This year marks the fiftieth anniversary of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations. Despite being half a century old, questions around ASEAN's identity
and, specifically, its status as an organization for collective security, remains
unanswered. Today, scholars of international relations remain divided in how
they perceive ASEAN, and how to classify the inter-governmental organization,
whether this regional order could rise to the definition of a "collective security
community". This article seeks to provide an objective, deliberate reading of the
two arguments. The author will seek to determine which of the two descriptions
fits reality more closely.