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           Congressional Research Service


                                                                                          U

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)


Overview
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is
Southeast Asia's primary multilateral organization, a 10-
member grouping of nations with a combined population of
630 million and a combined annual gross domestic product
(GDP) of around $2.4 trillion. Established in 1967, it has
grown into one of the world's largest regional fora,
representing a strategically important region with some of
the world's busiest sea lanes, including the Straits of
Malacca and the South China Sea. Taken collectively,
ASEAN would rank as the world's fifth-largest economy
and the United States' fourth-largest export market.

ASEAN's members are Brunei, Burma (Myanmar),
Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. Members rotate as
chairs: Thailand is ASEAN's chair for 2019 and Vietnam is
to assume the chair in 2020. ASEAN engages in a wide
range of diplomatic, economic and security discussions
through hundreds of annual meetings and through a
secretariat based in Jakarta, Indonesia. In 2008, the United
States became the first non-ASEAN nation to appoint a
representative to ASEAN, and in 2011 opened a U.S.
mission to ASEAN in Jakarta with a resident Ambassador.
Other ASEAN dialogue partners have followed suit.

ASEAN is a diverse and informal organization, operating
on principles including consensus and non-interference in
the internal affairs of its members. Some observers argue
that this style constrains ASEAN from acting strongly and
cohesively on important issues. Others argue that these
principles-dubbed the ASEAN Way-ensure that the
group's diverse members continue to discuss issues where
their interests sometimes diverge. ASEAN includes nations
across the economic development spectrum, and its political
systems include democracies, semi-authoritarian states, and
repressive military regimes.

U.S.-ASEAN Relations
ASEAN has played a key role in U.S. policy towards
Southeast Asia. While much U.S. diplomacy is conducted
bilaterally with the organization's individual members,
engagement with ASEAN offers opportunities to encourage
multilateral cooperation and promote U.S. goals across the
region. The United States initially supported ASEAN as a
means to promote regional dialogue and as a bulwark
against Communism in Asia, becoming an ASEAN
Dialogue Partner in 1977. In 2009, the United States
acceded to the ASEAN Treaty of Amity and Cooperation
and committed to an annual U.S. -ASEAN Meeting. In
2012, it raised the level of the annual U.S.-ASEAN meeting
to a Leaders Meeting, and in November 2015, it announced
the creation of a U.S.-ASEAN Strategic Partnership.


pdated May 22, 2019


Successive U.S. Administrations have stated that the United
States has deep interests in Southeast Asia, including
fostering democracy and human rights, encouraging liberal
trade and investment regimes, addressing maritime security
and rising tensions in the South China Sea, promoting
environmental protection, countering terrorist threats, and
combatting human trafficking and illegal trafficking in
narcotics and wildlife. Observers in the region have largely
welcomed U.S. initiatives that work through ASEAN. Some
Southeast Asian observers have expressed concern about
proposed U.S. funding cuts for ASEAN-centered programs
in FY2018 and FY2019. In a region where showing up
for diplomatic gatherings is considered important, President
Trump did not attend a series of summits, including the
U.S.-ASEAN Leaders Meeting, in Singapore in 2018.

The Trump Administration has cast its regional strategy as
the promotion of a Free and Open Indo-Pacific, a
formulation that raises some concern for some ASEAN
members, who see the group as a central hub for regional
diplomacy. Administration officials have sought to reassure
ASEAN of its importance. ASEAN is literally at the center
of the Indo-Pacific, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said
in July 2018, and it plays a central role in the Indo-Pacific
vision that America is presenting. ASEAN's current chair,
Thailand, says it intends to issue a joint ASEAN statement
on the Free and Open Indo-Pacific this year.

The United States has launched a series of initiatives with
ASEAN and with other Southeast Asian regional
institutions. U.S.-ASEAN Connect was created in 2016 as
an effort to coordinate U.S. public- and private-sector
economic initiatives in the region through the U.S. Mission
to ASEAN and the U.S. Embassies in Bangkok and
Singapore. Other U.S. initiatives targeted at ASEAN
include an expanded Fulbright Exchange of ASEAN-U.S.
Scholars, aid for ASEAN's formation of a Single Customs
Window to facilitate easier trade of goods and services, and
the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI)
which offers scholarships and opportunities for young
leaders in the region. In November, 2018, Vice President
Pence announced a U.S.-ASEAN Smart Cities
Partnership, to promote U.S. investment in the region's
digital infrastructure.

ASEAN and Asian Regional Architecture
Asia has no dominant EU-style multilateral body, and many
see the region's economic and security architectures as
underdeveloped. The United States has long had strong
bilateral alliances and security partnerships with individual
Southeast Asian nations, including treaty alliances with the
Philippines and Thailand, as well as a close security
partnership with Singapore. In recent years, some U.S.
officials have spoken of a need to strengthen the region's
multilateral institutions as well, including ASEAN.


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