Australian engagement with Asia is not a temporary enthusiasm. Asia is not a flavour of the month. We have not been on a 10-day package tour from which we can return with a couple of T-shirts and a handful of colour prints for the album. Australia can’t bolt on the Evinrude and motor off to the coast of California.
Paul Keating, March 1998
Under Prime Minister Scott Morrison, however, Australia apparently can bolt on a nuclear reactor and motor over to California, as part of a return to the glory days of white anglophone imperialism, seeking — to paraphrase Keating’s famous words — security from Asia, not in Asia.
Keating’s savage assault on both the government’s surrender of sovereignty in any mooted nuclear submarines deal — when/if it happens, some decades hence — and Labor’s supine response, is missing some important caveats and contexts.
Keating never had to deal with a more aggressive China when he was prime minister — for that matter, while the rise of China was of strategic importance to Australia’s national security considerations, no prime minister until Malcolm Turnbull had to really deal with it.
Indeed, despite his latter-day conversion to China hawk, Turnbull’s predecessor, Tony Abbott, cheered on by the likes of Paul Kelly at News Corp, was even more of a Sinophile than Keating. Keating in post-political life has traditionally been angrily dismissive of criticisms of China’s systemic, industrial-scale human rights abuses, urging us to instead focus on its remarkable achievement of lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty.
Casting China’s actions in the South China Sea as merely “unwise”, as Keating did, seems an understatement of extraordinary magnitude. And belting Penny Wong for her complicity with the Coalition on portraying China as a threat is wholly unfair given her repeated criticisms of the government for whipping up fear of China for domestic political gain — and being accused, in effect, of treason by News Corp for doing so.
But Keating makes some unanswerable points: it is the US that invades other countries (with Australia dutifully carrying its spears as it does so), not China. And, most particularly, “so poisonous are the Liberals towards China they are prepared for Australia to lose its way in the neighbourhood of Asia, in search of Australia’s security from Asia, by submission to yet another strategic guarantor”.
This shines a light on a key distinction between the participants in this debate — Keating on one side, Labor, the Coalition and media hawks on the other. Keating’s views — however problematic his reluctance to critique Beijing’s behaviour — spring from a coherent philosophy that links foreign policy and economic policy (and, Keating would argue, domestic policy on issues such as reconciliation). Seeking security in the region, not from the region, isn’t a slogan but sums up a complex vision of Australia’s history, geography and economy — one that the subsequent economic rise of China has wholly vindicated.
Those who weren’t around in the 1980s and early ’90s, or can’t remember them, won’t be aware of just how contested and criticised Keating’s emphasis on regional engagement was — his efforts to step up Australia’s relationship with Suharto-era Indonesia, his engagement with Japan (then at the height of its economic power, though just beginning its slide into the lost decades), his conviction that Australia’s future lay with its geography, not its history.
With 21st century Australia relying on China for exports as varied as iron ore and education, it’s unthinkable now that it would ever have been a matter of dispute. But most assuredly it was, especially from the Coalition — and especially given John Howard was best known before becoming prime minister for criticising Asian immigration to Australia.
Succeeding Keating, Howard would say that Australia didn’t have to choose between our history and geography, and gave effect to that by following the US in its illegal invasions while engaging with China — war criminal George W Bush and human rights abuser Hu Jintao addressed Parliament on consecutive days in 2003.
Along the way, Howard ditched the more complex demands of multilateralism (until given the chance to host APEC) in favour of the Coalition’s preferred approach of bilateral engagement. A decade later and Abbott was still joined at the hip with the US but boasting of his free trade deal with Xi, promising the Chinese an extradition treaty and damning anyone who criticised the deal as racist. A few years later still and China is now the great existential threat that requires an alliance of white powers.
There simply is no coherent foreign policy (let alone combined foreign/domestic policy) within the Coalition; it is driven by domestic political opportunism only — and at the expense not merely of relations with major powers like France, but of our own region, with the government now desperately trying to reassure regional partners about the implications of AUKUS, which, as Wong reminded us today, is essentially a plan to maybe do stuff involving technology.
