INTERNATIONAL
Debt as a weapon: Trump’s tariff blackmail and ASEAN’s turning point
US President Donald Trump's tariffs test ASEAN's unity and sovereignty as Malaysia urges resistance to economic coercion and calls for a fairer world order. - ADOBE STOCK
ON July 4, 2025, US President Donald Trump formally signed the One Big Beautiful Bill at the White House—putting the administration’s debt-driven domestic agenda on the global stage. Though full tariffs were scheduled for July 9, on July 7, Washington preemptively issued notices to 14 countries, including six ASEAN states. New import duties ranging from 25% to 40% will take effect on August 1.
AI Brief
This is no free-trade maneuver—it’s open-faced international extortion.
The targeted countries span Asia, Africa, Europe, and North Africa. Notably, 9 of the 14 are Asian—all with China as their top trading partner. The move clearly signals Trump’s attempt to erect an economic perimeter around China. ASEAN countries—Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, Bangladesh, South Korea, Japan—are being used as strategic leverage points. For example, Japan and South Korea face 25% tariffs starting August 1.
Trump’s playbook is clear: mix debt, dollar dominance, and tariffs into a potent political cocktail to punish rivals, provoke fear, and test resolve. The goal isn’t redressing trade imbalances—it’s institutionalizing U.S. leverage to reshape global alignment.
Vietnam has already taken a step toward compliance—reportedly agreeing to a 20% tariff and zero-tariff access for U.S. goods—but even that failed to satisfy the White House. As Reuters reports on Vietnam’s tariff deal, stumbling into compliance provides no protection—tariff appeasement is no escape.
For Malaysia, being among the first wave is not a slight—it’s a strategic acknowledgement of regional importance.
Malaysia is being tested, along with its ASEAN neighbours. While stabilizing tax, subsidy, and investment policies under Prime Minister Anwar’s reforms is vital, this moment represents a strategic test of ASEAN sovereignty.
Trump isn’t targeting Malaysia specifically—this is a test to evaluate whether ASEAN will submit.
That is precisely why Malaysia’s resolve to stand tall matters deeply.
Between the notification on July 7 and enforcement on August 1, Trump is watching: who will cave, and who will resist. Some ASEAN countries—including Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam—have offered reassurances, but the Trump administration remains unmoved. His tool is domination, not negotiation.
Moving forward, if any of these 14 countries acquiesce, it will trigger a second, fiercer round of demands. Trump’s brand of tariff terror will not relent once appeased.
Meanwhile, the global rules architecture is fracturing:
From July 9–11, Kuala Lumpur hosts 17+ ministerial dialogues—ASEAN with China, the U.S., Japan, India, the EU, and Russia, among others. The summit will not just test diplomacy—it will test ASEAN’s collective will to resist being pawns and instead become architects of regional stability. (See full agenda: ASEAN ministerial schedule, July 2025)
Malaysia may be small—but it remains central. It has never sought confrontation; it seeks balanced influence, peaceful coexistence, and protection of trade integrity. Today, being targeted is not a burden—it’s a reminder of strategic worth.
By verifying trade coherence, improving national governance, fostering investment, boosting public communication, and strengthening institutional resilience—even in the face of inflation and public concern—it asserts itself not as a victim, but as an ASEAN strategic anchor.
People must understand: household budgets are influenced by global debt wars; job security owes to supply chains subject to dollar fluctuation. Misunderstanding this dynamic risks being divided and diminished.
United, ASEAN stands between oppression and order—between new exploiters and new partners.
The message to the world, to ASEAN, and to the people is:
This isn’t just a regional commentary—it’s a new calling for global small and middle powers. Malaysia will stand, ASEAN will stand—and a new world order that honors autonomy may yet emerge.
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.
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AI Brief
- Trump targets 14 nations, mainly in Asia, with steep tariffs to pressure China's trade partners and assert US leverage.
- ASEAN countries, including Malaysia, face a strategic test to resist US coercion and defend regional sovereignty.
- As host of key ministerial talks, Malaysia urges ASEAN to reject submission, lead with resilience, and shape a fairer global order.
This is no free-trade maneuver—it’s open-faced international extortion.
The targeted countries span Asia, Africa, Europe, and North Africa. Notably, 9 of the 14 are Asian—all with China as their top trading partner. The move clearly signals Trump’s attempt to erect an economic perimeter around China. ASEAN countries—Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, Bangladesh, South Korea, Japan—are being used as strategic leverage points. For example, Japan and South Korea face 25% tariffs starting August 1.
Trump’s playbook is clear: mix debt, dollar dominance, and tariffs into a potent political cocktail to punish rivals, provoke fear, and test resolve. The goal isn’t redressing trade imbalances—it’s institutionalizing U.S. leverage to reshape global alignment.
Vietnam has already taken a step toward compliance—reportedly agreeing to a 20% tariff and zero-tariff access for U.S. goods—but even that failed to satisfy the White House. As Reuters reports on Vietnam’s tariff deal, stumbling into compliance provides no protection—tariff appeasement is no escape.
For Malaysia, being among the first wave is not a slight—it’s a strategic acknowledgement of regional importance.
Malaysia is being tested, along with its ASEAN neighbours. While stabilizing tax, subsidy, and investment policies under Prime Minister Anwar’s reforms is vital, this moment represents a strategic test of ASEAN sovereignty.
Trump isn’t targeting Malaysia specifically—this is a test to evaluate whether ASEAN will submit.
That is precisely why Malaysia’s resolve to stand tall matters deeply.
Between the notification on July 7 and enforcement on August 1, Trump is watching: who will cave, and who will resist. Some ASEAN countries—including Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam—have offered reassurances, but the Trump administration remains unmoved. His tool is domination, not negotiation.
Moving forward, if any of these 14 countries acquiesce, it will trigger a second, fiercer round of demands. Trump’s brand of tariff terror will not relent once appeased.
Meanwhile, the global rules architecture is fracturing:
- U.S. trade norms have been abandoned in favor of unilateral coercion;
- China is shaping new trade governance mechanisms;
- The EU is currently fractured by internal pressures;
- Japan’s trade framework—anchored in the old order—is under strain in light of its July 20 upper‑house election, a key gauge of ruling-party resilience.
- This chaos underscores why ASEAN must step up, and why Malaysia must lead.
From July 9–11, Kuala Lumpur hosts 17+ ministerial dialogues—ASEAN with China, the U.S., Japan, India, the EU, and Russia, among others. The summit will not just test diplomacy—it will test ASEAN’s collective will to resist being pawns and instead become architects of regional stability. (See full agenda: ASEAN ministerial schedule, July 2025)
Malaysia may be small—but it remains central. It has never sought confrontation; it seeks balanced influence, peaceful coexistence, and protection of trade integrity. Today, being targeted is not a burden—it’s a reminder of strategic worth.
By verifying trade coherence, improving national governance, fostering investment, boosting public communication, and strengthening institutional resilience—even in the face of inflation and public concern—it asserts itself not as a victim, but as an ASEAN strategic anchor.
People must understand: household budgets are influenced by global debt wars; job security owes to supply chains subject to dollar fluctuation. Misunderstanding this dynamic risks being divided and diminished.
United, ASEAN stands between oppression and order—between new exploiters and new partners.
The message to the world, to ASEAN, and to the people is:
- Cooperation, but not under coercion.
- Growth, but not at the cost of independence.
- Endurance, but never submission.
This isn’t just a regional commentary—it’s a new calling for global small and middle powers. Malaysia will stand, ASEAN will stand—and a new world order that honors autonomy may yet emerge.
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.