Australia’s
foreign policy has been a mix of positives and negatives under the
Liberal-National Coalition government, as was true of the previous Labor
government. Former prime ministers Gough Whitlam and Bob Hawke recognised the
need for Australia to think strategically about future regional developments,
and John Howard’s thinking gradually moved in that direction. Such long-term
strategic thinking, centred on Australia’s geographic realities and its
evolving regional relationships, is more urgently needed today.
Asia’s regional dynamics are changing. While the US
is a Pacific power, it’s an outsider in Asia. To complicate the picture, the
region features a China that is the largest trading partner of all Asian
nations, including Australia. Australia’s future relations with the region, in
Northeast Asia and with ASEAN particularly, will depend upon its relations with
China as well as with the US.
A coherent strategy must reflect the reality that Australia is linked to
Asia from within the region. It needs to reflect the growing importance of
China globally and to Australia, and to develop a political depth with that
country similar to that with the US. And it will be increasingly difficult to
continue separating the economic and strategic issues of this engagement.
As a result, Australia needs a greater understanding of China’s
environment, history, and culture, including its political system. Australia
need not like that system, but it must be able to work effectively with it.
The dominant and often one-sided Western perspective is not always
helpful when judging whether China will be aggressive and expansionist or
whether it will live more or less peaceably with the rest of the world.
Westerners often assume that terms like ‘international rules’, ‘global order’
and what constitutes ‘responsible behaviour’ are understood and accepted by all
others. Yet for China, these terms have emerged from a different culture and
historical experience. These differences in vision affect China’s foreign
policy.
Yet, despite obvious exceptions, such as human rights, China is well
integrated into the international system and largely complies with
international rules — probably at least as well as other major powers. China’s
reluctance to lead internationally might suggest not just free-riding but a
reluctance to challenge the existing global order.
When China opened up, it joined an international order that reflected a
pluralistic view of the international community, that acknowledged differences
in political and domestic value systems, and that pursued mutually acceptable
global rules and geopolitical equilibrium. Then the common vision shifted and
the membership bar was raised.
Ultimately, a US-led international system emerged that involved an
agenda of good governance, ‘free’ markets and ‘democracy’ (usually just
elections). These aimed to advance US security and its other interests. The
objective of regime change under this agenda in Iraq, Libya, Egypt, Syria and
perhaps Ukraine suggests we should be cautious about what we wish for. For
China, in any case, this agenda implies regime change, social instability, and
the end of the Party-state.
Of course, China has regional and global ambitions and its relative
military and other capacities will grow substantially. China wants a role that commands
attention and respect from its neighbours, particularly in its ‘near abroad’,
and Australia may not always like what it or others do. The US needs to manage
relations between states rather than just pursue political change or impose
views of complex issues that then become part of the problem.
China feels internationally vulnerable and, as with the US, domestic
nationalism influences its policies. Internally, China’s leaders fear
fragmentation, instability and competition for power. There are major problems to deal with
at home.
With domestic issues as its main priority, China’s foreign policies will
remain largely defensive and reactive to external influences, rather than
offensive and expansive. China knows it needs stable relations with the US and
its neighbours in order to sustain its development. It will seek changes to the
rules by basically working within the existing framework.
Maritime disputes are worrying but hardly central to
Australia’s strategic interests. Sovereignty claims by all parties are
unhelpful and pose serious risks of miscalculation. Australia’s attention is
understandably focused on China, but the historical context needs to be
understood, including China’s ‘missing out’ on territory in the 1960s and 1970s
regional ‘island grab’. Provocations and efforts to change the status quo are
not limited to China or unconnected to the US pivot and the regionally divisive
Trans-Pacific Partnership.
A US regional presence remains strategically important, but the US and
Australia’s values and vital interests are often different and Australia needs
to re-examine its concepts of regional order. There are considerable risks in
Australia’s growing enmeshment in the US regional security system to where
Australia’s security policy is increasingly a function of that of the US, and
an independent Australian position is difficult to maintain.
These issues will become important in the future with any adverse
regional developments, notably potentially over Taiwan. US diplomatic
management of such problems will remain critical. But history will treat
unkindly any Australian political leader who, consciously or inadvertently,
commits Australia to military conflict involving China without clear public
support and a full parliamentary debate, based on an explicit strategic
assessment of Australia’s long term vital interests.
Stuart Harris is Emeritus
Professor in the Department of International Relations, at the Coral Bell
School of Asia Pacific Affairs, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific.
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