After months of deliberating on state and territory agreements with foreign countries, the Morrison government finally last night moved to axe Daniel Andrews’ Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) with China, announcing that the Memorandum of Understanding and Framework Agreement between Victoria and China would be among four deals canceled under the Foreign Arrangements Scheme.
The other two deals were also Victorian deals: a Kennett government deal with Syria and a Bracks government deal with Iran.
The BRI deals were struck by Andrews after lobbying by a Chinese government-linked foundation — which was itself funded by both the Commonwealth and the Victorian governments. A 2019 World Bank report found that many of the benefits of the BRI would be offset by large debt costs associated with projects, negative net costs for countries where the costs of projects exceeded their benefits, and lack of transparency around project deals. The extensive use of Chinese personnel, rather than local workers, on projects has also been criticised. However, regular western claims that the BRI is driven by a Chinese agenda of “debt trap diplomacy” have been challenged.
The primary problem with Victoria signing onto the BRI was never about on-the-ground implementation, however, since no projects have flowed from the deal. It was about a major Australian state actively undermining Australian foreign policy by signing onto an initiative that the Australian government had refused. Not all of the blame rests with the Andrews government, though. For years, the federal government was not merely ambivalent about the BRI, but seemingly disposed to it, after Tony Abbott’s foolish decision to sign up to what proved to be a worthless free trade agreement with China.
For a time, the Abbott and Turnbull governments were actively working with the Chinese to integrate plans to invest in infrastructure in north Australia — which also came to nothing — with the BRI. Watching the federal government showboat on trade issues seemed to encourage Daniel Andrews to do exactly the same.
The other problem is that it amounts to Australian legitimisation of the foreign policy of a brutal dictatorship — which has in part been directed at attempting to intimidate Australia into compliance with Chinese foreign policy goals, interfere in Australian domestic politics, and silence critics of its monstrous human rights abuses.
The moment the Chinese regime’s enthusiasm for interference and intimidation became plain, Andrews should have abandoned the deal. Instead, he clung to it for no apparent reason other than, seemingly, to irritate the federal government.
The Morrison government now faces the same issue: will it allow itself to continue to participate in arrangements that legitimise Chinese foreign policy and its outrageous abuses and are inconsistent with our national interest?
The Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics are just over nine months away — they’re due to commence in early February next year. International participation in the games would be another soft power triumph for the regime, just as the 2008 summer Olympics were — despite a Chinese government campaign using Chinese students to deter and prevent protests against it in other countries. Efforts by the Xi regime to deter and intimidate protesters are only likely to be even more blatant and brutal this time.
Given the regime’s ongoing mass-scale internment and repression of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, its crackdown on democracy and the rule of law in Hong Kong, its aggression against neighbouring countries and increasing military pressure on Taiwan, as well as its systematic human rights abuses, trade war with Australia, and routine attempts to interfere in domestic politics here, any participation in next year’s Olympics would be profoundly immoral, as well as utterly inconsistent with Australia’s national interest.
The Morrison government has done well to maintain Australia’s interests against Chinese aggression. Now it must go further and boycott an event that will be another triumph for a bloody, brutal regime.
Should Australia boycott the Beijing Winter Olympics? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say section.
Not worth commenting on Bernard Keane when it comes to a balanced and objective view of China
You have touched on the main reason I now spend many more multiples of time at Menadue’s Pearls & Irritations, than I do here, Terry.
And why I won’t be renewing my subscription at this joint.
If I wanted low brow sophistry, I’d still be subscribing to The Age, or get it for free at the ABC, and the rest of the free-to-air rubes.
Quite so! Even with some intelligent discussion with a few subscribers I doubt if I will be renewing my sub.
Oh no!!! If you and David leave, we’ll have to go direct to the People’s Daily to find out what’s happening in China!!
Ha ha 🙂
Man! You are such a wit!
And, won’t be missed, you donkey.
Sick of idiots, beyond the understanding of idiots, in general.
Not polite David. It is a computer fault called an ID 10 T error.
