CEBU, Philippines — Southeast Asia's top diplomats met Wednesday under growing pressure to push a peace plan that has so far failed to end Myanmar's civil war, and to beat a deadline to conclude talks on a nonaggression pact with China this year.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations, a diverse 11-national bloc, has struggled to project unity and relevance for years. But it faced its latest setback last year when deadly fighting erupted between two members, Thailand and Cambodia, over a longtime border conflict.
Fighting ended with a ceasefire that was brokered by Malaysia and pushed through by pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, who threatened to withhold trade privileges unless they agreed. Helping sustain that fragile ceasefire is high on the agenda of the ASEAN's foreign ministers' annual meeting in the central Philippine city of Cebu.
The Philippines holds ASEAN's rotating chair this year, taking what would have been Myanmar's turn after the country was suspended from chairing the meeting after its army forcibly ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's democratically elected government in 2021.
ASEAN is struggling to promote peace in Myanmar's civil war
ASEAN does not recognize the country's military government, and its leaders are barred from attending the regional bloc's meetings, although lower-level career diplomats have been allowed to participate.
The resulting war has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions in a crisis that has emerged as one of ASEAN' biggest challenges and source of embarrassment as Western governments demanded the bloc to do more.
Last week, Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan said that ASEAN leaders decided in their annual summit in October not to send observers to Myanmar's recent elections because conditions for credible polls were not met, though some member countries, like Cambodia and Vietnam, chose to do so individually.