Russia Makes Inroads in Southeast Asia

Energy is Putin’s strongest card in a fuel-hungry region.

Foreign Policy
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Russia Makes Inroads in Southeast Asia

Welcome to Foreign Policy’s Southeast Asia Brief.

The highlights this week: ASEAN leaders head to Russia to talk energy, the Philippines worries about China’s designs on Scarborough Shoal, Uyghurs sentenced in dubious Thai trial, and the line that went viral from a Malaysian court judgment on former Prime Minister Najib Razak.


ASEAN Leaders Head to Russia

Last week’s ASEAN-Russia Commemorative Summit in Kazan illustrates how the Iran war and subsequent energy shock have strengthened Russia’s diplomatic inroads in the region. Nine Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) heads of state and government attended the summit on June 17-18. A number also met directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Since its invasion of Ukraine, Russia has deepened its diplomatic engagement with Southeast Asia, with energy—oil and gas or nuclear—a key part of its offer. ASEAN’s attitude toward Russia following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 was equivocal, reflecting a wide range of opinion among the various member states. Most have at various times voted at the United Nations to condemn the invasion, with Laos and Vietnam the only habitual abstentions. And the last ASEAN-Russia summit was in 2021, prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

However, an ASEAN foreign ministers’ statement following the invasion called for peace and talks but failed to mention the words “Russia” or “invasion.” Only Singapore imposed any sanctions.

This year, attitudes seem to have softened further. Energy—top of the agenda following the Iran war—was a recurring theme. Staunch U.S. ally President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. of the Philippines, acting as ASEAN chair, put on a friendly face and met with Putin.

“In an era of deepening geopolitical uncertainty, the value of steady political and security engagement between ASEAN and Russia cannot be overstated,” Marcos declared. He emphasized food and energy security as of particular importance, as well as calling for cooperation against transnational crime and terrorism.

A joint Russia-ASEAN statement after the conference called for finding areas of cooperation in civilian nuclear energy and the ASEAN Power Grid. Another statement called for ASEAN and Russia to “explore” setting up a dialogue mechanism on maritime cooperation.

On a bilateral level, Marcos told media that Russia and the Philippines were working on a mechanism for the latter to purchase Russian oil on a regular basis. He also said he was open to cooperation on nuclear energy. And he also talked up the possibility of visa-free travel for Russians to the Philippines. Meanwhile, Russia made a show of good will, releasing 24 Filipinos detained for nine months without charges in eastern Siberia.

Also making headlines was Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, long a critic of U.S. foreign policy, who said that the ASEAN leaders meeting Putin was a “good sign of our centrality and our preparedness to overcome these inherent prejudices.” This is Anwar’s third visit to Russia in three years. Returning to Malaysia, Anwar told the press the two countries were working on a long-term agreement for Russia to supply oil and gas to Malaysia.

Meanwhile, longtime Russian friends Laos and Vietnam took the opportunity to further deepen ties. Vietnamese Prime Minister Le Minh Hung highlighted energy, fertilizer, and tech as key areas of cooperation. In March, the two countries signed an agreement to cooperate on building a nuclear power plant in Vietnam. Laos also signed an agreement to explore the building of a Russian-designed nuclear power plant.

Thailand and Cambodia are both looking to boost trade ties via an agreement with the Eurasian Economic Union, a trade bloc that includes Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Armenia, and Kyrgyzstan.

Singapore’s prime minister, Lawrence Wong, making his first visit to Russia, also met with Putin, saying he wanted to see more Russia-ASEAN cooperation, and that he would work on this next year when Singapore serves as ASEAN chair.

There was a mild shot across the bow. Wong emphasized the importance of adherence to international law in the face of geopolitical instability, according to Singapore’s foreign ministry. Though in the context of the Iran strikes, this cuts more than one way.

Indonesia cut an unusually low profile. President Prabowo Subianto, whose term has been marked by numerous trips abroad, stayed at home, sending Foreign Minister Sugiono in his place as economic conditions at home look rocky.


What We’re Watching

Is China about to seize Scarborough? China may be gearing up to take permanent control of Scarborough Shoal, warned Philippine Secretary of National Defense Gilbert Teodoro in an interview with the Financial Times on Sunday. China asserts the reef in the South China Sea is part of its territory, despite a 2016 international court ruling against it.

Earlier this month, on June 11, Teodoro and his family were placed under sanctions by China. They were banned from entering the country, and entities in China were prohibited from interacting with them. China said this was as Teodoro “repeatedly made erroneous remarks concerning China” that undermined China’s “legitimate interests.”

