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China’s “Belt and Road” in Southeast Asia: Constructing the Strategic Narrative in Singapore
Alice D. Ba 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2019 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.43 No.2
China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is viewed by most as symbolic of a new era of Chinese initiative and ambition. But while much attention has focused on how the BRI fits into China’s—and specifically Xi Jinping’s—grand narrative of national rejuvenation, less has been said about regional narratives—that is, the narratives of China’s target audiences. Toward addressing this oversight, I consider the case of Singapore in relation to BRI. Specifically, I give attention to strategic narratives that offer analytic windows into the complex relationships being negotiated between China and Southeast Asian states. Strategic narratives, as instruments of policy, also play roles in constructing the strategic space in which BRI enters, with implications for the opportunities and constraints faced by China in Southeast Asia.
Sy Thanh Pham,Alice D. Ba 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2021 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.45 No.4
China’s Belt and Road may be China’s “Project of the Century,” but for Vietnam it encapsulates an age-old predicament, namely, how best to respond to the mix of opportunity and challenge represented by its very large neighbor next door. This article finds in Vietnam’s response a mix of caution and engagement reflective of Vietnam’s distinctive positionality on the asymmetry-authority framework outlined in the introductory essay. It gives special attention to how ongoing maritime disputes intensify the challenge on both asymmetry and especially, domestic authority dimensions, but also how Vietnam’s response to BRI illustrates elites’ dynamic adjustments between four key sources of domestic legitimacy— welfare, anticorruption, nationalism, and autonomy. While the domestic nationalist challenge posed by China largely explains Vietnam’s caution and ambivalence about BRI, these tensions also make BRI’s diplomatic and political functions and thus, Vietnam’s engagement more important beyond the economic opportunities it may offer.