Southeast Asia Treaty Organization
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The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was an international organization for collective defense in Southeast Asia created by the Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty signed in September 1954 in Manila, Philippines. The formal institution of SEATO was established on 19 February 1955 at a meeting of treaty partners in Bangkok, Thailand. The organization's headquarters was also in Bangkok. A total of eight members joined the organization in its lifetime.
Primarily created to block further communist gains in Southeast Asia, SEATO is generally considered a failure, as internal conflict and dispute hindered general use of the SEATO military; however, SEATO-funded cultural and educational programs left longstanding effects in Southeast Asia. SEATO was dissolved on 30 June 1977, after many of its members lost interest and withdrew.
Origins and structure
The Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty was signed on 8 September 1954 in Manila,Template:Sfn as part of the American Truman Doctrine of creating anti-communist bilateral and collective defense treaties.Template:Sfn These treaties and agreements were intended to create alliances that would keep communist powers in check (Communist China, in SEATO's case).Template:Sfn This policy was considered to have been largely developed by American diplomat George F. Kennan. President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Secretary of State John Foster Dulles (1953–1959) is considered to be the primary force behind the creation of SEATO, which expanded the concept of anti-communist collective defense to Southeast Asia.Template:Sfn Vice President Richard Nixon advocated an Asian equivalent of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) upon returning from his Asia trip of late 1953,Template:Sfn and NATO was the model for the new organization, with the military forces of each member intended to be coordinated to provide for the collective defense of the member states.Template:Sfn
The organization, headquartered in Bangkok,Template:Sfn was created in 1955 at the first meeting of the Council of Ministers set up by the treaty. This was contrary to Dulles's preference to call the organization "ManPac" (Manila Pact) to avoid public identification of the pact with NATO.Template:Sfn Organizationally, SEATO was headed by the Secretary General, whose office was created in 1957 at a meeting in Canberra,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn with a council of representatives from member states and an international staff. Also present were committees for economics, security, and information.Template:Sfn SEATO's first Secretary General was Pote Sarasin, a Thai diplomat and politician who had served as Thailand's ambassador to the U.S. between 1952 and 1957,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and as Prime Minister of Thailand from September 1957 to 1 January 1958.Template:Sfn
Unlike the NATO alliance, SEATO had no joint commands with standing forces.Template:Sfn In addition, SEATO's response protocol in the event of communism presenting a "common danger" to the member states was vague and ineffective, though membership in the SEATO alliance did provide a rationale for a large-scale U.S. military intervention in the region during the Vietnam War (1955–1975).Template:Sfn
Membership
Despite its name, SEATO mostly included countries located outside of the region but with an interest either in the region or the organization itself. They were Australia (which administered Papua New Guinea, until 1975), France (which had recently relinquished French Indochina, by 1955), New Zealand, Pakistan (which, until 1971, included East Pakistan, now Bangladesh), the Philippines, Thailand, the United Kingdom (which administered Hong Kong, North Borneo and Sarawak) and the United States.Template:Sfn
The Philippines and Thailand were the only Southeast Asian countries that actually participated in the organization. They shared close ties with the United States, particularly the Philippines, and they faced incipient communist insurgencies against their own governments.Template:Sfn Thailand became a member upon the discovery of the newly founded "Thai Autonomous Region" in Yunnan (the Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture in South West China) – apparently feeling threatened by potential Maoist subversion on its land.Template:Sfn Other regional countries like Burma and Indonesia were far more mindful of domestic internal stability rather than any communist threat,Template:Sfn and thus rejected joining it.Template:Sfn Malaya (independence in 1957; including Singapore between 1963 and 1965) also chose not to participate formally, though it was kept updated with key developments due to its close relationship with the United Kingdom.Template:Sfn
The states newly formed from French Indochina (North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos) were prevented from taking part in any international military alliance as a result of the Geneva Agreements signed 20 July of the same year concluding the end of the First Indochina War.Template:Sfn However, with the lingering threat coming from communist North Vietnam and the possibility of the domino theory with Indochina turning into a communist frontier, SEATO got these countries under its protection – an act that would be considered to be one of the main justifications for the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.Template:Sfn Cambodia, however rejected the protection in 1956.Template:Sfn
The majority of SEATO members were not located in Southeast Asia. To Australia and New Zealand, SEATO was seen as a more satisfying organization than ANZUS – a collective defense organization with the U.S.Template:Sfn The United Kingdom and France joined partly due to having long maintained colonies in the region, and partly due to concerns over developments in Indochina. The U.S., upon perceiving Southeast Asia to be a pivotal frontier for Cold War geopolitics, saw the establishment of SEATO as essential to its Cold War containment policy.Template:Sfn
The membership reflected a mid-1950s combination of anti-communist Western states and such states in Southeast Asia. The United Kingdom, France and the United States, the latter of which joined after the U.S. Senate ratified the treaty by an 82–1 vote,Template:Sfn represented the strongest Western powers.Template:Sfn Canada also considered joining, but decided against it in order to concentrate on its NATO responsibilities with its limited defense capabilities.Template:Sfn
Budget
