What's new

Canada takes note as China gets tough with Australia

striver44

BANNED
Joined
Jul 25, 2016
Messages
4,832
Reaction score
-16
Country
Indonesia
Location
Indonesia
By Charles BurtonContributor
Mon., Nov. 16, 2020timer3 min. read


As the world ponders the spectacle of Donald Trump’s desperate efforts to sabotage the legitimacy of the U.S. election, on other side of the planet, China is seizing the moment to launch a full-court press to weaken the Western alliance through economic coercion, starting with drastic measures levelled against our anglosphere ally, Australia. The implications for Canada and our relations with the Biden administration are immediate and dire.
Earlier this month, Chinese importers were abruptly told to stop importing a wide range of commodities from Australia, including barley, sugar, red wine, timber, coal, lobster, copper ore and copper concentrates. Consequently, tonnes of stinking dead rock lobsters sat on the tarmac at the Shanghai Airport and thousands of crates of Australian wine caught in customs limbo. This outrageous affront follows China’s specious imposition of anti-dumping duties on Australian barley, and beef export suspensions. The South China Post reported that a ban on Australian wheat could be next.
Australia will have no choice but to reciprocate by blocking imports from China, as Beijing’s actions are in gross violations of the terms of its 2001 accession to the World Trade Organization. It also opens up the way for China to curry favour with the Biden administration by offering the market for these commodities in a side trade deal with the U.S. So much for the protections of the 2014 Australia-China Free Trade Agreement that Canada has long craved to duplicate.

China’s anger is fired by numerous factors, including Australia’s call for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus, and Australia’s ban of Chinese telecom giant Huawei from its 5G network due to national security concerns. But Beijing is especially furious over legislation to address China’s covert, corrupt and coercive political operations to influence Australian politicians with, as a recent report by the U.K.’s Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) notes, “life-changing amounts of money.”
The Chinese Communist Party newspaper China Daily has threatened that Australia will “suffer further pain” for fuelling anti-China sentiment by sanctioning Chinese companies, sending warships to China’s doorsteps in the South China Sea and “colluding” with Washington, concluding that “Australia will pay tremendously for its misjudgment.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin recently said, “We want to urge some people in Australia to earnestly reflect on its own misdeeds, do more to enhance mutual trust … and create the good conditions and atmosphere for practical co-operation between the two countries.”
Chinese diplomats in Australia have issued statements suggesting that, to set things right, Australia should sign up to Beijing’s $1.5 trillion Belt and Road infrastructure initiative and begin a “new direction of co-operation.” One could imagine a future with Chinese military bases at the Port of Darwin and elsewhere along the Australian coast.

China of course wants Canada to interpret all this as an affirmation of the appeasement policy that Ottawa continues to adopt in the face of horrendous hostage diplomacy and of Beijing’s arbitrary termination of Canadian agricultural import contracts that we have seen over the past two years.



Those who have urged that we treat the panda kindly, lest he show his claws and draw blood with his fangs, will urge that Canada continue ignoring the strong recommendations of Commons committees to support endangered Hong Kong democracy activists or to sanction Chinese officials complicit in the Uighur genocide. That perspective implies it would be best that Canada simply risk our alliance with the U.S. by releasing Meng Wanzhou, approving Huawei 5G and continue to allow PRC acquisition of Canadian dual-use technologies.

While Australia has strongly supported Canada over Kovrig and Spavor, it is unlikely that Ottawa will dare to stand with Australia in the face of Chinese bullying, beyond our usual carefully worded “expression of concern.” But Australia’s relations with China today are almost certainly Canada’s tomorrow. As the RUSI report notes, citing the ex-Australian PM and China scholar Kevin Rudd, “the Chinese Communist Party despises and takes advantage of weakness, while it respects strength.”


Is Canada better off giving into Chinese disdain, or should we do the right thing and standing up to China’s bullying violations of the norms of international diplomacy and trade? It is high time our government gave Canadians a clear and unambiguous answer.



====================================================================================

ASEAN countries should take this OZ v CN trade war into considerations when doing trade with China
 
.
Australia will have no choice but to reciprocate by blocking imports from China, as Beijing’s actions are in gross violations of the terms of its 2001 accession to the World Trade Organization.
The reporter forgot Australia banned Huawei first. Which is also a violation of WTO rules. China's counterattacks are reasonable.