Labor’s challenge is to articulate how its “yes, but” response to AUKUS is founded in something more coherent than the Coalition’s “we’ve always been at war with east Asia” line. But its days of being able to lead foreign policy debate in the face of resistance from the media and the Coalition — which Keating did so expertly — are long behind it.
Australian reality. Don’t like it? Tough, it’s not changing anytime soon. But, as Labor learnt at the last federal election, the electorate is greedy, xenophobic, easily frightened and hungry for security speak. Why would they not try and deliver on those four points, if they do want to be in power again?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2013/05/07/map-more-than-half-of-humanity-lives-within-this-circle/
Agree, with an ageing electorate i.e. above median age vote is most important, hence, constant spooking and misleading via consolidated legacy media; Labor etc. does not have access to, let alone fair coverage, the same platform that is given to LNP etc. for free PR.
Great analysis BK. Thanks. Nothing quite like a missive from the pen of PJK to set out the realities. The contrast with the total incoherence of LNP on so many issues, but especially on foreign relations, could hardly be greater.
I am a fan of Keating from way back, and he always cuts to the point, and is good for a funny barb – but something he didn’t have to deal with way back when, was the partisan and lethal “Murdoch and mates” media machine – and I am ashamed to say that PJK helped make it happen back when he and Bob changed the media ownership laws in ’86.
God I would love to know WHY they did that?!? And how different politics and our entire society would be, overall, if that terrible terrible change hadn’t happened.
Fast forward to today, and you have a Labor party scared witless of saying anything that might sic the media attack dogs onto them, and an LNP that has an almost unassailable permanent advantage in presenting themselves as the natural government.
Today’s Labor have learnt the hard way, that staying a small target while letting an incompetent LNP government shoot itself in the feet, arms and everywhere else, is probably the most likely path to a victory.
However, if Labor CAN get in, then, with enough seats and willpower and public insistence, one of the first things on the to-do list is to repeal those media laws, de-claw the partisan barons that control so much of what gets broadcast, and if possible, boot Murdoch out of the country for good.
Maybe then, we could go back to bolder and more coherent policies, and a better standard of political debate, and I hope PJK is still around to see such a thing.
The answer is simple.
Keating and Hawke looked on while Whitlam was removed by Betty Windsor and co and saw how after the event, Murdoch managed to turn the furious outrage and public anger into an election win for the treasonous Coalition.
The deadly duo Hawke and Keating decided there and then never to repeat the folly of Whitlam in not kowtowing to America.
In fact Hawke went one better, ensuring his non removal by Murdoch and America by informing on Australia for the Yanks.
We will never see this again:
Murdoch’s overt interference in the 1975 campaign was so bad that reporters on the Australian went on strike in protest and seventy-five of them wrote to their boss calling the newspaper ‘a propaganda sheet’ and saying it had become ‘a laughing stock’ (Wright 1995). ‘You literally could not get a favourable word about Whitlam in the paper. Copy would be cut, lines would be left out,’ one former Australian journalist told Wright’ (1995).
~ Tony Wright, ‘On the Wrong Side of Rupert’, Sydney Morning Herald, 13 October 1995.
To go on strike over wages and conditions is one thing understood by all, but for 109 journalists to go on strike during a Federal election campaign is indicative of just how bad the editorial interference was; but unimaginably back then, it was going to get even worse as the decades rolled on.
True enough LoL and giving Murdoch even more power was a horrific own goal…but there must be an answer and the next Labor government better have a secret plan ready to nobble the Murdoch media once and for all.
Just a question, why did Morrison hand $30 million taxpayer dollars to Murdoch. There were several reasons given by Morrison and cronies, but none were valid in my opinion. https://thenewdaily.com.au/entertainment/tv/2017/07/19/foxtel-sport-funding-documents/
It shows that being politically aligned with a superpower is more dangerous than being unaligned. As an unaligned nation you are not immune from interference in domestic affairs – but maybe not subjected to the regular humiliations that you describe to keep you at peak friendly
Murdoch cannot accept that China resisted his media ‘charms’ & continues to behave like a lover scorned. STAR TV failed to become a power player like his other media organisations in the UK, USA & Oz. China’s potential audience was massive but Murdoch can now merely dream of what he’s missed out on. Whenever he sees the opportunity to take a swipe at China, he goes for it. The bitter taste ever in his mouth.
