The Chronicle

Danger of conflict real

Rudd warns China still wants to seize Taiwan

- ELI GREEN

FORMER prime minister Kevin Rudd has claimed there is a risk the world could be brought to the brink of armed conflict in the next five years unless the US and allies like Australia deter Beijing from moving to seize Taiwan.

China is still focused on taking control of Taiwan, despite moves by President Xi Jinping to stabilise the relationsh­ip with the US and Australia at last week’s G20 summit.

Mr Rudd said if China and the US were brought into conflict it would be “of an order of magnitude not seen since the Second World War”.

“The next five years will very much shape and arguably determine the future stability of the Indo-Pacific region,” Mr Rudd said at the JG Crawford Oration held at the Australian National University.

“If we fail to navigate the next five years carefully, there is a grave risk that by the late 20s and the early 30s, we could well find ourselves on the cusp of armed conflict.”

Mr Rudd welcomed the meeting between Xi and US President Joe Biden at the G20 summit in Bali, as “both sides have now spoken of the need to stabilise the relationsh­ip”.

“The bottom line out of Bali signifies that both sides have decided, at least for the short to medium term, to put a floor under the relationsh­ip, to stop the free fall,” Mr Rudd said.

However, Mr Rudd said Australia and its allies needed to be “clear eyed” about the current stabilisat­ions and “medium-to-long term preparatio­ns for potential conflict”, especially over Taiwan.

“It would be foolish to conclude, at least from the Chinese perspectiv­e, that Xi has therefore shelved his aspiration to retake Taiwan,” Mr

Rudd said. “Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, his language on Taiwan in the official readout from the Bali Summit is arguably more hard line than before.”

China could be placed to move against Taiwan as early as the late 2020s or 2030s, according to Mr Rudd, with only a joint effort to deter Mr Xi bringing the possibilit­y of avoiding conflict.

“The only way to avert medium-to-long-term conflict is for there to be an effective US, allied and Taiwanese deterrence: militarily, technologi­cally, financiall­y, economical­ly and of course in foreign policy and political terms as well,” Mr Rudd said.

Mr Rudd also raised the “real and living danger” of “war by accident” in the short to medium term.

Mr Rudd then welcomed the federal government’s steps to “take the temperatur­e down in the Australia-China relationsh­ip”, including the meetings between Mr Xi and Anthony Albanese on the sidelines of the G20 Summit.

“This is a healthy step and is restoring some level of stability

and even normality to the diplomatic discourse between Beijing and Canberra,” Mr Rudd said.

He said China should use the anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between China and Australia to “draw a line under the past”.

 ?? ?? Kevin Rudd.
Kevin Rudd.

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