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US, Brunei Talk On Security Ties
By Kartika Rahman
Bandar Seri
Begawan - US Deputy Under Secretary of Defence (DUSD), Mr
Richard P Lawless, visited Brunei for two days and talked on current
security policies, past involvements, future engagements, exchanges of
information and aims of his visit.
He came from two days of policy talks
at Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia, for the third Asean Regional Forum
(ARF) meeting, where ARF members discussed security policy issues.
"Brunei was -very well represented at
the meeting in KK. We had a very active discussion and we talked about
defence, maritime security, peace keeping. Those were the key things
of that event. So we're coming from that meeting with Brunei, where
Brunei participated," he said.
On current issues, he said there were
general discussions of the way U S develops its security policy in a
Roundtable Briefing at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, last
Saturday. Minister II Pehin Lim Jock Seng met DUSD Lawless.
"We shared our Quadrennial Defence
Review (QDR), explained the QDR process, explained QDR documents
released in February 2006, generally discussed standard security
relationships between US and Brunei, and how we might find traditional
ways to expand and further our relationship," he said.
Brunei is interested in expanding its
contribution of its regional roles. With this there was further
general discussion of Brunei's role in Asean, and how the Asean
organisation is becoming and sustaining its leading role within
greater Asean security arrangements, he said.
"We had a very good visit by His
Majesty the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam at the
Pentagon in December 2002, and subsequently in May 2005 led by then
Permanent Secretary Pehin Darn Singamanteri Col (L) Dato Paduka Hj
Mohammad Yasmin bin Hj Umar, and so what we are doing is trying to
sustain and expand the dialogue we have with Brunei.
"We're building on the recent visit
made here by US Admiral (Adm) William J Fallon. We're sustaining the
tempo that the US has established with later engagements with the
Asean nations."
On future engagements, he said "the
US plans on staying very deeply engaged in East Asia. And as we go
through things like global posture review, and our QDR process review,
in all these instances we are very mindful of our obligation to be
actively engaged in Asia. We are mindful that many countries here in
East Asia desire for US to be heavily engaged.
"We look forward to seeing Brunei's
representation in the IISS, in early June in Singapore. Once again
expanding the tempo of discussions."
The IISS gathering, known as the IISS
Asia Security Summit or the Shangri-La Dialogue, is held every year in
June in Singapore, with plenary sessions offer a platform for
ministers and national security advisers to clarify and expand on
government policy.
On exchanges of information, he said:
"This (the visit) allows us today to explain how we do our national
security planning, it also allows us to explain our transformation of
US defence forces, and equally importantly, it allows us to explain
changes in our global defence posture.
This relates to how we are organised
around the world, including Asia. So the meetings yesterday and today
allow us to explain a lot of the details of how we changed our global
defence posture internationally: where we are organised, where we are
based, and how we plan to operate. So that is referred to as our
global defence posture review.
"The changes that are to come out of
that review, how we organise ourselves in Asia, defence officials and
security officials, and foreign policy folks are very interested in
understanding what the US is doing, and why it's doing it.
"Last but not least, (this visit)
allows Brunei to explain to us what it's doing in its own defence
transformation. And there is a process underway here which I believe
Brunei is evolving its own defence planning and its own defence
structure, so we are very interested in understanding what's going on
there.
"What we are trying to do is show
that we are determined' to expand the relationship incrementally,
modestly, we want to make sure that people understand that we very
much desire to sustain a relationship with Brunei," Lawless said.
--
Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin
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