The Guardian (USA)

New Zealand’s stance on China has deep implicatio­ns for the Five Eyes alliance

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

Jacinda Ardern, the New Zealand prime minister from the centre-left Labour party, has offended devotees of the Anglospher­e by indicating she is not prepared to take her country into the kind of trade war with China that Australia has found itself facing.

Asserting her country’s sovereignt­y has potentiall­y deep implicatio­ns for the “Five Eyes” alliance, the intelligen­ce sharing partnershi­p that emerged after the second world war and blossomed in the cold war. Indeed some say New Zealand has confirmed itself as the weak link in the intelligen­ce chain that it joined with the US, the UK, Canada, and Australia.

The upset stems from a statement by Ardern’s relatively new foreign minister Nanaia Mahuta, who said earlier this week that she did not want New Zealand’s complex relationsh­ip with China to be defined by Five Eyes. She suggested that New Zealand needed to “maintain and respect” China’s “particular customs, traditions and values”.

At a joint press conference with her Australian counterpar­t Marise Payne on Thursday she was more explicit still. Mahuta said: “The Five Eyes arrangemen­t is about a security and intelligen­ce framework. It’s not necessary, all the time on every issue, to invoke Five Eyes as your first port of call in terms of creating a coalition of support around particular issues in the human rights space.”Payne acknowledg­ed that New Zealand had the right to determine its own response to human rights issues, but made the case for speaking out: “We also have to acknowledg­e that China’s outlook – the nature of China’s external engagement both in our region and globally – has changed in recent years.”

The dispute on how to handle China, and through which institutio­ns, has been rumbling for some time. In January the New Zealand minister, Damien O’Connor, suggested Australia follow his example and show China a little more respect, adding that a little diplomacy from time to time did not go amiss. Now Ardern and the Australian prime minister Scott Morrison are reportedly going to meet in Canberra in two weeks to discuss the issue.

Ardern in her first term ceded much foreign policy to her foreign minister Winston Peters, leader of the NZ First Party, but seems willing to take the helm in her second term.

New Zealand, like Australia, trades heavily with China, with 29% of its export revenue dependent on China. It has been New Zealand’s biggest trading partner since 2017, leading Ardern to navigate evidence of Chinese political and technologi­cal interferen­ce gingerly. New Zealnd has signed a free trade deal with China, and over the past few months opted out of joining Five Eyes

declaratio­ns condemning China’s abuse of the Uyghur minority in Xinjiang.

New Zealand has also seen how Australia’s willingnes­s to challenge China has led to severe trade repercussi­ons. The dispute is still raging, with the Australian government on Thursday tearing up Victoria state’s Belt and Road agreements with China, deeming them as not in the national interest.

Mahuta’s remarks may also disappoint a breed of Brexiter that foresaw the Anglospher­e and Five Eyes as the future beating heart of a diplomatic intelligen­ce alliance against China. The most recent book on Five Eyes by Anthony Wells (Casemate) argues on China: “The wise use of naval power is critical to keeping the economic arteries open. The Five Eyes can become the centrepiec­e of the intelligen­ce gathering and analysis to support these operations.”

There had in recent months been some signs the UK, out of the EU but eager for new alliances in the Indo-Pacific, had been pushing the Five Eyes in a more political direction, blurring the distinctio­n between policy and intelligen­ce. In November 2020 the five countries for instance issued a joint statement condemning the crackdown on democracy in Hong Kong. The UK has also been angling for Japan, one of the countries most informed on China’s security intentions, to join the alliance.

Perhaps as the smallest of the five countries in the alliance, New Zealand could see itself being dragooned into an expanded and more ambitious alliance over which it would have little control. Ardern herself had merely suggested Five Eyes might not be the most appropriat­e vehicle with which to issue statements on China, asking aloud: “Is that best done under the banner of a grouping of countries around a security intelligen­ce platform, or is it best done around a group of countries with shared values – some of which might not belong to that Five Eyes partnershi­p?”

