The Morrison government’s increasing ties to the Trump administration is, by consequence, achieving quite the opposite of its previous goal of “resetting” Australia’s relationship with China.
This has only been exacerbated over the past week by a string of Liberal Party figures including Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security chair Andrew Hastie and, tellingly, still-influential former prime minister John Howard speaking out against China’s authoritarian regime in the wake of ongoing and increasingly violent anti-Beijing protests in Hong Kong.
But it is now clear that the government is split on China. It is stuck between Canberra’s hardline and increasingly powerful security departments, and the firm middle-way rest led by the Department of Foreign Affairs.
Beijing will be more than aware of this and the concomitant rise of security hawks in Canberra with Defence Signals chief Mike Burgess named as the next chief of the Australian Secret Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and Tony Abbott’s former foreign affairs adviser and China hawk Andrew Shearer, dumped by Malcolm Turnbull, returning to favour as cabinet secretary.
What no one is saying out loud is the cold hard truth that the Australian government — and increasingly Australian businesses — are personae non gratae in China.
There has been no contact beyond polite handshaking at multi-lateral conferences between senior leaders from the two countries, with just occasional contact at foreign minister level, for more than two and a half years, effectively ending Julia Gillard’s landmark foreign policy achievement of having a leader’s summit every year.
Things are so bad — and this is pre-Hong Kong, remember — that Xi Jinping recently refused to meet Scott Morrison for a bilateral meeting at the recent Osaka G20 meeting, Crikey has learned. Trade Minister Simon Birmingham attended a multi-lateral meeting in Beijing earlier in August and was also refused an official bilateral meeting.
Indeed, old China watchers in and out of government in Australia believe the state of things hasn’t been this bad since Bob Hawke let Chinese students stay in Australia after the Tiananmen Square massacre, creating a diplomatic freeze that lasted almost three years. But that was when China made up only a fraction of Australia’s two-way trade. Now, it accounts for 24%.
The G20 slap in the face sent shockwaves through DFAT, which was already acutely aware of the dire state of affairs. After meeting with Payne in Beijing during the trade meeting, China’s top diplomat Wang Yi described any progress on repairing bilateral ties ass “unsatisfactory”.
Scott Morrison is obviously receiving that message, as he has twice tried to hose down China’s parliamentary critics in the past week — all the while not quite putting them to bed.
The recent meeting between the PM, Foreign Minister Marise Payne, Defence Minister Linda Reynolds — whose impressive Army Reserve background marks her out as a potential hardliner as she finds her feet — and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo only worsened “optics” in the eyes of Beijing. This perceived closeness to the US will only make already poor relations worse.
At least three major Australian businesses are stuck waiting to see regulators in China for major deals, and coal freighters full of Australian coal continue to sit off China’s coast. Critically, there is little prospect now of the minimalist China-Australia free trade agreement — a deal consistently promoted as a major Coalition achievement despite China getting by far the best side of the deal — being regularly upgraded, as originally planned.
Canberra, at least at the political level, has long coasted along the Pollyanna theory that security and trade can be compartmentalised. That is not at all how Beijing sees the world and it is driving this bus. As one senior diplomat noted, “It will get to the stage where China does not see any point trying to restore its relationship with Australia. Why talk to the monkey when you can talk to the organ-grinder?”
As this publication has consistently noted in recent years, and my colleague Guy Rundle has reiterated this week, Australia’s China policy is a mess. At least, as Peter Hartcher in the Nine papers has noted, we are now talking about it.
As if all of this were not urgent enough, all considerations about where to go next are on hold as the protests in Hong Kong continue apace as the level of violence by the authorities — including against journalists — is ratcheted up. Where things in Hong Kong will end remains uncertain but some sort of drastic action by security forces increasingly looks inevitable.
Troublingly for Australia, the Hong Kong protests have spilled into the country’s vast international student cohort — about 30% of whom are Chinese — with pro-Beijing elements launching violent attacks in a growing number of campuses against peaceful pro-Hong Kong protesters.
Back in Hong Kong, the protests are posing a real threat to the special administrative region’s economy. Tycoons are driving capital flight, and Hong Kong’s importance as a money funnel for China into the rest of the world should not be underestimated. All bets are off in a city where 100,000 Australians live and at least 6000 Australian businesses operate. Whatever fallout eventuates, it will be felt here and more broadly across the region.
