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Myanmar skips 2006 ASEAN chairmanship
Southeast Asian foreign ministers focused on ties with China, Japan and South Korea and an anti-terrorism pact Wednesday, a day after Myanmar freed their 10-member bloc from a standoff with the West by agreeing to skip the group's 2006 chairmanship. The U.S. and European Union issued statements overnight welcoming the move by Myanmar to forgo its chairmanship next year of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Myanmar's Foreign Minister Nyan Win told fellow ASEAN ministers during a retreat Tuesday in the Laotian capital that the junta would relinquish the 2006 chairmanship - and with it the right to hold that year's summit meeting - because it wanted to focus instead on "national reconciliation," an ASEAN joint statement said. EU Foreign Policy chief Javier Solana welcomed the move as "going in the direction the European Union wants." The United States, while welcoming the deferral of the chairmanship, noted that Myanmar remains far from its stated goal of a peaceful transition to democracy. ASEAN ministers, holding a six-day annual conference in Vientiane, were meeting Wednesday with counterparts from China, Japan and South Korea. A pact with South Korea to cooperate in anti-terrorism efforts was on the agenda. ASEAN comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. The Southeast Asians will be joined on Thursday and Friday for the security-oriented ASEAN Regional Forum by Australia, Canada, China, European Union, India, Japan, Mongolia, New Zealand, North Korea, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Russia, South Korea and the United States. The ARF is Asia's top annual security meeting. On Tuesday, the Southeast Asian nations invited Australia, New Zealand and India to attend the inaugural East Asia summit in Malaysia later this year, bringing them on board a drive to create a trade bloc rivaling Europe and North America. Australia and New Zealand were cleared for participation only after they agreed to sign a nonaggression pact this year with ASEAN - a condition Canberra had long shunned. India signed the pact in 2003. New Zealand is scheduled to sign the pact Thursday and Australia will sign a document of intent to join the pact, acceding to the treaty before the Malaysia summit in December. Australia free to launch pre-emptive strikes despite Asian peace deal Australia is still free to launch a pre-emptive strike to defend itself
against a terrorist attack despite agreeing to sign a regional peace treaty, but
such a military operation would be highly unlikely thanks to increased
cooperation among Southeast Asian nations, the foreign minister said Wednesday.
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