Average of contributions to civil and military budgets between 1958 and 1973:Template:Sfn
- United States: 24%
- United Kingdom: 16%
- France: 13.5%
- Australia: 13.5%
- Pakistan: 8%
- Philippines: 8%
- Thailand: 8%
- New Zealand: 8%
Secretaries-General
Secretaries-General of SEATO:
| Name | Country | From | To |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pote Sarasin | Template:Country | 5 September 1957 | 22 September 1958 |
| William Worth (acting) | Template:Country | 22 September 1957 | 10 January 1958 |
| Pote Sarasin | Template:Country | 10 January 1958 | 13 December 1963 |
| William Worth (acting) | Template:Country | 13 December 1963 | 19 February 1964 |
| Template:Interlanguage link multi | Template:Country | 19 February 1964 | 1 July 1965 |
| Jesus M. Vargas | Template:Country | 1 July 1965 | 5 September 1972 |
| Template:Interlanguage link multi | Template:Country | 5 September 1972 | 30 June 1977 |
Military aspects
After its creation, SEATO quickly became insignificant militarily, as most of its member nations contributed very little to the alliance.Template:Sfn While SEATO military forces held joint military training, they were never deployed because of internal disagreements. SEATO was unable to intervene in conflicts in Laos because France and the United Kingdom rejected the use of military action.Template:Sfn As a result, the U.S. provided unilateral support for Laos after 1962.Template:Sfn Though sought by the U.S., involvement of SEATO in the Vietnam War was denied because of lack of British and French cooperation.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Both the United States and Australia cited the alliance as justification for involvement in Vietnam.Template:Sfn U.S. membership in SEATO provided the United States with a rationale for a large-scale U.S. military intervention in Southeast Asia.Template:Sfn Other countries, such as the UK and key states in Asia, accepted the rationale.Template:Sfn In 1962, as part of its commitment to SEATO, the Royal Australian Air Force deployed CAC Sabres of its No. 79 Squadron to Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. The Sabres began to play a role in the Vietnam War in 1965, when their air defense responsibilities expanded to include protection of USAF aircraft using Ubon as a base for strikes against North Vietnam.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Cultural effects
In addition to joint military training, SEATO member states worked on improving mutual social and economic issues.Template:Sfn Such activities were overseen by SEATO's Committee of Information, Culture, Education, and Labor Activities, and proved to be some of SEATO's greatest successes.Template:Sfn In 1959, SEATO's first Secretary General, Pote Sarasin, created the SEATO Graduate School of Engineering (currently the Asian Institute of Technology) in Thailand to train engineers.Template:Sfn SEATO also sponsored the creation of the Teacher Development Center in Bangkok, as well as the Thai Military Technical Training School, which offered technical programs for supervisors and workmen.Template:Sfn SEATO's Skilled Labor Project (SLP) created artisan training facilities, especially in Thailand, where ninety-one training workshops were established.Template:Sfn
SEATO also provided research funding and grants in agriculture and medical fields.Template:Sfn In 1959, SEATO set up the Cholera Research Laboratory in Bangkok, later establishing a second Cholera Research Laboratory in Dacca, East Pakistan.Template:Sfn The Dacca (now Dhaka) laboratory soon became the world's leading cholera research facility and was later renamed the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh.Template:Sfn SEATO was also interested in literature, and a SEATO Literature Award was created and given to writers from member states.Template:Sfn
Criticism and dissolution
Though Secretary of State John Foster Dulles considered SEATO an essential element in U.S. foreign policy in Asia, many historians have considered the pact a failure.Template:Sfn In The Geneva Conference of 1954 on Indochina, Sir James Cable, a British diplomat and naval strategist,Template:Sfn cabled the Foreign Office and described SEATO as "a fig leaf for the nakedness of American policy", citing the Manila Pact as a "zoo of paper tigers".Template:Sfn As early as the 1950s Aneurin Bevan unsuccessfully tried to block SEATO in the British Parliament, at one point interrupting a parliamentary debate between Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Leader of the Opposition Clement Attlee to excoriate them both for considering the idea.Template:Sfn
Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia reported that Foster Dulles went to great efforts to convince him to join SEATO; however, he refused because "I considered SEATO an aggressive military alliance directed against neighbors whose ideology I did not share but with whom Cambodia had no quarrel".Template:Sfn However, this statement is misleading, as Sihanouk later aligned the Kingdom of Cambodia with Communist governments and political parties such as the China and North Vietnam, Khmer Rouge, which directly opposed Cambodia's proclaimed neutrality and contributed to internal conflict and regional instability. This contradiction calls into question the inconsistency of his "commitment to non-alignment and neutrality."Template:Sfn
In the early 1970s, the question of dissolving the organization arose. Pakistan withdrew in 1973, after East Pakistan seceded and became Bangladesh on 16 December 1971.Template:Sfn South Vietnam was defeated in war and annexed by North Vietnam and France withdrew financial support in 1975,Template:Sfn and the SEATO council agreed to the phasing-out of the organization.Template:Sfn After a final exercise on 20 February 1976, the organization was formally dissolved on 30 June 1977 during the Carter administration.Template:Sfn
Notes
References
- Nehru Has Alternative To SEATO. (5 August 1954). The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW: 1842–1954), p. 1. Retrieved 3 October 2012.
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Further reading
- Buszynski, Leszek. SEATO: The Failure of an Alliance Strategy. Singapore: Singapore University Press, 1983.
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- Fenton, Damien Marc. "SEATO and the Defence of Southeast Asia 1955-65," doctoral thesis, University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy, 2006. Discusses SEATO military planning.
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External links
- Copy of the Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty (Manila Pact); 8 September 1954, from Yale Law School
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