Tense, stable naval arms build-up in SEA | The Jakarta Post
The Jakarta Post, September 01 2012
Maritime relations between Southeast Asian nations is characterized by  an ongoing trend of a tense but stable build up of naval armament  throughout the region, military experts say.
“The good news is  that all of the countries involved [in Southeast Asia] support freedom  of the seas, and they all recognize the UN Convention on the Law of the  Sea,” Ralph Cossa, president of the Centre for Strategic and  International Studies’ (CSIS) Pacific Forum, said on Thursday.
Cossa  added that no Southeast Asian country wanted to have conflict in the  region and that all states within it respect ideas like sovereignty and  international law.
“The bad news is that quite a few countries  have different interpretations of what it [international law] means and  what it doesn’t mean. So everybody believes that what they do is in  complete accordance with it, but somehow their definitions vary,” he  added.
Adding to the problem of misunderstandings among nations  is the way Southeast Asian countries have constantly expanded their  naval armaments.
Richard Bitzinger, a senior fellow at the  Singapore-based S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, said that  these build-ups, while not necessarily the same as the Cold War’s idea  of an arms race, have had the effect of creating an atmosphere of  tension between states.
He said that there is “a certain mutual  aspect to armaments”, but warned that weapons can be procured in ways  that increase uncertainties on the part of a country about the  intentions of its neighbors.
“If you already don’t think your  neighbor is a very nice person and he goes out and buys a gun, then you  probably will have more concerns about your neighbor,” Bitzinger said.
This  uncertainty makes it hard for Southeast Asian nations to find the  common ground necessary to lead the way to collective security.
One  military analyst, Yoji Koda, a retired vice admiral from the Japan  Maritime Self-Defense Force, went so far as to say that there was no  “key ingredient” that could bind the nations of Southeast Asia together.
Instead, the region is arguing over common definitions of who owns what.
“You can’t commonly defend a certain area if two different people are claiming the same area,” Cossa said.
At  the same time, Southeast Asian nations are trying to come together  through organizations like the ASEAN Defense Ministers’ Meeting - Plus,  which brings defense officials from all member countries together.
Cossa said that this organization is a promising example of nations moving forward collectively.
“But  I think we have a long ways to go before we actually have that type of  meaningful [collective security] cooperation, but at least a mechanism  is now being created which may help us work on this.” (png) 
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