Biden unlikely to attend ASEAN summits in September

WASHINGTON/JAKARTA 鈥 US President Joseph R. Biden is unlikely to attend summits with Southeast Asian leaders in Jakarta next month, multiple sources told Reuters, an absence that would raise questions about US commitment to a region vital in its efforts to push back against China鈥檚 expanding influence.
Mr. Biden is due to attend a Sept. 9-10 Group of 20 (G20) summit in India and said on Tuesday he plans to visit an important emerging Southeast Asian partner Vietnam 鈥渟hortly鈥 to upgrade ties, but his presence at the Sept. 4-7 summits of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is in significant doubt.
One source close to the matter said Mr. Biden would not go to Indonesia, and another cited a Washington-based ambassador from an ASEAN member as saying that Indonesia had been informed on Monday that Mr. Biden would not be going. Other sources cited White House officials as saying that Mr. Biden鈥檚 attendance was 鈥渦nlikely.鈥
Asked if it was correct that Mr. Biden would not be going to Indonesia, a senior White House official told Reuters on Tuesday: 鈥淲e鈥檙e still working on it … we鈥檒l probably have more to say about it soon.鈥
White House spokespersons did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Sources said Mr. Biden鈥檚 schedule for Asia is not official until it has been announced and could change.
Several ASEAN diplomats said it would be a significant disappointment if Mr. Biden did not go to Jakarta, given the public emphasis his administration puts on the importance of ties with the region.
One senior diplomat referred to Indonesia having scheduled the ASEAN summits, which are normally held in November, for September, specifically to make is possible for Mr. Biden to attend and then go on to the G20.
Sources said Mr. Biden was expected to send Vice President Kamala Harris in his place. Ms. Harris, the first Asian American vice president, has conducted diplomacy in the region before.
DISAPPOINTMENT IN REGION
Mr. Biden already caused disappointment in the region when he canceled what would have been the first visit by a serving US president to Papua New Guinea in May and a subsequent planned visit to Australia because he was working to close a deal with lawmakers to resolve the US debt ceiling crisis.
In an address to an ASEAN-related event in Washington on Tuesday evening, Mr. Biden鈥檚 deputy national security adviser Jonathan Finer hailed the US-ASEAN relationship and said that 鈥淎SEAN centrality鈥 was at the heart of the administration鈥檚 strategy for the Indo-Pacific region.
Policy analysts said another no-show by Mr. Biden, who attended ASEAN meetings in Cambodia in November, would call that characterization into question.
鈥淚t will be viewed as another letdown by the region,鈥 said Murray Hiebert, a senior associate with the Southeast Asia program at Washington鈥檚 Center for Strategic and International Studies.
鈥淪outheast Asia has been impressed that Washington under Biden has stepped up engagement with the region,鈥 Hiebert said.
鈥淔or him to skip the summit when he will already be nearby attending a summit in India, and likely making an official visit to Vietnam, will prompt many in the region to wonder whether the US is again slipping back to its episodic and half-hearted engagement with the region.鈥
Ted Osius, a former US ambassador to Vietnam who heads the US-ASEAN Business Council, said there would likely be some disappointment if Mr. Biden was unable to go to Jakarta, although he stressed the 鈥渄ramatic鈥 increase in US government-to-government engagement with ASEAN under Mr. Biden, a Democrat.
ASEAN members were unhappy when Mr. Biden鈥檚 Republican predecessor Donald Trump skipped regional summits for three consecutive years, something policy experts saw as playing into China鈥檚 expansion of its influence in the region.
Mr. Trump鈥檚 predecessor Barack Obama attended every US-ASEAN and East Asia summit from 2011, apart from 2013, when he canceled due to a government shutdown at home. 鈥 Reuters


