OTTAWA - Calling the current tension between China and Japan
"worrisome," the head of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
wants Canada to become more of a peacemaker in Asia.
Surin Pitsuwan, secretary general
of the 10-nation ASEAN bloc, told The Canadian Press in an exclusive interview
Thursday that as Canada pursues deeper ties with Asia, it has to focus on more
than just trade and investment, and should take a more active role in security
issues.
Canada should leverage its good
reputation as a "soft power" to help mediate some of the intermittent
disputes that flare up in the region, perhaps emulating Norway, he said. Norway
has been an active mediator in the Middle East, the Balkans and Sri Lanka.
"What Canada can do is to
transform its expertise in those areas of peacekeeping, peace-building into a
more mediating role. A country like Norway has been very active and engaged.
Canada has been less than Norway, maybe by choice," Surin said in Ottawa,
where he was meeting several Conservative cabinet ministers.
"It has to be a package, an
integrated approach."
Surin would also like to see
Canadian troops taking part in military training manoeuvres in the region, such
as Cobra Gold, in which 10,000 troops from the United States and several South
Asian countries took part in simulated amphibious beach assaults and disaster
relief earlier this year.
"Canada knows that it has
been rather absent from the region," he said.
"Maybe Canada should be more
present at these kinds of region activities, for peace, for reconciliation, for
security, for mutual confidence."
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has
made forging deeper economic links with Asia a priority for his government.
Boosting trade and investment
with ASEAN — a group that does not include China, India, Japan or South Korea —
represents one way of broader engagement with the region.
Surin said ASEAN's 10 member
countries are anxious to deepen trade and investment, as well looking for new
opportunities in education, health and technology.
"We are able to be on the
supply lines of every factory in India and China. In that sense ASEAN is in the
middle of the growth centre," he said.
But the broader region is also
the scene of simmering tensions, including the current territorial dispute
between China and Japan over an island chain in the South China Sea.
Surin called the situation
"worrisome because they are our major partners," adding: "We
certainly would like them to be able to get along."
Because of Asia's rising
influence, unresolved disputes could effect growth across the globe, including
the recovery from the current economic crisis, he said.
That's why steps have to be taken
in various regional forums to find diplomatic solutions.
It's up to Canada, he said, to
gauge how big a player it wants to be.
"The decision will have to
made here in how much Canada wants to be part of the process to contribute to
confidence building, reconciliation in the region, and trying to restrain all
parties and not allow the situation into open conflict," said Surin.
"Because it's going to
affect the rest of the word."
In the case of the China-Japan
dispute, Surin said he has no illusions about Canada being able to make a
difference.
"It would be a rather
difficult issue between China and Japan. Territorial disputes, historic
mistrust, lack of mutual confidence. It's rather deep," he said.
But everyone has to find ways to
deal with the continuing rise of China.
"There used to be a notion
of peaceful rise of China. But apparently what we are seeing is, is not very
restrained," he said.
"What we are seeing is
(China) rather actively engaged in activities projecting its own presence, its
own power, its own influence over the environment and the landscape that it
perceives to belong to its own sphere of influence."
Foreign Affairs Minister John
Baird noted Thursday that Canada has had a "strong and vibrant
dialogue" with ASEAN in 35 years of relations. He pointed to a
Canada-ASEAN joint declaration on trade and investment, the recent creation of
the Canada-ASEAN Business Council as well as a $10-million commitment to fund "co-operative
activities" in the next three years.
Surin said the co-operation has
the potential to run much deeper.
"Canada has decided, I
think, a long time ago that soft power — before the word soft power came into
being, into vogue — should be its approach to the global community. It has been
very much welcomed on the issue of human rights, on the issue of democracy, on
the issue of open society, the issue of gender equality," he said.
"You can play a backroom
role or a subtle mediating role with less direct involvement or interest in the
region like other countries. There is that credibility. There is that room,
that space."
MIKE BLANCHFIELD, THE CANADIAN
PRESS
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