Deng the little Digger did make Murdoch look like the stupid old man that he is when it comes to women, that also probably promoted his China syndrome
In one of his mordant quips, PJK said the media moguls could be Queens of the Screen (TV) or Princes of Print (dead trees) but not both.
Now they are but its more or less irrelevant because there are so many other platforms and modes of communication consumption.
Yes and no, it was pre digital and since then, through mostly LNP salami tactics on behalf of legacy media, we have witnessed consolidation and homogenisation of political agitprop, dog whistling, infotainment etc. masquerading as news and current affairs, crossing media types, regions etc.
Further, thanks to our monocultural media, Australia (like the UK) has been overcome by imported GOP Republican sociocultural wedge issues attractive to ageing voters, masking deep seated radical right libertarian ideology, that future generations will have to deal with aka Brexit.
This has been made possible now by scripted dog whistling masquerading as national messaging, as opposed to local based media and reporting; everyone gets the same dog whistle not just an electorate or few. This was exemplified by QLD’ers being driven to fear and anxiety via Dutton because people in Melbourne could not go out for dinner due to Sudanese gangs….
As observed by both Baroness Warsi former UK Tory Head, and US legal academic Prof. Ian Haney-Lopez, strategised dog whistling of wedge issues over decades, is tearing apart the middle class and the nation, all for political power (allowing unpalatable radical right libertarian policies to be enacted); ably supported by ‘collective narcissism’ of voters.
Many on this forum wax lyrical about independents and minor parties yet it was the minor party of Nick Xenophon that handed over to Murdoch all the media platforms he ever wanted
Xenophon had a solid history of voting with the Coalition.
As do most independents and minor parties
Goes with his name
I wish for the same but our small country is too limited in its range of media barons…it’s proven again and again that fear and scandal sells papers. Many of our corporates have shown their indifference to our nation- lapping up Jobkeeper payments- we are turning into America with these displays of shameless entitlement and greed. The media has to keep us distracted so the rorting can continue.
Hawke hated Fairfax for some reason.
Excellent analysis. Thanks, Bernard.
The other element to this is the principle of bipartisanship in foreign policy, which Labor generally respects but the Coalition doesn’t. This principle is worth defending.
So it is a pity Mr Keating didn’t hold off his criticism of Labor until he sees how they operate when next in office. Recent comments by shadow foreign affairs and defence ministers – Wong, O’Connor, Conroy and Keogh – suggest that is likely to be more in line with the Keating doctrine.
If Mr Keating waited to see what Labor does when next in Government it seems likely that anything he said would be overtaken by events, and possibly would have to be posthumous, I despair of Labor when the coalition makes such a colossal foreign policy blunder and Labor’s response is negligible.
Time for 4 year fixed terms in Federal Parliament. Then we don’t have to waste the last year or so on pathetic political gotchas leading to an election that maybe soon, or not.
Agree entirely. The idea that an incumbent Government can go to election many Months short of their term to take advantage of a possible spike in their popularity based on maybe one Policy is quite deceitful, and is definitely not in the best interests of the wider community.
Politicians would still play the clock and the games that go with it
Unfortunately making a better Australia is lost to staying in government- no matter what
Agree, what would an extra year do to that sort of pathological politics, but put such behaviour off for a year, and an extra year for the rubes to forget what got screwed up, a year earlier, by the government.
In fact there is no 4 year fixed term even at state level – the legislation allows for earlier elections subject to specified conditions.
It is absurd that federal government has such a short maximum term – which only the worst ever run to – given that its responsibilities are/should be limited to major undertakings such as national infrastructure.
The UK, France & Canada have five year terms but rarely run so long unless utterly crapped out – Major, de Gaulle or Harper – but the democratic/eurpiod norm is generally 4 years. Only the US is so rigid on this point.
However, many of the northern euroids with 4 year fixed terms, can play musical chairs all they want but the term of government is fixed.
As they are usually also minority or coalition governments the frequency of disruptive (s)elections and the likelihood of radical change are greatly reduced.
Labor is terrified of being wedged by the LNP on security. What gets me is most Australians are so fearful of the world. National security this, national security that. One would think we are living in an era where Genghis Khan and his hordes are about to invade Australia. Why is that?
