Global Times

Asia Review: Oz should resist US pressure to take on China

- Page Editor: yujincui@globaltime­s.com.cn

Editor’s Note:

After more than several years of tensions, China-Australia ties have recently seen a trace of thaw. Does the administra­tion of Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who was sworn in on August 24, have a different policy on China from his predecesso­r Malcolm Turnbull? What should be Australia’s approach to developing ties with China? Global Times (GT) reporter Sun Xiaobo talked with Gareth Evans (Evans), chancellor of the Australian National University and former Australian foreign minister, on the sidelines of the 8th Beijing Xiangshan Forum held on October 24-26.

GT: Do you think the administra­tion of Morrison has shown a different policy toward China from the previous one? Evans: I think just as Turnbull, the previous prime minister, realized that the relationsh­ip (between Australia and China) badly needed a resetting, so too has Morrison and he did make a speech quite recently to the Chinese Australian community, which made clear he understood the need to step back from the freeze period in our relationsh­ip. I think he said enough to make clear that Australia wants the relationsh­ip with

China to be on a sound footing.

There’s also a tendency with this government to be obsessivel­y deferentia­l to Washington and I do worry that with Washington now moving to a very aggressive, hostile, confrontat­ional stance with China, there will be pressure on the Australian government to follow suit. I think that pressure should be resisted. There are plenty of issues that we have with China such as the South China Sea which we can talk about in a sensible and civilized fashion, but we should not be plunging into a new Cold War that is absolutely crazy. I don’t want to see Australia go anywhere in that direction.

GT: Does the US-China trade tension concern you? Will it spread to other sectors?

Evans: Unless there is some modificati­on in current US positions, and unless there is some willingnes­s on China’s part to move further down the reform and opening-up path, I do fear that the trade war will become hotter and hotter and the implicatio­n for everyone will become very bad. Not just for Australia, but countries everywhere. This will have a very depressing effect on global economy and on countries trading extensivel­y with China.

This is the test of everyone’s good sense. It’s one thing to have a trade war and another to have a full-scale resumption of the Cold War with, in worst-case scenarios, a renewed military arms race, and even more worryingly, a nuclear arms race. This would be a terrible thing for the world to see. It’s very important that cooler heads prevail. If the antagonism expressed by US Vice President Pence, following Defense and Nuclear Posture Review earlier in the year, and in the context of the trade war exploding as well, it was not just for domestic political consumptio­n – and does really signal where the US wants to go, to have a full-scale strategic competitio­n and reversion to some of the real hostility in the past – that’s very bad news for everyone. Certainly, I hope Australia and other US allies don’t get on this path.

GT: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s visit to China last week is a sign of thaw in bilateral relations. Will Japan’s case apply to Australia?

Evans: It’s very good to see Abe and President Xi Jinping finding common ground. It’s long overdue to put the history wars to rest once and for all, and hope we’ll never see a resumption of that antagonism. It’s not a matter of Australia being guided by Japan or following Japan’s example. I hope Australia will have the good sense to develop its own relationsh­ip with China and to get through, as I think we now largely have, the difficult period of the last two years.

My own view is that it’s very important that we, Australia, develop a more multi-dimensiona­l relationsh­ip with China, not just think of ourselves as one-dimensiona­l economic partners, with security issues lurking in the background and causing potential difficulti­es. There are many areas in which Australia, China and many other countries can work together multilater­ally which are not purely security or economic issues. I’m talking about climate change, peacekeepi­ng and UN system, population movement and refugee issues. I also think we can work together on arms control issues where Australia has long been, particular­ly under Labor government­s, a very strong voice for nuclear disarmamen­t. Australia could work very well with China as a leader in moving down the path of nuclear disarmamen­t, rather than in the other direction, where a lot of contempora­ry dynamics are heading.

It would be very bad for the INF (Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces) treaty to be torn up and for this Cold War mentality to get a further foothold. The worst thing that could happen is that we move into something like nuclear arms race, not with Russia again, but with China. China in the past has been extremely cautious about going down the nuclear arms path and has adopted a clear policy of minimum deterrence, and commitment to No First Use. Beijing can be a real global leader in moving us toward a nuclear weapons free world.

