The role of the five power defence arrangements in the Southeast Asian security architecture
This paper discusses the evolving Southeast Asian security architecture by focusing on the role of a “mini-lateral” defence coalition, the Five Power Defence Arrangements (FPDA). Examined from the Singaporean and Malaysian points of view, the paper investigates whether...
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格式: | Working Paper |
語言: | English |
出版: |
2011
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在線閱讀: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90836 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/6528 |
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總結: | This paper discusses the evolving Southeast Asian security architecture by focusing on the role of a “mini-lateral” defence coalition, the Five Power Defence
Arrangements (FPDA). Examined from the Singaporean and Malaysian points of
view, the paper investigates whether the FPDA complements or is being gradually
supplanted by other regional security instruments in Southeast Asia. The other mechanisms covered in the paper include the activities undertaken by Malaysia and
Singapore with the United States bilaterally, mini-laterally with Indonesia through the Malacca Strait Patrol (MSP), and multilaterally through the emerging ASEAN
Defence Ministers’ Meeting (ADMM) process. The overall argument of the paper is
that for Malaysia and Singapore the FPDA continues to complement these bilateral,
mini-lateral and multilateral security instruments, yet each in very different ways. In
that sense, the FPDA plays a clear, although limited, role in the Southeast Asian
security architecture. |
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