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Malaysia At The SCO: A Bridge For Peace And Prosperity

03/09/2025 01:31 PM

By Datuk Prof Dr Mohd Faiz Abdullah

 

KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 3 (Bernama) – In geopolitics, it is the wisdom of a fool to disregard the juxtaposition of regional security concerns with economic ties, and this mantra takes on added significance for smaller nations as they forge strategic linkages with larger entities. This is because economic interdependence fosters stronger ties and serves as a bulwark against conflicts while driving national resilience, spurring better informed policymaking and more crucially, reinforcing multilateralism and regional cooperation and stability.

In this vein, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s participation in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Plus Summit in Tianjin signified a watershed moment in Malaysia’s regional and global positioning. To begin with, the Prime Minister’s inaugural appearance at the Summit was rather unusual: after all, Malaysia is not a member, dialogue partner, or even an observer of the SCO. And yet, Malaysia’s presence was a clear signal of how a medium-sized trading nation is seen as a bridge-builder in a fractured world.

In a gathering dominated by Eurasian giants, Anwar’s intervention carried gravitas because it was rooted in principle, clarity, and a call to restore trust in a global order that is fast breaking apart at the seams.

Anwar’s remarks struck a deep chord. “We are living through a great unravelling,” he declared, pointing to eroding bonds of trust, and fragile, antiquated institutions that now strain under pressure. For a summit conceived to uphold regional stability, his words resonated widely. The SCO has long been framed as a counterweight to Western-led institutions, yet Malaysia’s message was not about bloc politics.

Underlying Anwar’s remarks was a consistent thread: the defence of multilateralism and rebuilding trust among nations with the stress on active cooperation in trade, investment, and disaster relief, and accelerating energy transition. Crucially, Anwar emphasised that regional organisations matter more than ever. ASEAN and the SCO, though different in form, share a founding conviction: sovereign nations, by working together rather than against one another, can shape a safer, more prosperous future.

That message was amplified because it came from outside the SCO’s formal orbit. Malaysia’s voice, untethered by institutional membership, reminded participants that inclusivity matters, and that trust can be built not by exclusion but by engagement.

 

Gaza and the failure of global governance

 

In perhaps the boldest part of his remarks, Anwar turned to Gaza. He called the tragedy the starkest example of the impotence of global institutions to stop genocide, mass atrocities, and blatant violations of international law. It was a sobering intervention.

For decades, the promise of “never again” has rung hollow. The ongoing suffering in Gaza, with thousands of children, women, and men killed, exposes the moral bankruptcy of global governance structures.

President Xi Jinping’s global governance initiative is critical not just because it advocates for a multipolar world but more importantly it calls for collective responses to global challenges. The paralysis of the UN Security Council, held hostage by the veto of great powers, demonstrates how outdated frameworks can perpetuate injustice rather than prevent it.

Anwar’s call for active intervention was not merely rhetorical but a demand for accountability, and a plea that global governance reform cannot be deferred. For Malaysia, a country that has consistently spoken up for Palestine, this was also a reaffirmation that peace cannot be divorced from justice.

 

Sovereign interdependence, not fatalism

 

Earlier, at a packed lecture hall at Tianjin University, Anwar doubled down on the doctrine of “sovereign interdependence” that he had first articulated in Kuala Lumpur at a joint BOAO-ISIS Malaysia event. In laying out the intellectual and historical thread of the concept, he rejected both naive globalisation that ignored inequality, and the rising temptation of autarky. Instead, he argued for standing tall without standing apart, where nations preserve sovereignty while embracing interdependence.

This was not abstract theory. Invoking history, from Admiral Zheng He’s voyages that brought gifts without conquest, to the Confucian ethos of hé ér bù tóng (harmony without uniformity), Anwar reminded Asia that the post-war economic orders scripted in Bretton Woods and Washington, were no longer suited to the needs and wants of an increasingly vocal Global South. Asia today must, therefore, write its own chapter.

Anwar’s critique of fatalism was equally compelling. Too often, leaders convince themselves that confrontation is inevitable. “That is when war becomes thinkable, and when peace slips away,” he warned. The antidote is reassurance: giving every state space to breathe, sovereignty to be respected, dignity to be preserved. This is not mere idealism. It is the hard work of preventing conflict from becoming self-fulfilling.

 

Economic partnerships and energy transition

 

At the Malaysia-China High Level Business Dialogue in Beijing, Anwar’s focus shifted to the economic realm. Here, his message was pragmatic: Malaysia and China must deepen trusted partnerships amid global fragmentation. He pointed to the dangers of protectionism, sharpened by US tariffs, which threaten the very principles of openness that underpinned Asia’s rise. The remedy, he argued, lies in building coalitions that uphold stability and fairness.

Malaysia’s transformation agenda offers fertile ground for collaboration. The National Semiconductor Strategy complements China’s ambitions in high-tech industries. Anwar also drew attention to the looming challenge of energy. Asia’s demand is growing, and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) will multiply that demand by leaps and bounds.

For Asia, a region rich in resources yet vulnerable to climate change, the choice is stark. On the one hand, the region needs AI as a driver of growth and innovation; on the other, it cannot allow the technology to deepen environmental strain. At the same time, the transition to clean energy must also be equitable, ensuring no community is left behind.

 

Malaysia’s voice in Asia’s future

 

It is easy to overlook the quiet significance of Malaysia’s role at the SCO Plus Summit. This was not an ASEAN Summit. Nor was Malaysia present in any formal capacity but as a guest. This was clearly a mark of recognition of Anwar, the consummate statesman, whose interventions in international fora and engagements, consistently focus on universal principles of justice, sovereignty, and fairness. In an age when middle powers often struggle to be heard, Malaysia’s call gained traction as a voice of moderation, of a country trusted to speak truth to power without rancour.

The SCO invitation reflected Malaysia’s ability to act as a bridge, not only between ASEAN and Eurasia, but also between competing narratives of global order. Anwar’s China visit and SCO intervention must be seen as part of a broader strategy to place Malaysia at the centre of Asia’s unfolding story. It is a strategy rooted in history but attuned to the future, blending principled stands with pragmatic cooperation.

The world may be living through a great unravelling, but Malaysia has chosen to act as a bridge: for global peace and security, for fairness in trade, for resilience in energy, and for multilateralism in a time of division. Malaysia’s participation at the SCO has shown that when it speaks with conviction, the world listens. The challenge is to turn words into outcomes, to prove that trust, once earned and honoured, can endure beyond the tempests of our times.

-- BERNAMA

 

Datuk Prof Dr Mohd Faiz Abdullah is Chairman of the Institute of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS) Malaysia.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of BERNAMA.

 


 


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