On 2 June 2015, reports emerged
that Australia was planning to send P-3 aircraft to the South China Sea to
assert freedom of navigation. This follows former Defence Department deputy
secretary and chair of the government’s Defence White Paper expert panel Peter Jennings
call for Australia to be prepared to send military assets
to the South China Sea to stop China asserting territorial control of sea lanes
in that region. An Australian military aircraft operation in the current
climate would be a big step, carrying significant risks of
mishap, including collision and worse. But it also highlights the
apparent lack of diplomatic energy being applied to this issue.
Previously, Australian South
China Sea diplomacy appeared to be limited to statements urging claimants to
adhere to the rule of law, maintain the status quo and finalise a Code of
Conduct. In this respect there is substantial continuity with the previous Rudd
and Gillard governments. Australia is aware that China and the ASEAN claimants
own the problem — Australia has no territorial stake and hence has taken no
position on the relative merits of claims. At the Shangri-La Dialogue in May,
Defence Minister Kevin Andrews called for a halt to
land reclamation activities.
But a number of developments
led to the sudden hardening of Australia’s foreign policy to the point of
considering a military deployment. There is frustration at the glacial pace of
Code of Conduct negotiations in the South China Sea and at China for
deliberately impeding these negotiations. There are concerns that China’s land
reclamation activities are a preliminary step to announcing an Air Defence
Identification Zone (ADIZ) in the area. Most critically, the US may have
commenced its own freedom of navigation
missions.
Since at least 2010, China
has maintained that the South China Sea is part of its core interests.
Why hasn’t the seriousness of the situation prompted more energetic Australian
regional diplomacy before now?
Part of the answer is that,
to paraphrase Hilary Clinton, it’s difficult to get tough with your banker.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop objected to the Chinese
declaration of an ADIZ, which brought forth a storm of condemnation
from China. There were fears the planned Free Trade Agreement would be
derailed. Australia may also fear working with ASEAN
countries to develop a common position and put more pressure on
China. This would contribute to Chinese perceptions of attempted containment.
The outcome has been that Australia’s leadership and media appears at times
hypnotised by the China choice
and trapped between fear and greed.
Australia needs to seek a
middle path through multilateral diplomacy. It should be working intensively
with ASEAN neighbours and China to develop common positions. Australia should
not become fixated on grand bargains. It should take a piecemeal, pragmatic
approach, seeking to solve problems individually. US Secretary of State Hilary
Clinton espoused comprehensive engagement
in the region through defence, diplomacy and development. Australia
should not neglect the latter two elements.
In 2014, Nick Bisley and
Malcolm Cook considered what caused the East Asia Summit (EAS) to fail to live up to its
potential. They concluded that greater institutional support was
needed to ensure that the EAS maintained momentum between summits and had the
means to develop policy initiatives. Australia could surely contribute more to
providing this. As Australia’s Secretary of Defence
Dennis Richardson noted, it ranks 13th or 14th globally in economy
size and 12th or 13th in defence budget size.
Australia also needs to
contribute ideas. One idea that might be dusted off and reassessed is one
floated by former foreign minister
Bob Carr in 2013: a resources sharing proposal. This would involve
an agreement to share resources without resolving conflicting sovereignty
claims. The 1961 Antarctic Treaty is a good example of where actors were able
to put aside sovereignty issues for common interests.
Australia’s regional
diplomacy under the Abbott government has mostly featured FTAs and the
sensible, albeit belated, support for China’s Asian Infrastructure Investment
Bank. The New Colombo Plan
is a worthwhile exercise in building interpersonal links and Australia-friendly
constituencies in the region. But the plan does not aim high enough and its
benefits will not be realised for some time. It is difficult to avoid the
conclusion that Australia’s involvement in the Middle East is absorbing too
much of the National Security Committee of Cabinet’s attention, leaving little for
regional initiatives.
In the past Australia acted
proactively to help solve serious regional problems with intelligence and
energy, as in the case of the Cambodian peace settlement 1990–1993. As Michael Wesley and Allen
Gyngell noted this was an issue in which Australia had substantial
policy interests but no direct stake, not unlike the South China Sea.
Australia’s role was, as described by then foreign minister Gareth Evans,
‘neither front- nor back-seat driving, but the more demanding, but less
visible, role of mapmaker and persuader. It was much more an intellectual than
a political or military role’.
Solving the problems of the
South China Sea surely warrants at least the same levels of diplomatic effort.
Australia’s future actions should be guided by an independent approach that
works to give diplomacy more time. Australia should work closely with the US
and regional partners to push back on unilateralism without escalating to
premature use of force.
Greg Raymond is a Research
Associate at the Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, The Australian
National University and was Director Strategic Policy in the Australian
Department of Defence 2009-2012.
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