I find myelf increasingly ‘trending’ in that direction, M.
Me, three.
After midnight, I’m gornnn.
I’ll miss a few aspects, but too few to mention.
Yeah, yesterday’s slab recomming a boycott of the games (hardly a major event) is, I suggest, the image of woky things to come.
At the risk of over generalising, the subscriber base is anti Lib; wishful ALP hopefuls (experience notwithstanding), wallows in the rorting (devoid of constructive solutions), no great regard for due legal process (let’s get the gibbet constructed) and, in the main, accepts, at face value, yesterday’s piece by Bernie.
Agreed : it’s no longer worth it.
Well can you all stop frikking moaning about it and piss off already then! All journos have their blind spots and we know what BKs are but I stay on for much more than that. Your pontificating won’t be missed and the rest of us ignoramuses will just have to stumble along in the dark without your enlightening us with your wisdom.
Speaking for some of us, our alternative subs are in place (thanks for the solicitude) and speaking for myself : nine weeks to the 30th June and end of sub here.
Keep the faith Beth. Cky needs true believers (beleaguered?).
No need to wait it out, its a sunk cost so makes no difference if you get your “value” out of it or not!
Think it through Beth. The horse racing analogy doesn’t apply here.
Can totally agree re Pearls & Irritations – essential reading for anyone seeking informed, balanced commentary and not only on China. Bernard has his strengths too, so I usually enjoy his writing but there are some topics on which his views frankly bizarre, more akin to the proselytising I expect in a Murdoch rag.
Pete, Keane’s strengths end at the borders, and local corruption.
Beyond that, he’s a bog standard drongo, who understands sweet FA about global realities, and offers token resistance to the crimes of modern day imperial powers, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, and on and on the list goes.
Put alternatively, Keane offers sops to Western violence, endlessly excuses it, on totally fallacious arguments that are actually steeped in Western supremacy and vile white Anglo-European white supremacy.
He’s a pig dressed in ‘expert’ clothing.
I think the guy is a rung or two above the standard drong but, having written that, this slab is, at best, from the biro of an attentive Yr11 or 12 kid having heard remarks over dinner from mommy and daddy who are likely Liberal Party office bearers.
The occasional “experts” either write down for the audience or are cheap and already out to pasture.
Topics of policy tend to attract relatively few comments compared to an acknowledged balls up.
As editor I’d start with making the articles adjective free and ensuring that no one writes above their knowledge.
I detest ill informed sophists, and no amount of ‘balanced’ accounting for their fundamental ignorance can get me beyond that glaring deficiency.
Such opinionistas are just not worth my time.
Having said that, I do occasionally find some relief in arguing they are as they are i.e. worthless.
Peanut’s an ex-public servant, to boot, and obviously still recovering.
If your last sentence were enacted, the result would be similar to a “See Jane & Spot Play.”
oink
Bernie, Cky is going to have to decide upon its audience.
If it is going to be a neo mechanics institute pamphlet of the 19th century then well and good. If the plan is to be a cutting edge information vanguard for those with senior qualifications and engaged in R.’s knowledge-sphere then it is a dismissal failure. The references that Thompson has offered are superior and ought to be matched by Cky.
If it were not for a dozen to a score of subscribers I doubt if I would be here. Having to mark, as it were, most of the submissions is rather tedious; in fact, nowadays, I seldom bother.
If only for contrast, attempt an alternative view or both sides of a story.
The Worm today was a grade above average. Yet it could have been pointed out that Australia now has some potential partnerships as to emissions reduction which other low emitters may come to adopt. Pooring slops over the government takes us nowhere although the ning-nongs might be entertained. Hopefully, such is not the goal of Cky.
I’ve been lacerated!
Crikey, indeed.
I find the ‘former diplomats’ at P’s & I’s most informative and, dare I say it, balanced.
Bruce Haigh and Tony Kevin are 2 such examples.
I first saw Kevin a few years ago, interviewed by a vert smart lass named Oksana Boyko (I’ll leave it to you to work out what telly station I was watching).
