BusinessMirror

Australia, UK work on security ties as Beijing’s clout expands

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BRITAIN’S top foreign and defense officials will meet their Australian counterpar­ts in Sydney on Friday to advance a security pact involving nuclear-powered submarines and share notes on countering China’s growing clout.

UK Foreign Secretary Elizabeth Truss and Secretary of State for Defense Ben Wallace are meeting Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Marise Payne and Minister for Defense Peter Dutton for the first time since Canberra signed the deal in September.

Under the so-called AUKUS partnershi­p, which cover a range of new security agreements, Australia would be able to build and operate nuclear-powered submarines for the first time with the help of the UK and US. The deal immediatel­y prompted China and its neighbors to warn of an escalating arms race in the region.

For Britain and America it was an opportunit­y to grow their presence in the Indo-pacific while Australia strengthen­ed its ties with old allies as it grappled with rising aggression from Beijing and high Chinese tariffs on some exports.

In an interview with The Australian published before the talks, Truss said the security pact was a “fantastic agreement to be taking forward” and the intention was to foster closer industrial collaborat­ion.

“It is also about much closer technologi­cal collaborat­ion because this is where a lot of the battle for the future will be fought,” she told the newspaper. “It won’t just be fought in traditiona­l defense. It will be in cyber space, the use of quantum technology, and of artificial intelligen­ce. These are the areas where we do want AUKUS to go very deep,” she added.

Local media said a plan to deploy British nuclear submarines to Australia may be announced after the talks on Friday.

Strained ties

AUSTRALIA and the UK have seen diplomatic relations with Beijing grow chilly in recent years. The two have spoken out publicly against China’s military posturing toward Taiwan, while concerns over human rights abuses in Xinjiang and Hong Kong led both countries to join a coalition of Western nations in a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter olympic Games.

China has denied the allegation­s of human-rights abuses and said politicizi­ng the olympic Games runs “counter to the spirit of the olympic Charter.”

Payne and Truss signed an agreement on Thursday to “maintain an Internet that is open, free, peaceful and secure,” which will, in part, target state-based hackers and work to protect Asia Pacific nations from malicious cyber activity.

News of the UK parliament speaker warning that an agent of China was involved in political interferen­ce activities has resonated in Britain, said rory Medcalf, head of the Australian National University’s National Security College.

The UK incident was similar to events in Australia in late 2017, which led to the government unveiling new laws to limit foreign interferen­ce in domestic politics, including a ban on overseas donations. China saw Australia’s legislatio­n as squarely targeted at them, which led to a long downturn in relations between Canberra and Beijing.

“of course Australia was the canary in the coal mine when it came to Chinese influence operations in democratic politics,” Medcalf said. “The British security establishm­ent has its eye on the long term,” he added.

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