These events come amid weeks of drama after a mysterious structure was first spotted on the reef in early June. The Philippines accused China of placing it there and launched a formal diplomatic protest. China claimed it was a “temporary scientific research facility” and on June 17 removed it from the reef. This did little to soothe worries. Scientific activity by China is seen by many as cover for other strategic goals. Some Filipino experts worry any data gathered could be used for preparations to build more permanent structures as part of a Chinese occupation of the shoal.

Former PM “made Attila the Hun look like a choirboy.” Malaysian courts have released the 809-page judgment justifying the decision to sentence former Prime Minister Najib Razak to 15 years in jail and fine him some 13.5 billion ringgit for abuse of power and money laundering.

One line, in particular, quickly went viral: “The scale of the plunder that took place (financially speaking, of course) made Attila the Hun look like a choirboy by comparison.”

Najib was sentenced in December of last year, substantially adding to the six-year prison term he was already serving after a separate case. Explaining the decision, the judge cited Najib’s damage to Malaysia and its reputation caused by the scandal, his exalted position, and his lack of remorse. Najib faces this trial and others over his involvement in the enormous 1Malaysia Development Berhad corruption scandal, in which an estimated $4.5 billion was stolen.

Despite his disgrace, the former prime minister remains a political force in Malaysia. Loyalists in the United Malays National Organization (UMNO), which he formerly led, continue to protest his innocence and agitate for his pardon and release. With UMNO looking to stage a political comeback, such a result is not impossible.

School shooting in the Philippines. A school shooting in the Philippines on Monday left three students killed and seven wounded.

Two suspects, aged 14 and 15 and armed with pistols, have been taken into custody. At least one was a student at San Jose National High School, where the shooting took place.

School shootings are rare in the Philippines. The last such incident in 2022 left three dead, including a former mayor targeted by the gunman while attending her daughter’s university graduation.

Authorities across the region are worrying about a potential rise in violence from young people and blame malign online influences. In November 2025, a bomb attack on a school in Indonesia by a student left 96 injured. Police found signs of online radicalization into far-right ideologies.


Photo of the Week

People take part in a yoga session to celebrate International Yoga Day at the Thuwunna National Indoor Stadium in Yangon, Myanmar, on June 21.

People take part in a yoga session to celebrate International Yoga Day at the Thuwunna National Indoor Stadium in Yangon, Myanmar, on June 21.

People take part in a yoga session to celebrate International Yoga Day at the Thuwunna National Indoor Stadium in Yangon, Myanmar, on June 21. Sai Aung MAIN / AFP via Getty Images


What We’re Reading

Rare reporting from behind rebel lines in Myanmar, by Quentin Sommerville and Darren Conway of the BBC.

Measles is making a comeback in Southeast Asia, and that’s an alarm bell for health systems, writes Mochammad Fadjar Wibowo in the Interpreter.

How Singapore’s “Four Floors of Whores” found God. Jean Iau explores the megachurches expanding into unexpected spaces, including the once-notorious Orchard Towers, in the South China Morning Post.


In Focus: Thailand sentences Uyghurs to death in flawed trial

On Aug. 17, 2015, a bomb went off at the Erawan shrine in central Bangkok, killing 20 and wounding more than 120. It was Thailand’s worst-ever terrorist attack.

Shortly after, two Chinese Uyghur men—Bilal Mohammed and Yusufu Mieraili—were arrested. And over a decade later, on June 11 of this year, a Thai court found them guilty of carrying out the bombing and sentenced them to death. Both men have maintained they are innocent.

The motivation for the bombing remains unclear, with no group claiming responsibility. Some think it was retaliation for Thailand’s decision in July 2015 to deport 109 Uyghurs back to China. It may have also targeted Chinese tourists, since the shrine was a popular spot to visit.

The trial, critics say, was riddled with flaws. Testifying at the trial after more than a decade of detention, both defendants claim they were mistreated during interrogations in 2015 to coerce a confession.

Reporters such as the BBC’s Jonathan Head have pointed out the trial’s many strange turns and unanswered questions.

Bilal bore little resemblance to the man caught on CCTV planting the bomb. Numerous other suspects remain at large.

The military government that first oversaw the trial said that it did not believe the bombing was a retaliation over the deportation of Uyghur men. Instead, officials blamed government opponents or maybe human traffickers.

The two men’s lawyers have said they will appeal.

Uyghurs in Thailand, often passing through as refugees fleeing persecution in China, are a recurring source of political drama. And conditions seem to be growing more difficult for them.

On Feb. 27, 2025, Thailand deported another 40 Uyghurs back to China, where they face imprisonment and persecution, claiming the deportation was an act of family “reunion.” Later that year, an art exhibition showing works from Uyghur, Tibetan, and Hong Kong artists who had fled China was censored and the curator fled to the United Kingdom.

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