at a pan-Asian political identity arose with Imperial China's "tribute" system, which distinguished the non-Asian "barbarians" from the Asian tributary states, which included Korea, Japan, and numerous kingdoms in Southeast Asia. Swaths of Asia were also under the rule of the Mongol Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368).

Western colonial rule over Asia from the 18th century curtailed interaction among Asian states as many regions ceased to be independent political actors and colonial-era rivalries led to the creation of buffer states. Imperial Japan also used the concept of an Asian identity to justify its "liberation" of Asian states from Western colonial rule under its model of the "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere".

Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Indonesian president Sukarno and Chinese premier Zhou Enlai took the helm of the Asian identity debate at the Asian Relations Conference in 1947 by combining Asia's struggle against Western imperialism and decolonization with the struggles of Africa and Latin America to forge the "Bandung spirit" of 1955, which became the precursor for the Non-Aligned Movement and the Asia-Africa Summit.

The spirit of Asian brotherhood was most visibly manifested over the slogan of "Hindi-Chin bhai bhai" (Indians and Chinese are brothers), which attempted to forge a familial bond between Asia's two oldest civilizations, and Panchsheel, or the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence, which formed the basis for Sino-Indian relations and China's and India's relations with other countries.

Prime minister Nehru was especially vocal in his support of an Asian identity, as evinced by his support for China during the Korean War and for mainland China's claim to a seat at the United Nations. Nehru also expressed pride in Japan's victory in the Russo-Japanese War in 1905 and even opposed punishing Japan at the post-World War II Tokyo trials, based on his view of Japan as Asian brethren. However, this phase of Asian solidarity perished as China and India went to war in 1962 and the regional architecture divided along the Cold War divide with the formation of organizations such as the anti-communist US-led Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO).

The most recent manifestation of Asian regionalism emerged in the 1990s with the rise of Asia's four tiger economies, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan.

Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad and Singaporean prime minister Lee Kuan Yew led this round of the debate with the view that the ability of their countries to move from agrarian developing economies to newly industrialized countries within a single generation was a sign of their superior economic and political model, based on a Confucian work ethic, filial piety and a patriarchal society, and the importance of social freedom over individual freedom, which translated into Asia "getting the fundamentals right" with high savings rates and high-quality education, export-led development and a political model of soft authoritarianism or "guided democracy".

At the state-to-state level, this translated into espousing mutual respect, territorial integrity and sovereignty, non-aggression, non-interference in internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit, which was codified in the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations' Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, which subsequently came to be known as the "ASEAN way".

The 1997 Asian financial crisis and the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) epidemic exposed the flaws of Asian values. The need to "save face" led to a lack of transparency over the spread of SARS. The crony capitalism within Japan's keiretsu, South Korea's chaebol, and Indonesia's konglomerats fueled the "contagion" effect across the region during the Asian crisis.

Finally, the lack of accountability of the region's non-democratic regimes led to political upheaval in numerous states, from the fall of the Suharto regime in Indonesia to the arrest and imprisonment of deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim in Malaysia, and leadership changes in South Korea and Thailand.

China and India, engines of integration
However, the Asian financial crisis also heralded a new phase of the Asian-values debate as China came to the rescue of the region. The fact that China was insulated from the crisis by its relatively closed capital market and acted as a "firewall" for the contagion by not devaluing its currency demonstrated its emergence as a responsible player in the region.

China's centrality to the emerging Asian order is being reinforced by its leadership role in numerous regional multilateral forums 

Continued 1 2


An East Asian community? Not so fast (Jan 19, '07)

Aftershocks in Southeast Asia (May 24, '05)



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2. A clean sweep

3. Iran: Blowback, detainee-style

4. I told you so, essentially 

5.US losing ground through tribal allies

6. After Rumsfeld, a new dawn?

7. Levitate the Pentagon

8. US gives Russia short shrift 

9.Thailand's free-falling economy

10. Lessons from China's
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(24 hours to 11.59pm ET, June 19, 2007)

 
 



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