Kevin had returned to one of his first diplomatic postings, and was talking about a book he’d written, called ‘Return to….?.
He went on to be the Ambassador in a coupla Asian countries, who still send him best wishes. Kevin is one of those old style diplomats, who was interested in the people in the places where he was posted, and they continue to regard him well.
Cavan Hogue and Mack Williams also used to pop in from time to time but haven’t seen them for a while now.
Any single item at P&I, daily, exceeds the worth of a week of weak, woke wanker waffle here.
I’m more than happy to pay Menadue what I’ll save.
The 4 W’s! Kudos.
He has swallowed the Cool Aid.
There will not be a balanced and objective view on China when writing points are being outlined by ASPI.
After a mate left today, Bill, I whipped around the telly news services. I saw Jennings presented by 4 out of 5 extolling the virtues and sense of Payne’s announcement to can the Vic govt’s MOU on the BRI.
Jennings outfit is funded by FOREIGN weapons manufacturers, and Jennings himself was a ‘trusted’ adviser to Howard when this country bought into the fraud of Saddam Hussein having WMD’s.
Put plainly, Jennings is a traitor to this country’s interests.
And, the bastard does it to enrich himself.
Not worth commenting on Keane about anything sensible or relevant…
“For a time, the Abbott and Turnbull governments were actively working with the Chinese to integrate plans to invest in infrastructure in North Australia…with the BRI. Watching the federal government showboat on trade issues seemed to encourage Daniel Andrews to do exactly the same.
The primary problem … was about a major Australian state actively undermining Australian foreign policy.”
In your own words, Bernard. Everyone else was getting in on the act with China but apparently Andrews should have foreseen the change of tack in Canberra.
As for the Olympics – that is small beer. If Scotty wants to adopt a total war footing, he could cancel the CHAFTA (the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement) signed by Abbott and Robb. Let’s see how his donors like that.
No, the true nuclear option is to call in the Chinese Ambassador, tell him that he and his staff are persona non grata and could they kindly leave Australia within 48 hours, and oh by the way, we are recognising the Republic of China as the true China.
Only if so ordered by the USA
Just how much reading on international relations have you undertaken Jackson? Are you able to offer a 50 minute seminar on Taiwan from (1) the first European encounter through to (2) Japan losing the island at the end of the war to the events from 1949 (3) to the present?
Do you know that there are references to Taiwan in Chinese court records from the 3rd century BCE? WHAT do you know about Ma and Tsai in terms of manifesto or ethnicity? Not for two millennia has Formosa (beautiful island) / Taiwan been independent.
Are you aware (even vaguely) of the diplomatic and trade relationships the PRC has with Scandinavia and the EU? The UK for that matter?
Just which country is the largest holder of USA securities by a country mile?
Given that you now have some reading to explore are you able to foresee the consequences of such a recommendation for Australia and the Asian region?
Until the early 70s, the Hegemon forced the rest of the world to pretend that the invader of Formosa, the delightful democrat Chang Kai-Shek & his Dragon Lady, were the only representatives of the people of China at the UN as the satrapy of Taiwan.
The “Only Nixon could go to China” was rote until the 90s – despite Great Gough having previously done so.
‘The delightful democrat’, CK-S, loomed very large in a book I read years – decades – ago, by Prof Alfred McCoy.
To keep simple the main reason CK-S loomed large, the book was titled, and subbed;
“The Politics of Heroin”.
“CIA Complicity in the Global Drug”
And, just to connect to another of your mentions, Agni, when the book was released, on came the heat. So, McCoy needed a place to lay low, for a while, and chose Straya.
If you’re not familiar with all this, if you search ‘Alfred McCoy Nugan Hand’, you’ll find McCoy was central to uncovering the role the Nugan Hand Bank played in Whitlam’s dismissal, and their ties to all sorts of ‘big’ crime, both here, and in Asia.
