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The United States aims to support a Southeast Asian region free of coercion where safety, security, sovereignty, self-determination, and prosperity are shepherded by ASEAN centrality. U.S. defense cooperation with Southeast Asian allies and partners, centered on ASEAN and its member states, seeks to empower the region through practical cooperation on building capabilities, exchanging expertise, ensuring free trade, and bolstering sovereignty, all underscored with collaboration and mutual respect.
The United States has worked closely with ASEAN on defense and security in the Indo-Pacific region since former Defense Secretary Robert Gates attended the inaugural ASEAN Defense Ministers' Meeting-Plus (ADMM-Plus) in 2010. And at every ADMM-Plus since, a U.S. Secretary of Defense has attended and supported ASEAN. As we mark the fifteenth anniversary of the ADMM-Plus in 2025, we reflect on the ties of friendship and cooperation among our countries and those who defend us. The United States welcomes a strong ASEAN that speaks with a powerful voice on key issues and plays a leading role in upholding shared principles and international law. These aspirations, as articulated in the ASEAN Outlook on the Indo-Pacific, envision ASEAN playing a central role in ensuring peace, security, stability, and prosperity for the peoples across the Indo-Pacific. The principles on which the Outlook is based are complimentary with those in the United States' Indo-Pacific Strategy, which seeks to promote sovereignty, transparency, good governance, and a rules-based international order in conjunction with our allies and partners.
The United States' vision for defense capacity building reflects the history of U.S. investment in the Indo-Pacific's regional security architecture, which has supported the sovereignty, self-determination, and defense capabilities of Southeast Asian countries. Since 2005, the United States has:
Key Lines of Effort
Building on this robust base of defense cooperation, the United States seeks to advance the collective capacity of ASEAN and individual Southeast Asian nations by investing in the following areas:
Timor Leste Accession: The United States supports ASEAN's decision-in-principle to admit Timor Leste as the eleventh member of ASEAN. We envision including Timor Leste in all lines of effort listed above as appropriate and in accordance with the Road Map for Accession. The United States is prepared to offer Timor Leste capacity building assistance in the defense sector to help it meet accession milestones.
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