At that point, Canberra will still be stuck with the far thornier issue of how to envision the bigger picture with Beijing.
I can only agree that government policy is likely to become contrary to our national interests. US policy towards China is clearly to block the possibility that China will become a global technology leader. China’s growth and technological development is not an attack on the US, so we have absolutely no reason whatsoever to line up with the US in confronting China. Yet the government is clearly preparing for that.
We should by now have refused to continue to be a US lap dog or the monkey for a US organ grinder, whichever is your preferred metaphor. This government will let us down by failing to have moved on.
I have had great difficulty working out from MSM reports what on earth the protests in Hong Kong are about. I can recommend the ABC’s Q&A program for revealing the answer. The initial protests were an entirely understandable response to a proposal that would allow Hong Kong residents to be tried in China for crimes in China under a legal system with an over 99% conviction rate, equaled only by Japan in East Asia. That protest succeeded and its leaders are lying if they say there is any way to prevent the reintroduction of the law short of Hong Kong leaving China or establishing a full blown electoral democracy in place of the government system agreed between the UK and China in 1999. While student leaders seem to think that international opinion will prevent their suppression, there is no way it will, anymore than it prevented the Tien-an-men suppression of a similar democracy movement in Beijing in 1989, or that any attempt to leave China will not be similarly suppressed, regardless of international opinion. The students should conduct a strategic retreat, after demonstrating how much support democracy has among the young in Hong Kong, so that they can exert pressure on the Hong Kong government down the track for better outcomes for Hong Kong residents. That is the best they can hope to achieve.
Australians, of course, should take the earliest opportunity to remedy the mistake we made in May. I know we should always pretend that the electorate gets it right but, of course, in reality, sections of the public can be taken in by Clive Palmer propaganda and fear of losing mining jobs. We have a government that is ruining our trade relations with China for no good reason and blocking our best response to the threat to future generations from climate change. I think justice to future generations demands nothing in the way of debt reduction, if we keep taxes on the present generations reasonably high, but a lot in the way of not enriching ourselves by taking our carbon profits today without restraint so our grandchildren can be poorer in 2050 and possibly face a crisis of civilisation.
This is what happens when regional Queensland is left to elect the ‘Kiddies’ to Canberra and in turn those intellectual dwarfs (with apologies to all small people) Morrison and Dutton and Hastie and Porter and Reynolds are left to receive policy advice from the titans of foreign and trade policy analysis at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (incidentally, has anyone heard from Payne late apart from a few comments on Consular issues?)
Paul Barrett made more sense in a few minutes on ‘The Drum’ last evening than any of the abovenamed have made in the past six years
Instead of having a positive relationship with the world’s largest economy that is currently responsible for a third of the world’s economic growth. We have sided with a financially and morally bankrupt US government that is merely a tool for wall street and the military industrial complex. Australia is just a pawn in the great game and Australian voters are too ignorant to understand what’s going on.
The US is using Australia to produce rare earth minerals as China has refused to sell to the US due to their constant aggression around the world. The US will continue extracting Australia’s minerals as they see fit and we will get scraps in return. They’re also making themselves at home on all our military airfields and are building a new military base in Darwin. We’re the new frontline for the US’s war on China. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3hbtM_NJ0s
Our economy and environment is at breaking point and when the housing bubble bursts and wall street demands payment on Australia’s mortgage backed bonds they are going to try and stitch us up with an IMF loan. The world’s sovereign bond market is in free-fall.
The sooner the US loses influence in Australia and around the world the sooner the world can move towards a co-operative and more optimistic future. If business continues as usual, Australia is going to fall very hard whilst Asia and Africa move on without us.
It has been monumental stupidity to lose so much of our technological and manufacturing ability over the past few decades, especially in high tech, industrial and transport areas. Not only has it deskilled and de-disciplined young Australians, but the loss of associated manufacturing infrastructure greatly compromises our defence arrangements.
I wonder if Morrison has Dutton and Coleman working on a plan to receive all those ‘refugees’ should things go horribly wrong in Hong Kong?
They’ll be worried about how many applicants are genuine refugees and how many are CCP plants. Perhaps we’ll only take the Christians.
No, we will take all those who have been allowed to buy their bolthole here, including the many CCP plants.