McCoy wrote a book that now sits in the National Library i.e;
“Drug traffic : narcotics and organized crime in Australia / [by] Alfred W. McCoy”
Read Politics of heroin in Sth East Asia many many years ago. Fascinating reading. Have watched with growing alarm as the Australian military is embedded deeper within the American military industrial war machine.
For Jackson’s benefit, Taiwan was not democratic in any sense until the early 90s and only recognisably so from the late 90s. Having tapped that, the son was more “democratic” than papa but by little margin.
The reforms of Ma and the election of Tsai along with the respective assessments of the PRC deserve attention.
Recently, someone, clearly untutored, attributed the poverty of Mexico to its colonialism. It was land reform and the dislodgement of the purple circles and NOT DEMOCRACY that transformed Taiwan into a major economic player. Until about the 80s the economy of the Philippines was stronger than that of Taiwan. Compare the difference NOW to a location that only recently has been autonomous.
gawd, woky stuff sloshes around here.
I would have thought that some mention of the sale of the Port of Darwin to Chinese interests and represented by a former LNP Trade Minister, would have also merited a mention here. Otherwise, definitely hope a boycott of the Beijing Olympics is brought front and centre by a vote in the Australian Parliament..
‘Oliver’ the ‘Port of Darwin’ was not sold to Chinese interests – and I am not going to tell you what happened you can do your own research
The , “Port of Darwin” was …”leased to the Chinese at a cost of $506m …on a 99 year lease”… according to many media outlets, including ABC News, who ran a large story in 2019 (4 years after the event).
The biggest surprise is how long it took everyone to start whingeing and complaining about it.
People I spoke to, after I’d read about it in Guardian Australia in 2015, seemed to think I was crazy (I probably am) because they hadn’t heard of it.
A 99-year lease is of course, similar to what the ACT Government used to give landowners for purchasing property in that neck of the woods (when I lived there many long years ago) , effectively ensuring that nobody really owned it.
Not sure if that still stands Terry…but people still thought (back then) that they “owned” the property.
Actually you will find that it’s a Management Lease to provide the services in the Port. Ownership of the land still rests with the Crown.
Futile, Lex, given Marcia chooses to rely on The Guardian as an ‘authority’, that vile garbage outfit that sold Julian Assange down the river, after spruiking their partnership with Wikileaks as standing up their credentials on ‘freedumb’ of the press.
You do that, and you have NO credibility, NONE!
You overlooked the woke. No one there is able to define the word “progressivism” either despite the usage as confetti.
As with most leases, the freehold ownership stays with the government
A 99 year lease is as good as a sale
Port of Darwin was leased for 99 years by CLP Chief Minister Adam Giles. Giles reputedly and picked & parachuted in from outside the NT. Mmmmm…..
Adam was later employed by Gina Rhinehart…….
Such is the stench of the top offices these days. Pretend to work for us (the voters) for a few terms before taking up the REAL job of working for the billionaires, armaments manufacturers, fossil fuel corporations, mining magnates, media corps…..
Got to love the way that we throw athletes on the fire of morality in foreign policy but we keep trade and related agreements sacrosanct – if we are sincere about isolating China in foreign affairs terms let’s see some of the usual industrial and farm sector LNP supporters lead the way with a proper trade boycott. We might wait a while though.
Is Robb still getting $800,000 a year from the Chinese Communist party for setting that up? What about the Chinese takeover of Port Darwin? Can we scap that too or is Adam Giles still getting kickbacks for that?
Be nice to know where we are with both these stories.
Yes, he is!!
Gina Rhinehart employed Adam Giles. Gina has many Chinese business partners….
Ginas Chinese partners guilty of massive land clearing breach on WA cattle station.
Looking at massive clearing, feedlot & fodder production for live cattle export, using water from the Fitzroy River. THIS is what Gina wants. The destruction of the Kimberleys, the killing of yet another river system. Remember the death of the endangered saw fish? GINA.
Billionaires are destroying the country. Massive wealth in few hands is NOT the sign of a healthy democracy. Billionaires given jobs in government during emergencies who then DOUBLE their fortunes -NOT a sign of a healthy democracy.