5 May 2016

Rebalance to Asia Led to Drop in Security Assistance for Southeast Asia


In 2011, the Obama administration launched an approach to East Asia called the “rebalance to Asia.” One aspect of the rebalance was supposed to be strengthening security relationships in Southeast Asia, including through bilateral security assistance. Yet an analysis of U.S. security assistance to Southeast Asian nations shows that, in nominal dollars, overall security aid to Southeast Asia fell by 19 percent since 2010, the year before the rebalance was launched. Accounting for inflation, the overall decline in U.S. security assistance to the region would have been even steeper.


Of the ten nations in Southeast Asia, only Laos, Myanmar, and Vietnam received larger outlays of U.S. security assistance in 2015 than in 2010, and only Vietnam received increased aid for programs that directly boost military-to-military relations. Much of the assistance to Laos is for demining programs, and the majority of U.S. security assistance to Myanmar was for narcotics control and demining. Assistance to U.S. treaty allies Thailand and the Philippines fell by 79.9 percent and 8.8 percent, respectively, since 2010; assistance to Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore—important partners in intelligence sharing, counterterrorism, antipiracy patrols, and other programs—dropped by 51.7 percent, 58.2 percent, and 71.4 percent. Security assistance to tiny, rich Brunei and to Cambodia remained negligible.

The decline in actual assistance suggests the White House has not followed through on its vow to bolster security relationships with Southeast Asian nations. The Obama administration has begun to boost maritime security assistance for Southeast Asian nations, but only since 2015. To be sure, U.S. law required the White House to cut some assistance to Thailand after its May 2014 coup, and U.S. leaders remain wary of boosting security relationships with semiauthoritarian, unstable countries such as Cambodia, Myanmar, and Laos. But Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines, all of which also saw aid levels drop, are large, relatively stable, and critical U.S. partners in helping maintain freedom of navigation in Asian waters.



Share Meanwhile, evidence from Europe and the Middle East suggests that the White House continues to prioritize these regions. As the graphic above shows, aid to Southeast Asia decreased by $34.5 million between 2010 and 2015, while total U.S. security assistance to the Middle East and North Africa rose by nearly $1.3 billion over the same time period. U.S. security assistance to Europe decreased by $52.9 million between 2010 and 2015. The emergence of the so-called Islamic State and the civil conflict in Ukraine were major reasons for the continued focus on Europe and the Middle East. Still, U.S. security assistance to Southeast Asia remained comparatively small: assistance to the Middle East and North Africa was more than fifty times as large as aid to Southeast Asia in 2015, while assistance to Europe was nearly three times as large as aid to Southeast Asia in 2015. Given the relatively small amount of aid to Southeast Asia, the White House probably could have boosted assistance to Southeast Asian nations between 2010 and 2015 without dramatically altering funding for nations in Europe and the Middle East.

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