Hawke's Bay Today

Diplomatic disorder in China/NZ relations

- Audrey Young

One of Jacinda Ardern’s responses to the deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip with China was to pledge that she would continue to exercise an independen­t foreign policy — implying that it is somehow under threat. That is a rather heroic and fanciful interpreta­tion of events that are becoming a serious worry in New Zealand’s relationsh­ip with China, our second-largest trading partner. This is a diplomatic mess arising not from some David-and-Goliath contest against a superpower but through a change in attitude to China, one which was never foreshadow­ed before the last election. And as the Prime Minister and ultimately responsibl­e for foreign affairs, Ardern has overseen the deteriorat­ion even it if has been the result of some cavalier actions of Foreign Minister Winston Peters. Both Ardern and Peters have downplayed the cancellati­on by the Chinese Government of a delegation to celebrate China-NZ tourism year — the latest in a series of “scheduling issues” intended to send a signal from China. It was just a dinner, she said. It had been organised by John Key, he said. Peters described the relationsh­ip

This is a diplomatic mess arising not from some Davidand-Goliath contest against a superpower but through a change in attitude to China.

with China as excellent, which means either he is deluded or he is just doing what diplomats and politician­s do — pretend that everything is fine until it actually is. But Peters has been an irritant. A year ago, he framed his Pacific Reset in terms of a response to counter China’s growing influence in the region, and he challenged China’s most important foreign policy strategy, the Belt and Road initiative. He ended the year with a speech in Washington, practicall­y begging them to get more involved in the Pacific to counter China’s influence. A National Party foreign minister could not have made such a speech without being accused of wanting to rejoin Anzus. But Peters acts as though he has some magic when it comes to China, that he can say what he likes with impunity. The poor state of affairs between the United States and China means that balancing the two relationsh­ips has become a lot more difficult. That is reason to take a lot more care in preserving the relationsh­ip New Zealand had. The ultimate test of exercising New Zealand’s independen­t foreign policy is not throwing ourselves into the arms of one or the other, but in being able to manage the relationsh­ips with both superpower­s.

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