Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface and acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- South East Asia
- Indonesia and Malaysia
- Introduction: Britain, the United States and the South East Asian setting
- Part I Build-up
- Part II Outbreak
- 5 The emergence of confrontation: January–May 1963
- 6 The path to the Manila summit, May–July 1963
- 7 From the Manila summit to the creation of Malaysia: August–September 1963
- 8 Avoiding escalation, September–December 1963
- Part III Denouement
- Conclusion: The Western presence in South East Asia by the 1960s
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - The emergence of confrontation: January–May 1963
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface and acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- South East Asia
- Indonesia and Malaysia
- Introduction: Britain, the United States and the South East Asian setting
- Part I Build-up
- Part II Outbreak
- 5 The emergence of confrontation: January–May 1963
- 6 The path to the Manila summit, May–July 1963
- 7 From the Manila summit to the creation of Malaysia: August–September 1963
- 8 Avoiding escalation, September–December 1963
- Part III Denouement
- Conclusion: The Western presence in South East Asia by the 1960s
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
At the beginning of 1963, the British Government received another of the body blows that came to characterize the final years of Macmillan's premiership. With negotiations to admit Britain into the European Economic Community at an advanced stage, de Gaulle convened a press conference on 14 January where he announced in unabashed fashion that he was vetoing British entry. The whole thrust of the government's international policies, formulated in the summer of 1961, had been disposed of in a matter of minutes. ‘It is the end – or at least the temporary bar – to everything for which I have worked for many years’, Macmillan sadly noted in his diary. ‘All our policies at home and abroad are in ruins.’ In parallel with the turn to Europe, the discussions in the Future Policy Committee in 1961 had shown that senior ministers had been thinking of significant reductions in South East Asia commitments. A Laotian settlement (drawing the teeth from plans for SEATO intervention in Indochina) and the creation of Malaysia, allowing the relinquishment of residual colonial responsibilities and a transfer of internal security duties at Singapore to Kuala Lumpur, appeared well on track by the summer of 1962.
The emergence of Indonesian hostility to the plans for Malaysia, however, constituted another setback to the notion of reducing commitments. Indeed, from this period onwards in British overseas policy, there was a tendency to shift attention away from the European stage to a renewed focus on the east of Suez role.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Conflict and Confrontation in South East Asia, 1961–1965Britain, the United States, Indonesia and the Creation of Malaysia, pp. 125 - 149Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001