We remain a colony because of our adolescent insecurity. Ever since the only successful invasion in 1788, we’ve been terrified of other nations…french, dutch, germans Russians more than once, japanese, communists, koreans indonesians vietnamese and Chinese, despite none arriving. So we are locked into a self defeating juvenile mentailty that if we declare independence big brother wont come and rescue us.
Invasion in 1788, revisionist nonsense.
I completely agree but imho, one reason for the fear is the tabloid journalism that offers nothing else. Another reason Labor dare not offer clear policy again- it just becomes a club for Murdoch to hit them with.
Well Who Cares, economic coercion/ punishment by a communist dictatorship, that is amassing the largest military force in history and one which has no interest in human rights and has threatened Australia with nuclear armageddon. Crikey what rock have you been hiding under.
Keating was the best Liberal PM the Liberals ever had; he initiated the wrecking ball that he and Howard et al have smashed through this nation. I have never held any respect for the leech.
How the Labor faithful don’t like the steel being stuck up them as Dad’s Army would say , but whether you like it or not , it was Keating who got the CES ready for privatization , sold off the Commonwealth bank and Qantas and was limbering up for whatever he could cast desire on to add to the booty.
Keating devised the competitive neutrality policy used by business to close down anything local government or government provides that stops then from price gouging, as they can’t compete.
You can down tick as much as you like but it does not change the facts and history so go at it
And Keating and Hawke began the destruction of unions.
Don’t think I am not a Labor supporter or voter I erred a couple of times and voted Greens about 20 years ago but have voted Labor faithfully ever since, but if we cannot acknowledge Labor’s questionable and definitely counterproductive actions then we are doomed
You have to admire this eloquence though! Though how on earth PK is familiar with an Evinrude I can’t imagine!
Australian engagement with Asia is not a temporary enthusiasm. Asia is not a flavour of the month. We have not been on a 10-day package tour from which we can return with a couple of T-shirts and a handful of colour prints for the album. Australia can’t bolt on the Evinrude and motor off to the coast of California.
Paul Keating, March 1998
Yes but, you also need to acknowledge the many great things that Keating and other genuine Labor leaders did, and avoid serial bagging of the current Labor team – out of the dread possibility that the LNP might get another term of waste and destruction
Please back off a bit and try to be constructive.
I do not bag the current labour team nor that of Rudd or Gillard or Whitlam
How about you list some of the great things that Keating supposedly did
Agreed. Keating ensured Hewson lost by refuting his own initiatives. Howard then won….and the rest is now history.
At least Frazer seemed to try and make up for his mistakes. Keating just turns out for a defensive rant whenever he thinks he can plaster up the cracks.
I regard the myth that Keating was a great Labor prime minister to be in the same vein as the myth that John Howard was a great Coalition prime minister , both are myths, both of these men damaged our nation and our future
As Bernard points out Keating was confronted by a very different China then what we have under Gigi ping
No its not.
Keating hasn’t articulated our need for a 100 year plan. China has one. It’s extension into the pacific, tying up potential threats as trading partners, stealing corporate and military secrets while engaging in military exercises and business deals, undermining democracies by compromising key political figures, each action is carefully planned to achieve benchmarks, milestones and tactical wins.
Basically it’s only a matter of time before we are swamped. Been to Sydney recently? Chinatown has expanded from the bottom of king st to martin plaza and beyond. We have no coherent plan. Amateurs playing pros.
Spot on, don’t mention Hong Kong or Tibet that won’t be appreciated here
https://www.hrw.org/asia/china-and-tibet
Yet we hitch our wagon to a far more destructive global empire. China is a neighbourhood tough. The US is a genicidal global crime syndicate.
Well said.
Absolutely correct, Andrew. The decades of unprovoked aggression, assassinations, invasion based on lies and BS, wholesale destruction of whole generations, false flag attacks on friendlies to “legitimise” retaliation, murderous hidden wars “on terror, drugs, truth, democracy”….and on the list goes. The US is the world’s foremost terrorist nation without equal. And they have the unmitigated gall to preach to the Chinese about the Urgurs, when at home, and abroad, they have waged an endles genocidal war by one of the most bigoted and racist police and “justice” systems on the planet, against their african americans, mexicans, and most other coloureds. We Australians are regarded by the US as compliant US stooges, and Asian nations also regard us that way.
https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2020/country-chapters/united-states#
Try and deviate from Western press……been to China ??? Tibet ??? Hong Kong ???….and I don’t mean being holed up in a packaged hotel !!!
