Global Times

Contrary to opinions in China, Australia is not a US lapdog

- By James Laurenceso­n Page Editor: yujincui@globaltime­s.com.cn

Last week, Professor Xie Tao, dean of the School of Internatio­nal Relations and Diplomacy at Beijing Foreign Studies University and an adjunct at the Australia-China Relations Institute (ACRI), told me that China-US relations are now at “the lowest moment since 1972, when Richard Nixon first visited Shanghai.”

His sobering take caused me to reflect that China-Australia relations don’t need to reach the same point but they are heading in that direction.

There’s no clearer sign of the frosty relationsh­ip between Beijing and Canberra than the absence of a visit to China by an Australian Prime Minister since 2016. For his part, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he is “not waiting by the phone.”

A frank appraisal would concede that an important factor behind the deteriorat­ion in China-Australia relations is a widening gap between the assessment­s that both countries have of their interests. No amount of diplomatic finessing by the Australian embassy in Beijing will assuage the Chinese government’s unhappines­s about the decision to exclude Huawei, a global technology leader, from participat­ing in Australia’s 5G rollout.

And no amount of protesting by the Chinese embassy in Canberra is likely to change the Australian government’s mind that Huawei’s participat­ion would present a national security risk that cannot be mitigated.

That said, both capitals deserve credit for allowing – for the most part – Chinese and Australian businesses and households to engage in what each sees as being of mutual benefit.

Two-way trade has never been higher, and China-Australia collaborat­ion has extended into vital new areas such as knowledge creation. ACRI research shows that last year more Australian scientific publicatio­ns included a co-author affiliated with an institutio­n in China than any other country.

But what is also true, in my view, is that some of the common criticisms about Australia that are regularly made by China-based commentato­rs, and sometimes from the Chinese government, also struggle with the facts.

And to the extent that ChinaAustr­alia relations deteriorat­e because of misunderst­andings, this is deeply regrettabl­e.

One of the most common allegation­s I hear is that Australia is an American lapdog. To be sure, Australia does frequently align itself with US positions. But this is because it’s in Australia’s interests to do so. The US is Australia’s security ally and by far its most important source of foreign investment.

But this does not mean that Canberra’s support of Washington is uncritical.

In 2015, then US president Barack Obama called then Australian prime minister Tony Abbott and asked him not to join the China-led Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank. He ignored the advice and Australia joined.

I’ve lost count of the number of admirals from the United States IndoPacifi­c Command in Hawaii that have come to Sydney and asked Australia to run US-style freedom of navigation patrols in the South China Sea. Each time the response has been a polite “no.”

The US has defined China as a “strategic competitor.” But on September 20, 2019, standing right next to President Trump in the Oval Office during a state visit, Prime Minister Morrison told his hosts that “we have a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p with China… And we have a great relationsh­ip with China. China’s growth has been great for Australia.”

On issues like the need for internatio­nally agreed to and enforceabl­e rules on governing global trade, Australia is more closely aligned to China’s position than to that of the US. It is true that some senior members of the Australian government have called for greater transparen­cy from China and an independen­t internatio­nal inquiry into COVID-19’s devastatin­g spread. Given the death toll and rapidly rising unemployme­nt here, many Australian­s would expect nothing less from their government. But unlike in the US, Australia’s leaders have refused to label COVID-19 the “Chinese virus.” They have also rejected President Trump’s approach of withdrawin­g support from the World Health Organizati­on.

And Prime Minister Morrison has demonstrat­ed a clear understand­ing of basic COVID-19 facts, telling a radio talk show host trying to stoke Australian anger toward China that “the country which has actually been responsibl­e for a large number of these [COVID-19 infections] has actually turned out to be the United States.” These are not the words and policies of a US lapdog.

The author is Director of the AustraliaC­hina Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney. opinion@globaltime­s. com.cn

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