Gaming billionaire James Packer believes his friend Malcolm Turnbull will lead Australia towards its economic destiny because he "understands China and its importance". Fairfax Media columnist and defence academic Hugh White is convinced he's finally found a leader whose "deep curiosity about China" will cause him to adjust the strategic compass in that direction, at the expense of the US. And there are some in the intelligence and defence establishments who have been worried that such prophecies might turn out to be right.
But Turnbull tore up
the script that had been written for him at the first available opportunity,
when the ABC's Leigh Sales asked him about "the greatest threat to global
security" on Monday night.
"Well,
look, there are – you probably can't really – you can't really rank them 'cause
they are very difficult ..." said Turnbull, scratching an imaginary itch
on the back of his neck as he searched for a form of words that would not
directly contradict the late Abbott government's obsession with death cults in
the Middle East.
And then he
continued: "In terms of our region, what we need to ensure is that the
rise of China [is] conducted in a manner that does not disturb the security and
the relative harmony of the region upon which China's prosperity depends. Now –
now, that requires careful diplomacy, it requires balancing."
Turnbull
went further in response to a follow-up question about China's territorial
ambitions in the South China Sea. "China would be better advised in its
own interests, frankly, to – not to be pushing the envelope there, and that is
why there's been resistance against that activity," he said.
And so,
within hours of swearing in his cabinet, Turnbull had swung his strategic
compass in a very different direction to what most commentators had predicted.
He has become the only Australian prime minister to publicly articulate a
"balancing" and "resistance" strategy towards China. Not
even Abbott managed to do that.But the tycoons, academics and security hawks
should not have been surprised. Turnbull is responding to the same Chinese
paradox of market-oriented economics and Leninist politics that drove John
Howard to initiate a free-trade agreement with China a dozen years ago, while simultaneously
supporting a "quadrilateral" military arrangement with Japan, India
and the United States.
He is using
the same "engage and hedge" logic that informed Kevin Rudd's defence
white paper in 2009 and helped Rudd to nudge Hillary Clinton towards her
"pivot" to Asia the following year.
This is the
same strategy which Julia Gillard converted into a "strategic
dialogue" with China alongside new security ties with Korea and Japan and
the deployment of US marines to Darwin.
And Abbott
built upon these foundations laid by Howard, Rudd and Gillard to sign the free
trade agreement with China and erect more ambitious defence ties with Japan,
India and Vietnam.
And now
Turnbull has wrong-footed the tycoons, academics and security hawks to model
himself as a paragon of US-anchored, regionally-oriented strategic continuity.
"I think their foreign policy in the South China Sea has been quite
counterproductive," Turnbull told Leigh Sales, explaining how China's
muscle-flexing was pushing China's maritime neighbours closer to each other and
also the US.
As the US
ambassador John Berry told me this week: "It's a story of
rock-solid bipartisan support, on both sides of the Pacific, continuing from
Abbott to Turnbull."
To boil it
down to its primordial motivations, Australia's China policies are all about
"fear and greed", as Abbott explained to German Chancellor Angela
Merkel behind closed doors.
The
underlying strategic logic is so strong that Turnbull and Defence Minister
Marise Payne may not need to change the substance of the draft defence white
paper, which they inherited from their predecessors and is scheduled to be
released next month.
But as each
recent prime minister has discovered, just because there is a strategy doesn't
mean its execution will be easy. It requires consistency, focus, and the
ability to be selective with what you care about while making sure you can
follow through.
And defence
may well turn out to be the easier part of the "fear and greed"
equation, as the Chinese economy that Australia's prosperity is built upon is
showing ongoing signs of trouble. This is where Turnbull's deep
"understanding" and "natural curiosity" of China will place
him ahead of his peers.
While
Treasury and many business leaders have been taking strong Chinese economic
growth as an article of faith, Turnbull has been reading sobering on-the-ground
analysis that suggests deep trouble. Turnbull would not be entirely surprised
that the market value of James Packer's Macau gambling empire has fallen by
three-fifths since January last year, when Packer was boldly predicting the
Chinese economy would be fine. Similarly, he would understand that the Chinese
central bank may have incinerated about $US300 billion in foreign exchange
reserves since a mismanaged currency adjustment five weeks ago, about the
time when former treasurer Joe Hockey was bravely predicting that Australia's
GDP rate would soon have a "3" in front of it.
Several of
the bearish analysts that Turnbull has been reading over the past two years
have been broadly right, including Michael Pettis, Rodney Jones and Anne
Stevenson-Yang. None of them predict a rebound any time soon. That doesn't mean
they'll be right from this point on, but the risks will need to be factored
into Turnbull's mid-year budget story.
Australians
have never known such opportunities, as Turnbull has been reminding us since
taking the prime ministership. Many of them have been made in China. But it's
also been a long time since we've had to face so many China-driven challenges.
John Garnaut is the Asia-Pacific editor.
Sydney Morning Herald
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