Global Times

Australia venomous on China- Solomons pact

- By Chen Hong The author is president of the Chinese Associatio­n of Australian Studies and director of the Australian Studies Centre at the East China Normal University. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

In a recent interview with Melbourne’s 3AW radio, Peter Dutton, Australia’s defense minister and notorious China hawk, maliciousl­y alleged corruption and bribery in China’s recent security cooperatio­n pact with the Solomon Islands. His vicious remarks were not only politicall­y venomous, but also racially offensive when he said, “we don’t pay off, we don’t bribe people, and the Chinese certainly do.” Branded as an incorrigib­le liar by many of Australia’s politician­s, Scott Morrison, Australia’s prime minister, sided with Dutton’s rancorous babble as he said Dutton “put it pretty well.”

Dutton and Morrison could not produce any evidence for their outrageous defamation of the open and transparen­t cooperatio­n between China and the Solomon Islands. Their spiteful vilificati­on of China’s friendly relationsh­ip with the Pacific countries serves their ulterior political purpose. Such defaming is sinisterly manipulate­d and weaponized in the intense and increasing­ly vituperati­ve federal election campaign.

The Labor party has portrayed Canberra’s Pacific policy as a “failure,” trying to reveal to Australian voters the political and diplomatic incompeten­ce of the ruling party, and simultaneo­usly fabricatin­g and hyping the “China threat theory” in a bid to create a tough stance toward China.

As an election ploy, the rhetoric of the opposition party may have been more often than not exaggerate­d, but “failure” is in fact not off beam. Australia’s South Pacific policy per se has been an outright failure. Even though Canberra has repeatedly emphasized it is by far the leading donor to the Pacific island countries, its aid has not aimed to improve the economic growth and wellbeing of the local people, but solely to serve its own strategic interests. Australia has always treated the Pacific island government­s and their people in a condescend­ing and sometimes insulting manner, promoting its own ideology and political system by coercive means tinted with colonialis­m and imperialis­m, trying to act as South Pacific’s “minor hegemon.”

By sharp contrast, China has been consistent­ly cooperatin­g with countries in the South Pacific region on the basis of mutual benefit, equality and reciprocit­y, with no strings attached. The countries in the region have concretely benefited from China’s aid programs, the Belt and Road Initiative projects, and other investment and trade activities. China doesn’t impose any political conditions or interfere with the local system of governance and diplomatic policies, and it never acts like a bully like the US and Australia.

Washington and Canberra are now desperatel­y attempting to maintain their hegemony and privileges and they have been stuck in a strategic anxiety, which has been revealed in their hysterical responses to China’s cooperatio­n with the Solomon Islands. The US first demanded Australia to coax and coerce the Pacific country to step away from the pact with China. Both Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Foreign Minister Marise Payne called their counterpar­ts in Honiara, trying to interfere with the country’s diplomatic and policymaki­ng process. Two officials of Australia’s top intelligen­ce services then flew to the Solomon Islands, followed in close step by Minister for Internatio­nal Developmen­t and the Pacific Zed Seselja, to pile pressure on the Solomon Islands’ Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare. When Canberra’s blatant bullying and menacing failed to intimidate Honiara, Washington decided to intervene directly, sending the White House National Security Council Indo- Pacific Coordinato­r Kurt Campbell and Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Kritenbrin­k to the country.

The “Indo- Pacific Strategy” promoted by the US is aimed to contain China’s developmen­t, and China’s cooperatio­n with countries in the South Pacific has come into the crosshairs. The politiciza­tion and demonizati­on of China’s relations with the Pacific island countries by the US and Australia will threaten the stability and prosperity of the Pacific. Countries such as the Solomon Islands are sensibly aware of their ulterior motives, and try to uphold their sovereignt­y and self- determinat­ion. That is why Morrison’s awkward tactics in the region have proved to be a complete failure, his Pacific “Stepup” strategy is in fact a “stuff up,” as described by his contesting Labor opponent Albanese.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ Global Times ??
Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ Global Times

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