I thought Autralians were fully prepared for China's revenges for what they did to China. Turns out they look like they are suffering from China's surprise attacks. I don't understand "anglosphere" mindset. You did bad things to other. Never expect any consequences to come?
 
Last edited:
.
By Charles BurtonContributor
Mon., Nov. 16, 2020timer3 min. read


As the world ponders the spectacle of Donald Trump’s desperate efforts to sabotage the legitimacy of the U.S. election, on other side of the planet, China is seizing the moment to launch a full-court press to weaken the Western alliance through economic coercion, starting with drastic measures levelled against our anglosphere ally, Australia. The implications for Canada and our relations with the Biden administration are immediate and dire.
Earlier this month, Chinese importers were abruptly told to stop importing a wide range of commodities from Australia, including barley, sugar, red wine, timber, coal, lobster, copper ore and copper concentrates. Consequently, tonnes of stinking dead rock lobsters sat on the tarmac at the Shanghai Airport and thousands of crates of Australian wine caught in customs limbo. This outrageous affront follows China’s specious imposition of anti-dumping duties on Australian barley, and beef export suspensions. The South China Post reported that a ban on Australian wheat could be next.
Australia will have no choice but to reciprocate by blocking imports from China, as Beijing’s actions are in gross violations of the terms of its 2001 accession to the World Trade Organization. It also opens up the way for China to curry favour with the Biden administration by offering the market for these commodities in a side trade deal with the U.S. So much for the protections of the 2014 Australia-China Free Trade Agreement that Canada has long craved to duplicate.

China’s anger is fired by numerous factors, including Australia’s call for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus, and Australia’s ban of Chinese telecom giant Huawei from its 5G network due to national security concerns. But Beijing is especially furious over legislation to address China’s covert, corrupt and coercive political operations to influence Australian politicians with, as a recent report by the U.K.’s Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) notes, “life-changing amounts of money.”
The Chinese Communist Party newspaper China Daily has threatened that Australia will “suffer further pain” for fuelling anti-China sentiment by sanctioning Chinese companies, sending warships to China’s doorsteps in the South China Sea and “colluding” with Washington, concluding that “Australia will pay tremendously for its misjudgment.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin recently said, “We want to urge some people in Australia to earnestly reflect on its own misdeeds, do more to enhance mutual trust … and create the good conditions and atmosphere for practical co-operation between the two countries.”
Chinese diplomats in Australia have issued statements suggesting that, to set things right, Australia should sign up to Beijing’s $1.5 trillion Belt and Road infrastructure initiative and begin a “new direction of co-operation.” One could imagine a future with Chinese military bases at the Port of Darwin and elsewhere along the Australian coast.

China of course wants Canada to interpret all this as an affirmation of the appeasement policy that Ottawa continues to adopt in the face of horrendous hostage diplomacy and of Beijing’s arbitrary termination of Canadian agricultural import contracts that we have seen over the past two years.



Those who have urged that we treat the panda kindly, lest he show his claws and draw blood with his fangs, will urge that Canada continue ignoring the strong recommendations of Commons committees to support endangered Hong Kong democracy activists or to sanction Chinese officials complicit in the Uighur genocide. That perspective implies it would be best that Canada simply risk our alliance with the U.S. by releasing Meng Wanzhou, approving Huawei 5G and continue to allow PRC acquisition of Canadian dual-use technologies.

While Australia has strongly supported Canada over Kovrig and Spavor, it is unlikely that Ottawa will dare to stand with Australia in the face of Chinese bullying, beyond our usual carefully worded “expression of concern.” But Australia’s relations with China today are almost certainly Canada’s tomorrow. As the RUSI report notes, citing the ex-Australian PM and China scholar Kevin Rudd, “the Chinese Communist Party despises and takes advantage of weakness, while it respects strength.”


Is Canada better off giving into Chinese disdain, or should we do the right thing and standing up to China’s bullying violations of the norms of international diplomacy and trade? It is high time our government gave Canadians a clear and unambiguous answer.



====================================================================================

ASEAN countries should take this OZ v CN trade war into considerations when doing trade with China
Good move by China
That will force Canada, Australia to do more business with ASEAN.
 
