Lee Hsien Loong urged the nation to implement new strategies as the US reassesses its global role
Singapore must adjust to a far less predictable world where the US is no longer willing to “underwrite the global order,” Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong has said.
Speaking at a Chinese New Year celebration dinner on Saturday, Lee, who served as prime minister from 2004 to 2024, described the current geopolitical situation as “tense as ever” with “much uncertainty.” He attributed this to Washington shifting its focus to domestic challenges and reassessing its international commitments.
The minister argued that the US “takes a transactional approach to achieve immediate objectives,” adding that the White House views tariffs as a key policy instrument, a source of external revenue, and a means to pressure other nations into making concessions.
“The US is no longer prepared to underwrite the global order. This makes the international environment far less orderly and predictable,” he said, as quoted by Channel News Asia (CNA). He pointed to the Trump administration’s decisions to withdraw from the World Health Organization and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
“Singapore, like all other countries, must adapt to this new reality, even as we seek to maintain our strong ties and friendship with the US,” he added.
Singapore has historically maintained close ties with Washington, particularly in defense and economic cooperation. The two nations signed the Singapore-United States Free Trade Agreement in 2004, making the US Singapore’s largest foreign investor. A security agreement also allows American forces access to Singapore’s military facilities, and both countries participate in annual joint exercises such as Exercise Commando Sling and Exercise Tiger Balm.
Lee noted that shifting global dynamics, including rising US-China tensions, require Singapore to diversify its economic partnerships and strengthen regional collaborations.
“US-China relations remain fraught, with fundamental differences unresolved,” he said. “In Europe, the war in Ukraine is about to enter its fourth year. In the Middle East, there is now a temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, and some hostages have been released, exchanged for prisoners. But the fundamental Palestinian issue remains unresolved—and probably worsened.”
He warned that while Southeast Asia remains largely stable, tensions in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea pose potential risks.