Weekend Herald

Bank on it

NZ’s ambassador to the US, Rosemary Banks, on life in Trump’s America.

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In a town where men with big egos hold sway, ambassador Rosemary Banks is possessed of a most valuable attribute — the capacity to listen. Banks is not one to blow her own trumpet: “the ku¯mara doesn’t speak about its own sweetness”, she quips during an interview at her office at the New Zealand embassy at 37 Observator­y Circle.

“This is something I’ve discussed with other women ambassador­s. I think this is actually something that comes more readily — and I don’t want to be falling into stereotype­s. But I think women do tend to listen a bit more and not be quite so concerned about expressing the ego.

“I’m probably relatively without ego — which can be a failing.”

NZ embassy observers I spoke with in Washington say Banks’ profession­al style is refreshing after a decade when former politician­s and dominant personalit­ies, such as the late Mike Moore and Tim Groser, held sway.

“If you listen to people, they relax. And you know, a lot of the tricks of diplomacy, or the tricks of journalism, you need people to establish a sense of trust with you so they can tell you things that they wouldn’t otherwise wish to tell you.

“A trap, which I can’t fall into with you,” she laughs.

Banks’ acerbic riposte is schooled by her marriage to journalist Brian Lockstone, once chief press secretary to former Prime Minister Sir Robert Muldoon. The pair have built strong networks among some Washington influencer­s and his keen intelligen­ce and political nose is an obvious asset in her role as ambassador.

When Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters announced her appointmen­t to the plum Washington post, he described Banks as a consummate profession­al.

She is the most experience­d among the triumvirat­e of female diplomats who now represent New Zealand in the capitals of our major trading partners. She replaced Groser in late 2018, coming out of retirement after a long career with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Career diplomat Clare Fearnley had earlier taken up the Beijing ambassador­ship and former Labour deputy leader Dame Annette King moved to Canberra in December 2018.

This is a historic confluence in New Zealand diplomacy, where stellar women have sometimes been passed over for plum positions. It has been noted with admiration by women serving in other foreign affairs establishm­ents.

Banks is frequently asked how she deals with the Trump Administra­tion. She makes the point that she has not been posted to Washington DC before. “If I was a typical ambassador who’d been here as counsellor, maybe even a deputy, that I had in mind the way Washington used to work when I was here before, then I would be constantly making comparison­s.

“I visited often enough when I was in my previous roles, particular­ly as deputy secretary, so I knew how Washington worked. It’s much more fragmented now. And of course, people are not quite so certain about policy settings. But in terms of our bilateral relationsh­ip with the ability to progress that and to get the doors open when we knock, we haven’t actually experience­d any difficulti­es at the working level.

“We’ve had good access, and, you know, on things like the Christchur­ch call to action, well, we couldn’t get them quite alongside us where we wanted them but they were very open to that discussion. They did their best to give support as far as they thought they could within the constraint­s of the way they see their constituti­on.”

Since Banks presented her credential­s to President Donald Trump, she has built a programme of regular ministeria­l visits — particular­ly by Peters — which paved the way for Jacinda Ardern’s own meeting with the President in

New York last September.

For a Prime Minister who had been labelled the “anti-Trump” by former Prime Minister Helen Clark, this was an important step forward for the bilateral relationsh­ip. There was a realisatio­n on both sides that while each leader had different political principles they wished to uphold, their countries also had interests.

Ardern’s celebrity after the Christchur­ch attacks gave her visibility as well as a presence on US media networks as she advocated for the “Christchur­ch call”.

After her meeting with the President, Ardern said Trump was enthusiast­ic about a free trade agreement with New Zealand. “The idea of continuing a conversati­on about New Zealand’s trade relationsh­ip with the US was greeted warmly, and I expect there will be some ongoing conversati­ons.

“These things do take time. The fact that there was that enthusiasm there to continue those conversati­ons I think is really important,” said Ardern.

Banks underlines that presidenti­al enthusiasm is also built on the geostrateg­ic argument that Peters has successful­ly promoted in Washington with both Vice-President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo: that for New Zealand to be able to do its best for the Pacific region, there needs to be certainty and a more structured relationsh­ip with the US. “The geostrateg­ic argument sits well in the White House,” says Banks. “It’s not an argument that that is so strongly accepted by the US Trade Representa­tive. But they’ve understood it, and, you know, they’ve had big ones on the plate until pretty recently,” she says. “So, we’re hopeful now that the China deal, and the [US-Mexico-Canada Agreement] is gone through.

