HNC students in Singapore |
The trip had two main components: The first part of the trip led by Professor Arase was a mini-course called “Sino-US Rivalry in Southeast Asia.” Students met with experts and Ph.D. candidates from the Yusof Ishak Institute of Southeast Asian Studies and National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and East Asian Institute, and Fulbright University Vietnam. After these insightful sessions, students got a sense of ASEAN’s increasing geopolitical, economic, and social importance and how China and the U.S. are viewed as Southeast Asian economic and security partners. A moment that stood out to me was learning how Singapore felt the President Biden was not doing enough for Southeast Asia; to them, the American policy of “strategic patience” meant inaction. This assessment put my own experiences interning at the U.S. State Department on the maritime and mainland Southeast Asian country desks into perspective: I was constantly reading and writing about all the projects and relationships the U.S. was building in the region, yet the reality seems to be the opposite.
National University of Singapore - East Asian Institute |
As, second year MAIR+HNC Certificate student Tan Yanglong expressed, “an enlightening moment was when [Singapore’s former Permanent Representative to the United Nations and Director of the NUS Middle East Institute Bilahari Kausikan] likened ASEAN to a cow: you can’t expect a cow to run like a horse, but you need a cow to be good at plowing the fields before the real horses can run,” he said. “It was a good reminder that for all the criticism of ASEAN as a sluggish and ineffectual organization, it is still seen as a vital organization by countries in the region.”
The second part of the trip was a career trek led by Professor Adam Webb and first-year MAIR+HNC Certificate student Matthew Sperzel. Students had the chance to meet with high-level business leaders and executives (most of whom were HNC alumni) to learn how students can apply their skillsets to a wide range of careers and for a chance of networking beyond SAIS’ three campuses. “We realized the wide range of opportunities available for SAIS’ers in Southeast Asia, which aren’t limited explicitly to international relations or the public sector,” Sperzel commented.
Visiting HSBC's office in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam |
As first-year MAIR+HNC Certificate student Diep Tran stated, “I can really see how Vietnamese government’s economic policies that are precisely designed to fit certain regional and global political climate over the past two decades have had an enormous impact on how the company has changed their strategies and sources of funding or investment.”
Overall, students left Southeast Asia having learned a great deal about ASEAN and its members countries’ roles in shaping the future of the global community within the US-China rivalry. As second year MAIS student Joseph Baldock said, “The emergence of the “China +1” policy in response to the U.S.-China trade war and Chinese COVID restrictions has encouraged supply chains to build backups to their Chinese suppliers.” He continued, “This has brought many factories to Vietnam and brought a number of companies to re-shore in Singapore as well.”
Mango pomelo sago at Ah Chew Dessert |
Written by Betty Thai, HNC Certificate + SAIS MAIR '23