Everything that you have stated can equally be said of the USA and on an even greater level! BTW. The expansion of Chinatown in Sydney just displays the usual White is Right attitude to other races and is ignorant in the extreme! Would you say the same if it was Septictown?
What is the point of China “stealing” military secrets from the Yanks? This despicable mob hasn’t won a war outright for the last 60 years, and they still claim superiority.
The faster we get swamped the better !
Since 1949 America has threatened (and attacked) China. They have surrounded China with bases filled with bombers and missiles pointed at China. To give but one example out of an appalling list, millions of people in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia were slaughtered by America, with the eager participation of their Australian vassal, in the cause of confronting China. To this day people in those countries are still losing limbs and eyes and lives to the unexploded bombs and mines the American war machine left behind. To this day babies in those countries are being born with frightful disabilities as a persistent legacy of American chemical warfare. Perhaps Bernard, when you talk so freely about industrial strength human rights abuses you might consider the old adage about people in glass houses.
Really, is it any wonder that as they have grown stronger the people of China have strengthened their defenses against the continual threat of nuclear attack from the bloody tyrant? This, of course, is their principal offense; they have grown rich and powerful and have dared to assert their sovereignty. In cravenly binding ourselves to the pale, stale, frail and failing empire of white men we have earned the derision of the Chinese and the contempt of our neighbours; hastening the day when Lee Kwan Yew’s prophecy will be realised.
Yes, I know, in our own eyes we are paragons of virtue, so unctuous in pointing the finger at the abuses committed by others and so convinced of our own righteousness. Yet, if for one moment we could consider how our words and deeds over the last two hundred years have been perceived by our neighbours, might we not have cause for even a modicum of humility?
Hear, hear, Griselda! My sentiments exactly.
Well articulated Griselda!
Well said
All is not lost China owns a great slice of Australia now that should even things out a little for you
Chinese foreign investment in Australia accounts for 2%. US and UK investment accounts for 41.8%- the US alone accounts for 23%.
https://www.dfat.gov.au/trade/resources/investment-statistics/statistics-on-who-invests-in-australia
All four big banks and Woolworths are majority US owned, too. But that’s ok because they share our values, don’t they? Good thing, because if we annoyed them and they pulled their capital we’d be proper farked.
Good link – it’s a shame that we now have to trawl through various sites to extract facts,almost as if the difficulty to garner were a Plan…?
The ABS (ABDARE or wotevs the new acronym is) was once a one-stop repository of all the hard data that any half educated could require to evaluate government performance.
(Also to some extent commercial indicators but alas there is too little we can do about that, apart from eschew participation – which is another story, given that most people already have more plastic crap than they can consume in several lifetimes.)
Unfortunately in the 90s the Commonwealth Year Books ceased to be published in the old format and became little more than glossy brochures of misleading wowstats – easily digestible by the new generation of stenographers but containing zero nourishing facts.
Brilliant piece Griselda – your comment is a keeper. If only the ABC would repeat it on multiple current affairs programs…
“ A few years later still and China is now the great existential threat that requires an alliance of white powers.”
I suspect Labor share your opinion, Bernard, so don’t look to them to come up with anything other than AUKUS! AUKUS! AUKUS! Oi! Oi! Oi! The Greens think it, too, so they’ll just flap about floating Chernobyls. And the entire mainstream media including the Guardian.
I suggest we welcome the bases, the nukes and everything else that slips through the back door with this deal, providing we finally own up to the long ago surrender of our sovereignty to the USA, formalise the deal and become the 51st state of the USA. At least the USA would be compelled to protect us then- a guarantee ANZUS has never given us.
Whatever there was of our culture drowned in American TV and movies so long ago most Australians won’t even notice we’re Americans now (many (most) already confuse American laws with Australian laws – like “Rights” ) and the ANZUS lovers will breathe a huge sigh of relief. Most importantly, we finally get a vote in US elections after more than half a century of our young fighting and dying in their wars.
