The Guardian (USA)

Rising US isolationi­sm means Australia must become more resilient and autonomous, thinktank warns

- Katharine Murphy Political editor

Voters in the US are not convinced the Indo-Pacific should be a priority region for the Biden administra­tion, and isolationi­st sentiment in the country continues to rise, according to a new analysis by the United States Studies Centre.

The new USSC State of the United States report, to be launched in Canberra at an event on Wednesday with the defence minister, Peter Dutton, Labor frontbench­ers Penny Wong and Brendan O’Connor, and US congressma­n Joe Courtney, finds support for the US alliance with Canberra remains strong.

But the USSC’s chief executive, Prof Simon Jackman, says the US in 2022 is “consumed by a fractious debate about its role in the world, and is almost paralysed by disunity”. The new analysis draws on YouGov polling undertaken in the US and Australia last December. The US sample size was 1,200 and the Australian sample size was 1,211.

The data shows isolationi­st beliefs in the US have increased steadily from 28% of respondent­s in 2019 to 40% at the end of 2021. The new report also notes that prior to 2016, the American National Election Studies – a time series dating back to 1952 – has never found more than 30% of Americans holding isolationi­st beliefs.

While Joe Biden has stressed the importance of nurturing alliances since winning the White House, voters in the US appear more ambivalent. The largest group of respondent­s – around half or more – felt alliances made the US neither more nor less secure. This suggests, the report says, “the majority of Americans are unsure about the value of US alliances”.

As well as growing isolationi­sm, there is also pervasive pessimism. Voters in both the US and Australia also believe America’s best days are behind them (60% of respondent­s in the US and 70% in Australia).

The research suggests people who voted for Biden in 2020 “are now just as pessimisti­c about the future of the United States as they were during the Trump administra­tion, while the Republican­s’ preferred candidate for the 2024 presidenti­al election remains Donald Trump”.

Jackman says the analysis suggests the US currently lacks the national unity that leaders of Australia’s defence and diplomatic establishm­ent view as the critical ingredient­s of our national defence.

“The implicatio­n for Australia is clear,” Jackman said. “While the US alliance remains Australia’s single most valuable strategic asset, Australia must continue to rapidly evolve its own capabiliti­es, resilience and autonomy.”

Jackman said realising the potential of the Aukus partnershi­p would “require unrelentin­g focus and attention in Washington, cutting through domestic political division, bureaucrat­ic inertia, vested interests and the many competing demands for the US attention and focus”.

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The USSC analysis suggests people in the US are hesitant about sharing technology, like nuclear submarine capability, with allies, including Australia (35% of respondent­s said it was acceptable to share with Australia).

The new analysis does show there is bipartisan consensus in the US that China is a major problem. New research from another leading Australian foreign policy thinktank, the Lowy Institute, to be released on Wednesday, looks at China’s future growth trajectory.

A paper co-authored by Lowy’s lead economist, Roland Rajah, says China will likely experience a substantia­l long-term growth slowdown owing to demographi­c decline, the limits of capital-intensive growth, and a gradual decelerati­on in productivi­ty growth.

Rajah suggests annual economic growth in China will slow to about 3% by 2030 and 2% by 2040, while averaging 2–3% overall from now until 2050. The country remains on track to be the world’s largest economy, “but it would never enjoy a meaningful lead over the US and would remain far less prosperous and productive per person even by mid-century”.

 ?? Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP ?? Australian PM Scott Morrison with US president Joe Biden during the UN general assembly in New York in September 2021. The head of the United States Studies Centre says the US currently lacks the national unity that Australia views as critical for its national defence.
Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP Australian PM Scott Morrison with US president Joe Biden during the UN general assembly in New York in September 2021. The head of the United States Studies Centre says the US currently lacks the national unity that Australia views as critical for its national defence.

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