Sunday Territorian

AUKUS deal to make inroads

- AKPEIRERMS­A N

FORMER prime ministers Kevin Rudd and Paul Keating have yet again demonstrat­ed the appalling tendency of Labor politician­s to treat the people of Australia as fools.

When the rotten submarine contract with the French-government backed and trade union-dominated Naval group (formerly DCNS) was mercifully euthanised by Prime Minister Scott Morrison and, most notably and decisively, Defence Minister Peter Dutton, most of rational Australian­s felt as if they had been handed a hefty bonus.

The dud sub contract signed just five years ago by the disastrous­ly tin-eared Liberal PM Malcolm Turnbull was the most costly and potentiall­y disastrous deal ever initialled.

This was pointed out time and time again by a handful of seasoned commentato­rs within days of it being announced on April 26, 2016, and I have to tip my hat to The Australian’s Robert Gottliebse­n who published his first critical review immediatel­y the news broke. My first dissection of the dreadful deal followed here on the first Sunday post the decision on May 1, 2016.

The deal was a stinker, a duff, and Turnbull and the ever weaselly Liberal MP Christophe­r Pyne worked it to save a South Australian seat by promising that some work on the French nuclearpow­ered vessels – which were to be retrodesig­ned as diesel-powered – would take place near Adelaide,

The cost, which our own defence establishm­ent lied about, soared from $50bn to a projected $90bn and rising and the delivery date similarly blew out well beyond the expected life of the already aged Collins-class work horses still in service. Two years ago, I personally asked then Defence Minister Marise Payne at an Australian Chamber of Commerce and

Industry function in Sydney, how many nations in the world relied on 50-year-old submarines for their underwater defences – but she had no answer.

The cancellati­on of the sub deal is part of the new AUKUS agreement with the US and the UK, a critical alliance with China making inroads into nations around the Indo-Pacific region. The Chinese, again, are angered by Australia as they have ever been ever since we rebuffed their attempts to take over 5G communicat­ions here with the statecontr­olled Huawei organisati­on and cancelled Victoria’s Belt and Road project. The logical demand by Scott Morrison that the origins of the catastroph­ic Covid virus be thoroughly investigat­ed provoked Chinese outrage. There was a half-hearted inquiry and following the comprehens­ive cover-up by WHO, run by China’s longtime lackey, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

Last November, an anonymous Chinese official from the Foreign Ministry provided Australian correspond­ents in Beijing with a 14-point charge sheet claiming falsely that Australia had unfairly blocked Chinese investment, spread “disinforma­tion” about China’s efforts to contain coronaviru­s, falsely accused Beijing of cyber-attacks and engaged in “incessant wanton interferen­ce” in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Xinjiang. It also criticised Australia’s push against foreign interferen­ce and permitting federal MPs to issue “outrageous condemnati­on of the governing party of China”.

Attempts by the Chinese government to interfere in domestic Australian politics have been well documented. Former Labor Senator “Shanghai” Sam Dastyari lost his job after it was revealed he’d accepted Chinese funds. Had China’s demands been taken seriously, our nation

The Chinese, again, are angered by Australia as they have ever been ever since we rebuffed their attempts to take over 5G communicat­ions here

would have kowtowed to a totalitari­an state run by ruthless Communist party headed by President-for-life Xi.

However, Xi has the former Labor prime ministers Keating and Rudd on his side. Their attempts to denigrate the Morrison government for cancelling the French subs deal and standing up to China are a national disgrace. Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald, last week, Keating (who has been a member of the China Developmen­t Bank’s internatio­nal advisory board) lashed out at the Australian media for reporting on China repression of the Uighur people in Xinjiang province.

The preachy, Mandarin-speaking Rudd, writing in the French newspaper Le Monde, was unable to contain his pomposity with his claim that he “rarely put pen to paper to ventilate such criticism” before he lashed the Morrison government for cancelling the putrid contract.

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