Win/win.
AUKUS! AUKUS! AUKUS! Oi! Oi! Oi! Who needs sovereignty? You don’t miss what you’ve never had.
I was listening to a news service last night talking about whether businesses could demand employees get vaccinated. The commentator, a purported legal person, kept talking about individual’s legal rights. I kept shouting at the radio “we have no human rights legislation in Australia.”
He couldn’t hear me.
Maybe that person was from the civil liberties brigade, they’re advocating for the narcissist rather than society
We need a ‘Bill of Rights’ and a low limit on the level of foreign owned media. The USA has anti trust laws that have been used to break up (or attempt to) monopoly influence in a number of industries. Murdoch should always be referred to as ‘USA citizen Rupert Murdoch’ to slowly get the message across to more Australians. His old man was an interfering pr**k who spread BS and bias during WW1. The fruit has not fallen far from the tree. At least one grandson seems to have discovered some morals.
True. but why are there so many who believe wholeheartedly that Oz has “rights” and “freedom of speech” enshrined in the Constitution?
If Australia became US’s 51st state, and then an aggressive foreign power (maybe China, maybe not) was to simultaneously invade both Australia and California, how much attention do you think Australia would get? Looking at how well prepared the US were for Japan’s assault on Pearl Harbor – when Hawaii is so much closer to the US mainland than Australia – probably gives us a good idea.
“If Australia became US’s 51st state . . .”? It would be because Australia and Australian Federal Govt(s) have so little belief in Sovereign power as a national responsibility to and for future generations? Instead beliefs, non-acceptability of national responsibilities a la Prime Minister Morrison’s possible preference in avoiding responsibility? eg more than willing to relinquish Australian sovereignty . . . and for our nation to be accommodated as a US vassal? Our great southern land and population has never quite come to grips, grown up, confident in location, legitimacy, so far from other peoples, just like us?
Lack of preparedness was guaranteed by Roosevelt because he wanted the US to be involved in the war for economic reasons, so much so that the Pearl Harbour invasion early warning system was disabled, thereby ensuring an attack on Pearl Harbour would be successful. Roosevelt had a good deal of trouble trying to convince the US public to join the war effort, and using Pearl Harbour gave him a green light.
Sure, if you want Australia to be targets to protect US of A. Will they come to our aid if we are being bombed into the next entury? Give them at least two and a half years to thonk about it, that’s what they ususlly do.
Excellent points, Peter and Daibhin, but Daibhin, a little base called Pine Gap and that other one nobody talks about means we’re already targets, mate- not to mention our soldiers have fought in every American Forever War since WWII- all in the name of ANZUS which does not and never will give us any security whatsoever. All ANZUS guarantees is consultation- you’re quite right thinking the Americans might spend two and a half years consulting with our Cabinet in Exile in Washington or London whether or not a response is appropriate to the nuclear missiles that took out Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane, Darwin and Perth.
Correct. First it was the glutinous Windsor lot then it morphed into the Windsor/UK/American disease. But Abott went one step further by including the ISDS provisions in our FTA’s with China, a step too far even for the Australian Lethal Rodent John Howard.
Ironic that now China is the Coalition enemy, after the bluebloods have sold off everything they could to the commies who are now in bed with the Coalition and even own the bloo**y bed too.
Perhaps this is just a giant scam by the 3 tory outfits [the Dems being the 3rd one, with the Republicans so far off their faces they resemble the Taliban] to gain electoral support.
And Scotty, Jen and the girls wouldn’t need to get visas and go abroad for their holidays in the 50th State.
“most won’t remember we are already Americans now…” Love it Kathy ….would add; Couches (not lounges), living rooms (not lounge rooms), badderies (not batteries), laundry rooms (not laundries) to name just a few that spring to mind….we lost out also on Doonas, UGG Boots…our Aussie identity is long gone sadly.
My young grandson tells me that his Primary school teachers speak in Americanisms, “all the time” which apparently makes it all the more acceptable.
On ‘(most) already confuse American laws with Australian laws – like “Rights”’, we hear this expressed via the Americanism lifted straight from the US Bill of Rights ‘freedom and liberty’……