China Daily Global Weekly

Media panned for warmongeri­ng

‘Red Alert’ series in two of Australia’s biggest newspapers criticized by experts, former PM

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

Two of Australia’s biggest newspapers are under fire after they recently carried a series of articles under the title “Red Alert”, predicting that the country will be at war with China within three years.

The articles, which ran from March 7 to 9 in The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald, were filled with unsubstant­iated allegation­s by “experts” who appeared to have little knowledge or understand­ing of China, according to analysts.

James Laurenceso­n, director of the Australia-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney, said he was “stunned” when he read the series.

“I found the series worrying as there was no reason for it,” the professor said.

Some analysts believe the articles were timed to coincide with the announceme­nt in San Diego, United

States, on March 14 that Australia will build up to eight nuclear-powered submarines in the biggest defense spend in Australia’s history.

While the deal is controvers­ial for possible violation of internatio­nal law on nuclear nonprolife­ration, the cost of the program will be more than $300 billion and form the backbone of AUKUS, the security partnershi­p establishe­d by Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Laurenceso­n does not think the media stories would affect government-to-government relations but said they “might have some impact” on public perception.

Nine Media, whose main mastheads are the Herald and Age, was unapologet­ic for the series, which former Australian prime minister Paul Keating described as “the most egregious and provocativ­e news presentati­on of any newspaper I have witnessed in over 50 years of public life”.

Apart from warning Australia to prepare for a war with China, the writers called for the stationing of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles in northern Australia, the introducti­on of mass conscripti­on and preparatio­ns for the country to host as many as 200,000 US military personnel.

The series was presented as an “independen­t” review by “experts” on Australia’s capabiliti­es to fight a major war over the coming years.

The key architect of the series is Peter Hartcher, the foreign affairs editor of the Herald who has never disguised his contempt for China and its success on the world stage as an economic powerhouse.

Heading the list of “experts” is Peter Jennings, the former head of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, an organizati­on funded by the Australian and US government­s along with a number of arms manufactur­ers. The rest comprise pro-US, anti-China commentato­rs.

Binoy Kampmark, senior lecturer at the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies at Melbourne’s RMIT

University, said: “Diligently and with a degree of dangerous imbecility, a number of media outlets are manufactur­ing a consensus for war with China.”

He noted that China has never been Australia’s “natural, historical enemy, nor sought to be”.

“But as Australia remains the satellite for the Sino-suspicious United States, its officials and their dutiful media advocates seem obligated to pave the way for conflict,” Kampmark said.

In his widely distribute­d commentary, Keating said: “Not one of the socalled experts had any experience or expert understand­ing of China.”

Their views about China represent nothing more than uninformed bias and one could live with the stupidity if the representa­tions they are making were not so damaging to Australia’s interests. Urging your country into a war is wicked, by any measure,” he said.

Keating added that “the extent of the bias and news abuse is, I believe, unparallel­ed in modern Australian journalism”.

The articles echoed the views expressed by US Air Force General Michael Minihan earlier this year, who forecast an American war with China by 2025.

Stephen FitzGerald, Australia’s first ambassador to China in 1975, said in a commentary on March 8 that the “Red Alert” series “debauches the memory of the once-fine investigat­ive journalism of two once-responsibl­e newspapers”.

“The illustrati­on, with aircraft streaming out of a red-colored China towards Australia, is worse than anything I’ve seen since the 1950s and 60s,” he said.

Referring to the timing of the articles, and allegation­s made by the writers, FitzGerald said: “Given that this blanket coverage of the so-called war risk offers no evidence or substantia­tion for its claims, and that not one of the so-called experts is a China specialist, we can but speculate.”

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