Opinion | How will China deal with region's distrust?
Greg Torode says distrust of China's intentions is pushing others in the region to find common cause, whatever Beijing may say
If there has been a running theme of this column, it has been the way countries across the region have been discreetly but actively co-operating to deal with the challenges of China's rise. It is not simply a case of a nervous neighbour of China's reaching out to a re-engaged US, but of nations big and small finding sudden shared interests in their mutual suspicions - a certain safety in numbers, if you like.
Those suspicions emerged into plain view last week with reports from Tokyo that Japanese and Vietnamese officials will meet in Hanoi next month for their first formal discussions on maritime security.
There will be plenty to interest a Beijing ever wary of anything that might suggest containment. Both Tokyo and Hanoi are, of course, locked in their own increasingly complex territorial disputes with China in the East China and South China seas respectively.
And on the agenda is likely to be not just hardware - what Japan can do to help Vietnam further develop its coastguard and maritime policing capabilities - but also software; intelligence from shared experiences of dealing with an assertive China at sea.
Tokyo has been reaching out to Manila in a similar fashion, and the latter is in turn reaching out to Hanoi. Indonesia is also active in co-operation that reaches beyond the troubled framework of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
While the Philippines and Vietnam have never been close, their disputes with China have pushed them much closer together. "We swap notes and we strategise in how to handle China," said one Philippine official recently. "Vietnam's old secrecy is breaking down and a strong relationship is developing."