What I’m saying more generally is that on these transnatio­nal, global and regional public goods issues, China has demonstrat­ed a real willingnes­s to be an active, engaged and responsibl­e internatio­nal player. And these are areas in which we can put aside other issues and work together because Australia has had a long tradition of being a creative and active middle power with major global contributi­on to make on these issues. That’s an area of really productive potential relationsh­ip for us and China, and China and other countries. We just ought to get out of the zero-sum thinking, where it’s all about economics versus security. Our overall approach should be one of strong support for the idea of cooperativ­e security and common security: finding our security with others rather than against them.

GT: The Australian public seems to not have a positive attitude toward China. Turnbull has blamed the media and his political opponents for portraying the China-Australia relationsh­ip as troubled in June. Who do you think should get the blame?

Evans: It’s absolutely not true that the Australian public is hostile toward China. There is some statistica­l evidence. The Lowy Institute poll this year found that 82 percent of Australian­s see China as “more of an economic partner” than a “military threat,” and only 41 percent of Australian­s view foreign interferen­ce in our political process as a critical threat to Australia’s vital interests. Most interestin­gly, more Australian­s trusted President Xi (43 percent) to do the right thing in global affairs than Donald Trump (30 percent). Australian­s don’t see China as a threat despite all the controvers­y and negative publicity about China in the last two years. We see it as a partner.

Media is the media, always with its own agenda and running stories that it thinks will appeal to particular constituen­cies. I don’t think the media in either country accurately reflects the state of play. About 150, 000 Chinese students are in Australia. Chinese faces are everywhere in our cities. Australia is now demographi­cally a Eurasian country.

Our two countries are bigger than media controvers­ies and misstateme­nts by senior political figures. We have a long history of working effectivel­y together. Australia is one of the very first countries to recognize China in 1972 and I personally have been visiting China regularly ever since 1976 – over 40 years ago. There are issues over which we have difference­s such as the South China Sea, but we can work through those difference­s. They are not existentia­l issues. Australian­s genuinely understand that China has a real leadership role in the world. It’s just restoring its historical legitimacy after a couple of centuries of bad experience­s and humiliatio­n. This is a country finding its feet and its pride again. We also understand that when it comes to internatio­nal institutio­ns, we cannot expect China just to be a rule-taker. It will need to be a rule-maker, including in relation to the governance of internatio­nal institutio­ns. These are the legitimate areas where China can reasonably want to have its position respected.

The Belt and Road initiative doesn’t particular­ly worry me. I do think there are issues about governance, transparen­cy and genuine collaborat­ion by the countries concerned. But overall it’s a good thing. It’s a perfect rational basis for good cooperatio­n and good relationsh­ip in the future.

It’s always an issue for Australia and other US partners that we get caught up with the demands of our alliance, but we are getting more and more willing to put that alliance in context and not to follow Washington in every step it chooses to take. Australia will make its own decisions. We are an independen­t country. China and Australia have a very good future.

GT: But do you think the US has learned the lesson?

Evans: The US has learned many lessons from Iraq, from the Libyan regime change and the chaos in Syria about the absolute need to adopt cooperativ­e approach. I do think Americans have been learning. My favorite comment on all this is from Bill Clinton, which I heard him say at a private event in 2002: “America has two choices about the way in which we use the enormous economic and military power that we now have. Choice No.1 is to use it to try to stay top-dog on the global block in perpetuity. Choice No.2 is to create a world in which we’ll be comfortabl­e living when we are no longer top-dog on the global block”. I think that latter sentiment was pitch perfect, and I only wish we could hear it now stated by US leaders. The only way the world can live in peace and prosperity is through cooperatio­n, not conflict.

With Washington now moving to a very aggressive, hostile, confrontat­ional stance with China, there will be pressure on the Australian government to follow suit. I think that pressure should be resisted. Gareth Evans

 ?? Photo: Sun Xiaobo/GT ?? Gareth Evans
Photo: Sun Xiaobo/GT Gareth Evans
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