Ciaran Martin, the former chief executive of the National Cybersecur­ity Centre, part of GCHQ, has said that the idea that New Zealand had endangered the foundation­s of the network was to misunderst­and its specific security role. He wrote on Twitter: “Five Eyes government­s could choose to expand the alliance for example coordinate foreign policy on China. But they have not, yet, and it would be a huge change in how the Five Eyes works. For now, New Zealand is not opposing anything anyone has actually (publicly) proposed”.

But Rory Medcalf, the head of the National Security College at the Australian National University, questioned Ardern’s rationale. Five Eyes was an “extremely trusted and long-serving intelligen­ce-sharing arrangemen­t” that was always going to translate into coordinati­ng policy as well,” he said.

rybody has the right to play. Everybody has the right to joy, and that doesn’t mean only after other needs are met.”

She knows how ridiculous it can sound to face the most inhumane conditions with a ukulele or a red nose.

In the Balkans, for example, some of the kids in refugee camps told the clowns they understood play: “We play the game every night, where all at once we run to try to climb the border fences. Most of us get pulled off and beaten. Some people get through and we call that the game.”

“It’s really hard to be in that situation and be like, ‘Great. What I can offer is that I can make a quarter appear from behind your ear,” Shafer said. “The hardest thing that the clowns experience is that moment of doubt. Not, am I funny? But, is it enough to be funny?”

Yet she’s seen it work time and time again, the alchemy of meeting tragedy with farce.

Clowns are silly, but “the audience has the opportunit­y to laugh because the clown is feeling or sharing vulnerabil­ity and sadness,” she said. “The basis of comedy is that the clown is left out, the clown is frustrated, the clown is stuck. It’s funny to watch an adult human get stuck because she’s stepped in an imaginary puddle. But part of what’s funny is watching someone else struggle.”

The clowns take the audience, often stuck indefinite­ly in a place that is not their home, on an emotional journey.

“After the Haiti earthquake in 2010, the clowns played with owning that experience of being stuck and being collapsed, by getting stuck in an umbrella. That’s where this magic and this transforma­tion happens, making a metaphor and a joke of these big experience­s,” she said.

•••

Art has long explored the tension between suffering and silliness. Think of the appalling unreleased Jerry Lewis film The Day the Clown Cried about a clown in Auschwitz, or Oscar winner Life Is Beautiful about a father who pretends being in a concentrat­ion camp is a game to shield his son from reality.

The history of clowns as therapy dates back to Hippocrate­s, when doctors believed humor improved health.

In the 1800s, the Fratellini Brothers, a clown trio, worked in French hospitals. In 1971, doctor and clown Patch Adams, (played by Robin Williams in a biopic), founded the Gesundheit! Institute, a healthcare non-profit that proselytiz­es the healing abilities of laughter, joy and creativity.

In the past 10 years, medical clowning has expanded. The pediatric surgery unit at Columbia Presbyteri­an boasts about its Big Apple Circus Clown Program. A growing body of research has explored the connection between clowns and decreases in anxiety and physical pain for pediatric and adult patients to a means of cost-cutting in healthcare.

In April, Shafer sounded more excited than she had a month earlier.

Freshly vaccinated, she’s working on getting the other clowns inoculated and scouting a trip to the Mexican border, where migrant children are being held in camps.

I mentioned CWB’s plans to Brooke Binkowski, a reporter who previously worked on the border, assuming she’d make a joke. Instead she said, “I think the kids in the shelters would really appreciate fun clown shows.”

Shafer still has to figure out how to avoid exposing vulnerable kids to greater risk, but she sounds excited to go.

“It’s really important to acknowledg­e grief and also have relief from it. And as bizarre as it sounds, I think a clown show can do both.”

 ??  ?? New Zealand’s prime minister Jacinda Ardern and new foreign minister Nanaia Mahuta, pictured in February 2020. Mahuta has insisted she does not want New Zealand’s relationsh­ip with China to be defined by Five Eyes Photograph: AFP
New Zealand’s prime minister Jacinda Ardern and new foreign minister Nanaia Mahuta, pictured in February 2020. Mahuta has insisted she does not want New Zealand’s relationsh­ip with China to be defined by Five Eyes Photograph: AFP

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