Moreover, one factor that creates a momentum for ASEAN to accelerate their idea of building an ASCC may have come from the influence of the EU model. Since 2003, ASEAN’s plan was to create three ASEAN communities (Economic, Security, Socio-Cultural), to some extent “echoing the structure of the EU and the three European communities (Community of Coal and Steel, European Economic Community and Community of Atomic Energy), which became the European Community in 1992”. Also, at the same time, the EU was created by the Maastricht Treaty which encompasses the Community (first pillar) and adds different forms of cooperation policy, the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP, second pillar) and cooperation in the field of Justice and Home Affairs (JHA, third pillar). Due to the absence of a real community of citizens, the Socio-Cultural Community in ASEAN seems to have been created to better fit with the model of the EU, aiming to create the basis of a ‘desire to live together’ and of a ‘we feeling’. Thus, added to the two above groups of ASCC’s objects (address the side-effects of financial crises and economic integration, deal with the non-traditional security problems) one more of its objectives is set “to preserve and promote cultural heritage and regional identity.”