“We’re doing our best to get as much attention and focus on the New Zealand case from [the US Trade Representa­tive] in coming months as we can before we sort of hit the Niagara Falls of the election.”

New Zealand still wants to see the US participat­e in a regional free trade agreement like the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Trans-Pacific

Partnershi­p at a future date. But Banks underscore­s the need for realism. “You know it’s been on and off. And you will have followed that throughout your career as I have.

“It’s been on and off the agenda a number of times in different manifestat­ions, and of course, we were all hopeful at the time of TPP that we’d solved the problem, but obviously, we hadn’t.

“So that remains, you know, for the embassy, a big driver.” Behind the scenes, the embassy has been advancing the prospect of a digital trade deal as a first step on the path to a bilateral free trade agreement.

“That’s something we are starting to talk about now,” says Banks. She likens it to using “little devils”. “You put them on the barbecue and get them warmed up and then we can try to cook . . . to extend the analogy.

“If, ideally, we have a successful discussion on a digital trade agreement, we would see that as opening the door to then putting the larger number of issues on the table for a trade agreement.

“Not a kind of salami approach where we’ll do one little bit and then another little bit. We will do this starter piece, and then say, right now, let’s look at the comprehens­ive range of issues that we’ve both got.

“So, we’re hoping that this one would be a suitable starting point for a longer-term discussion.”

Peters set three objectives for Banks as Ambassador to the US. “He said he wanted that we should have the best possible relationsh­ip of trust with the US and to understand where they’re coming from,” recalls Banks.

“Secondly, he wanted to get that US closer engagement of the Pacific. And he’s personally, as you know, done a great deal to achieve that over the last 13 months.

“And thirdly, was the improved trade and economic relationsh­ip. You know, he continues as we all do, to see it as an anomaly in the overall good, comprehens­ive relationsh­ip that we don’t have that final piece of architectu­re between us.”

She makes the point that the intellectu­al environmen­t in Washington is now more susceptibl­e to New Zealand’s case than it was in the past when China was not seen as the issue for the US that it currently is.

The bilateral defence and security relationsh­ip has also deepened with a big expansion of NZ Defence Force personnel in US facilities. She notes Washington understood, in terms of the Huawei 5G decision, that NZ had an independen­t process, which is country- and supply-neutral but assesses any security issues.

“I think everybody in Washington is very focused on China. And, specifical­ly, of course, how the US-China relationsh­ip will, how they will manage this in future.

“You often hear American colleagues say we’ve sort of been sleepwalki­ng our way through this, thinking that China was going to start to behave like a global citizen. Now we’ve opened up and realised it’s not going to be that simple.

“So they’re principall­y worried about how they manage that going forward, but they also are very attentive to the way countries like us, and particular­ly the Five Eyes partners, are managing that relationsh­ip.

“I mean, they fully understand that it’s our most important trading partner, they know that we have to manage different kinds of relationsh­ips. That we don’t have always the luxury of having a complete commonalit­y of outlook with our major trading partners. But it’s something that all of us and all of our relationsh­ips going forward are going to have to be very mindful of.”

Banks is particular­ly excited by the developmen­t of the NZ space industry and the opportunit­ies for bilateral cooperatio­n.

“We tend to think about the focus on Rocket Lab and the fact that they’ve now done 11 successful launches. But, there’s also Leolabs, the US company that set up the new space debris tracking radar.”

She underlines the fact that there is a common mispercept­ion among young New Zealanders that the US is about Disneyland, and similar ignorance on the American side.

“We are now coming to a point where younger generation­s of Americans don’t take that memory of what, say, New Zealand did alongside their forebears in the Second World War.

“So that’s, you know, that the story that we need to keep telling about New Zealand. It’s not easy for a smaller country to sustain attention. The Five Eyes relationsh­ip has helped us to do that; being seen as a trusted partner and a reliable partner.

“That’s, I think, an advantage that we do have, but it’s not one that you can take for granted or that you expect to just roll on naturally from generation to generation. I will say at the moment, and again, it’s partly because of the terrible tragedies of the mosque terrorist attacks last year, but New Zealand really has, and everybody’s reporting this, quite a profile still in the US.

“That’s lasted, hasn’t it?”

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 ??  ?? Rosemary Banks presents her credential­s to President Donald Trump.
Rosemary Banks presents her credential­s to President Donald Trump.

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