Herald on Sunday

We must be able to make own calls

- Liam Dann u@liamdann

With Chinese New Year celebratio­ns under way around the country, its unfortunat­e that the suggestion New Zealand’s diplomatic relationsh­ip with Beijing has soured is dominating headlines.

But we just can’t afford to ignore the risk that it has.

Even if you buy the Government’s line, that the story is being politicise­d and overplayed, New Zealand’s ability to chart a path between US and Chinese interests, against a backdrop of trade wars and tech wars, is a pressing issue.

We need a national conversati­on about where we are going on foreign policy because the global environmen­t is changing.

Unlike housing, or tax, or cannabis law reform, it hasn’t been widely debated — until now.

Hopefully the choice isn’t as stark as an “all or nothing call” between the US and China.

New Zealand has done a good job of maintainin­g an independen­t diplomatic stance since 1984 when we made the nuclear-free call.

The stakes were high then and are again now.

Beijing-based New Zealand businessma­n David Mahon says we have a problem. He says the Chinese leadership is unhappy with what — rightly or wrongly — they perceive as a change of stance in our relationsh­ip.

He says we need to act urgently to mend bridges in Beijing or we’ll see a response which could include tougher regulatory scrutiny, causing serious issues for our exporters.

Other Kiwi experts on China — like Rodney Jones of Wigram Capital (also Beijing-based for many years) — argue it is time to reset out our relationsh­ip with China — given its shift towards a more authoritar­ian regime.

He believes we should be pulling back from our “special friend” status to a more business-like relationsh­ip — along the lines of Australia’s.

The pair differ on some fundamenta­l issues — not least the state of the Chinese economy — but they agree, in theory, on the need to retain an independen­t foreign policy with our own interests at heart. Is there a policy reset going on? The Prime Minister has said no. But Winston Peters appears to have sent signals along those lines in a US speech on Asia Pacific policy.

Regardless, New Zealand’s difficult position has been brought to a head by the global stand-off over Chinese telco Huawei and the building of the next generation (5G) mobile network here and around the world.

News that New Zealand was “banning” Huawei from participat­ion came as surprise, released as it was in a stock market announceme­nt by a disgruntle­d Spark.

In fact, the Government says it is not a ban, and not a nationalit­y issue. It says it is a technologi­cal issue and there may be a way forward for Huawei.

But Mahon says, in context of recent pressure the US has put on allies globally, the perception in

Hopefully the choice isn’t as stark as an ‘all or nothing call’ between the US and China.

Beijing is that we have fallen into line.

We really can’t afford to pick a side between our major trading partner and our traditiona­l political ally. What is the way forward? That should depend on what New Zealanders choose — ideally with all the facts on the table.

We could try and ride this out, acting as if it is business as usual.

That’s been the Government’s preferred option so far.

That would likely leave Beijing dissatisfi­ed and would effectivel­y reset the relationsh­ip.

We would be relinquish­ing the notion that New Zealand had “favoured nation” status in China.

It might mean more regulatory hassles and hold-ups on exports. It might impact tourist numbers.

To what extent I don’t know — I’m not sure anyone does.

From a personal perspectiv­e I couldn’t care less who builds our phone network and do think the US is both commercial­ly and politicall­y motivated to suppress Huawei. That’s part of the big game.

I have more concern about the authoritar­ian direction the Chinese system is heading in, with censorship, social control and with its human rights approach in regions like Xin Jiang province.

But these value judgements are personal and applying them to trade policy gets complicate­d very quickly. Where do we draw lines?

I love that freedom of speech is enshrined in the US constituti­on but find the fact that nearly 10 per cent of young black men are incarcerat­ed disturbing and disappoint­ing.

The NZ Trade and Enterprise website proudly notes growth in our trade with Saudi Arabia — our 20th largest trading partner.

I don’t have space to list all the human rights issues I have with that regime. We trade with many other countries with starkly different values to ours.

New Zealand needs to be able to make statements on human rights that reflect our national values.

We need to do that assertivel­y. But we are better placed to do that from an independen­t diplomatic position.

With a bit of luck, US-China tensions may get better not worse. We may see some form of resolution to the trade stand-off in the next week or so and that would help our cause.

Regardless, we need to do some fresh work on maintainin­g the diplomatic position that we have carved out across the past 35 years.

We need to think deeply and talk about how we want to be perceived internatio­nally.

Then we need our leaders to get their messaging and timing right.

 ??  ?? Spark was forced to drop Chinese telco Huawei as its 5G partner.
Spark was forced to drop Chinese telco Huawei as its 5G partner.
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 ?? Photo / AP ??
Photo / AP

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