INTERNATIONAL

Between peace and pressure: Can Malaysia hold its ground on August 1?

CW SIM 30/07/2025 | 01:00 MYT
Malaysia faces a 25% US tariff on August 1, testing its diplomacy, economic resilience, and ASEAN leadership amid rising global tensions. - REUTERS
IN Putrajaya, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim successfully hosted Thai and Cambodian leaders in a tense but symbolically important ceasefire dialogue — held with both China and the United States observing. It was a moment that showed how a smaller, steady nation can still act as a respected bridge for peace, even amid power rivalries.


AI Brief
  • Malaysia's diplomatic success in hosting Thai-Cambodian ceasefire talks is challenged by looming US tariffs on its exports.
  • The 25% tariff is seen as a strategic pressure test, prompting Malaysia to seek reductions and protect its economic momentum.
  • PM Anwar must balance diplomacy with reform and ASEAN unity to navigate rising geopolitical volatility and safeguard national interests.


Yet behind this diplomatic success, a new front looms. On August 1, the United States is set to impose a 25% tariff on selected Malaysian exports — part of a global strategic move that goes far beyond economics.
This isn’t a normal trade dispute. It’s a loyalty test in disguise.

Why Malaysia Was Chosen - and Still Stands Trusted

The Thai–Cambodian border tension is old and volatile. That both governments agreed to Putrajaya as host — and Anwar as convener — reflects growing trust in Malaysia’s role as a fair, neutral, and reliable regional actor.

This was not Anwar’s first diplomatic overture. Over the past year, he has quietly rebuilt credibility through sustained outreach — traveling to Beijing, Washington, Tokyo, Riyadh, Jakarta, and Cairo. This isn’t headline diplomacy. It is quiet strategy: consistent, principled, and open to all sides without being captured by any.
But even this reputation is now being tested.

The August 1 Tariff — A Strategic Warning Shot

On August 1, Malaysia will face a 25% U.S. tariff on a range of exports. While semiconductors and integrated circuits — crucial to global supply chains — are exempted, the broader tariff still carries enormous implications for investor confidence, manufacturing continuity, and regional positioning.

Negotiations are underway, but time is short. The goal must now shift from simply reacting — to securing a reduction to 10%, a rate comparable to what Singapore has reportedly been promised.

Anything higher could undercut Malaysia’s recovery momentum and give the impression of weak leverage — something Malaysia must avoid, especially after earning diplomatic credit from the Thai–Cambodian breakthrough.

Why Neutrality Must Be Matched by Agility

Malaysia’s diplomatic capital lies in its domestic foundation: a multi-ethnic, multi-faith, parliamentary system that balances divergent views — and in turn enables Malaysia to mediate external divides.

But diplomacy alone isn’t insulation. It must be matched with economic agility and policy coherence.

The public protests that emerged — though limited in scale — reflect not just discontent but deep concern over where Malaysia stands in this escalating geopolitical storm. These were not mass uprisings, but signs that Malaysians care deeply about sovereignty, trade fairness, and national dignity.

Pretending they did not happen would miss the point.

The Thai-Cambodia Ceasefire: A Win, But Not Yet Peace

Malaysia’s diplomatic success in the ceasefire should not be over-celebrated. Thai military actors have expressed scepticism, and implementation remains fragile.

Behind-the-scenes messages suggest that not all factions within Thailand are aligned with the agreement. This makes the next 72 hours — and regional monitoring — essential.

Civilian casualties, refugee flows, and regional investor anxiety are just a few of the risks if the ceasefire collapses. Malaysia must be ready to re-engage, possibly with a multilateral monitoring or economic assistance package, if requested.

What Anwar Must Do Next

Malaysia has regained international visibility. But visibility is not legacy — unless it delivers durable transformation.

Prime Minister Anwar must now:

Negotiate a tariff outcome under 10%, preserving both economic continuity and national self-respect;

Consolidate institutional reform, especially in public procurement, taxation, and regulatory transparency;

Appoint leaders based on merit, not just political loyalty — this builds public and investor confidence;

Strengthen ASEAN solidarity, including proposing a regional mechanism to respond collectively to coercive tariffs — one that aligns with WTO norms but reflects ASEAN interests.

ASEAN Cannot Be Cornered One-by-One

Washington’s approach — bilaterally isolating countries — must not be allowed to succeed. ASEAN should work toward trade equalisation strategies that spread risk, diversify exposure, and enable collective negotiation.

Malaysia, as current ASEAN Chair, has both the legitimacy and the moral high ground to propose this.

From Calm to Credibility — Malaysia’s Role Ahead

Malaysia does not need to be loud — but it must be clear. In a world of strategic ambiguity, its discipline, restraint, and strategic alignment with no one camp is its most powerful asset.

But calm must now lead to credibility. And credibility must deliver coherence.

To the People: Peace Is Not Weakness

Malaysia is not a superpower. But it is no pawn.

The Malaysian people have shown that maturity is not silence — it is wisdom. They did not riot, but they are watching. They are asking the right questions. And they are learning what kind of nation they wish to become.

Final Note: The World Is Not Calming Down

The next phase of global geopolitics will not be one of resolution — but of prolonged volatility, economic duress, climate shocks, and technological disruption.

Peace will require structure. Diplomacy will require institutions. And nations like Malaysia — if steady, thoughtful, and united — will matter more than ever.

August 1 is not just a date. It is a test.

Malaysia cannot afford to fail it.



CW Sim is Chief Strategic Advisor on Greater China, Strategic Pan Indo-Pacific Asia (SPIPA)

** The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of Astro AWANI.












#US tariffs #Malaysia #ASEAN #Anwar Ibrahim #global trade #English News