Southeast Asia barely features in America’s new security strategy

Last Updated on December 14, 2025 11:01 pm

By Maria Siow

Washington’s latest national security blueprint may be one of its most consequential in years, yet it barely mentions Southeast Asia.

Analysts say that absence speaks volumes, signalling a narrowing of American priorities that risks turning the region into a “bargaining chip” in the US-China rivalry.

The National Security Strategy published by the White House on December 4 presents the Trump administration’s vision for restoring “American economic independence”, alongside preventing conflict in the Indo-Pacific, as the twin pillars of its “America first” doctrine.

It calls for fairness and reciprocity in global commerce and for robust measures to “prevent war in the Indo-Pacific”. But Southeast Asia appears only twice in its 32 pages – mentioned once in passing as a market for China’s “enormous excess capacity” and again as a distinct theatre from Northeast Asia.

That singular focus on China at Southeast Asia’s expense in the first such blueprint to be issued since 2022 “comes as a disappointment, but not a surprise”, Kevin Chen, an associate research fellow with Singapore-based S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies’ US programme, told This Week in Asia.

Source :SCMP

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