Tony Abbott reckons the tensions between Australia and Indonesia over his asylum seeker policy are merely a “passing irritant”.
But it’s bigger than that. It’s a dangerous bit of diplomatic brinkmanship that threatens a relationship the government wants, quite rightly, at the heart of its foreign affairs policy.
Abbott believes he can breach the sovereignty of a foreign nation — something the Prime Minister, worryingly, doesn’t seem to comprehend — and still sit down to cosy talks on trade; that Australia can tell Indonesia what a great friend it is to its face while insulting the country behind its back.
As Crikey‘s international affairs commentator Professor Damien Kingsbury put it to us today, you can’t quarantine issues in international diplomacy. This one counts, it stings, and getting business done while this “passing irritant” is in existence may be difficult.
For the sake of a domestic political argument — already run and won — the Prime Minister is becoming an irritant to one of our most important neighbours. The damage may not pass quickly.
We can only hope the “passing irritant” is Tony Abbott himself.
“But it looked so easy when the grown-ups were doing it!?!?”
I think you are right in that the “Indonesian issue” and the problems the Abbott government faces is much more significant than is generally realized. The signal for me is that so many Indonesians have been so public with their warnings and over some considerable time. This is so rare for a people who’s reliance on public politeness is so ingrained. If Abbott and Bishop (sic) cannot read the tea leaves, they may be in for some surprises, and surprises that will survive the next presidential elections in Indonesia.
From ‘border emergency” to “passing irritant” – amazing the difference electoral success has.
AR – well the “economic emergency” has disappeared.