.
Good move by China
That will force Canada, Australia to do more business with ASEAN.
you cant afford their wine. lol
By Charles BurtonContributor
Mon., Nov. 16, 2020timer3 min. read


As the world ponders the spectacle of Donald Trump’s desperate efforts to sabotage the legitimacy of the U.S. election, on other side of the planet, China is seizing the moment to launch a full-court press to weaken the Western alliance through economic coercion, starting with drastic measures levelled against our anglosphere ally, Australia. The implications for Canada and our relations with the Biden administration are immediate and dire.
Earlier this month, Chinese importers were abruptly told to stop importing a wide range of commodities from Australia, including barley, sugar, red wine, timber, coal, lobster, copper ore and copper concentrates. Consequently, tonnes of stinking dead rock lobsters sat on the tarmac at the Shanghai Airport and thousands of crates of Australian wine caught in customs limbo. This outrageous affront follows China’s specious imposition of anti-dumping duties on Australian barley, and beef export suspensions. The South China Post reported that a ban on Australian wheat could be next.
Australia will have no choice but to reciprocate by blocking imports from China, as Beijing’s actions are in gross violations of the terms of its 2001 accession to the World Trade Organization. It also opens up the way for China to curry favour with the Biden administration by offering the market for these commodities in a side trade deal with the U.S. So much for the protections of the 2014 Australia-China Free Trade Agreement that Canada has long craved to duplicate.

China’s anger is fired by numerous factors, including Australia’s call for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus, and Australia’s ban of Chinese telecom giant Huawei from its 5G network due to national security concerns. But Beijing is especially furious over legislation to address China’s covert, corrupt and coercive political operations to influence Australian politicians with, as a recent report by the U.K.’s Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) notes, “life-changing amounts of money.”
The Chinese Communist Party newspaper China Daily has threatened that Australia will “suffer further pain” for fuelling anti-China sentiment by sanctioning Chinese companies, sending warships to China’s doorsteps in the South China Sea and “colluding” with Washington, concluding that “Australia will pay tremendously for its misjudgment.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin recently said, “We want to urge some people in Australia to earnestly reflect on its own misdeeds, do more to enhance mutual trust … and create the good conditions and atmosphere for practical co-operation between the two countries.”
Chinese diplomats in Australia have issued statements suggesting that, to set things right, Australia should sign up to Beijing’s $1.5 trillion Belt and Road infrastructure initiative and begin a “new direction of co-operation.” One could imagine a future with Chinese military bases at the Port of Darwin and elsewhere along the Australian coast.

China of course wants Canada to interpret all this as an affirmation of the appeasement policy that Ottawa continues to adopt in the face of horrendous hostage diplomacy and of Beijing’s arbitrary termination of Canadian agricultural import contracts that we have seen over the past two years.



Those who have urged that we treat the panda kindly, lest he show his claws and draw blood with his fangs, will urge that Canada continue ignoring the strong recommendations of Commons committees to support endangered Hong Kong democracy activists or to sanction Chinese officials complicit in the Uighur genocide. That perspective implies it would be best that Canada simply risk our alliance with the U.S. by releasing Meng Wanzhou, approving Huawei 5G and continue to allow PRC acquisition of Canadian dual-use technologies.

While Australia has strongly supported Canada over Kovrig and Spavor, it is unlikely that Ottawa will dare to stand with Australia in the face of Chinese bullying, beyond our usual carefully worded “expression of concern.” But Australia’s relations with China today are almost certainly Canada’s tomorrow. As the RUSI report notes, citing the ex-Australian PM and China scholar Kevin Rudd, “the Chinese Communist Party despises and takes advantage of weakness, while it respects strength.”


Is Canada better off giving into Chinese disdain, or should we do the right thing and standing up to China’s bullying violations of the norms of international diplomacy and trade? It is high time our government gave Canadians a clear and unambiguous answer.



====================================================================================

ASEAN countries should take this OZ v CN trade war into considerations when doing trade with China
Good Canada should learn and not make same mistake. Don't be the second eye got poked.
 
.
Good move by China
That will force Canada, Australia to do more business with ASEAN.
Like Canada and Australia didn't want to do more business with ASEAN countries. They always do. But you can not offer them the market
 
.
Good move by China
That will force Canada, Australia to do more business with ASEAN.
ASEAN doesn't have a market for what canada is selling. Actually ASEAN is in the business of selling what Canada is selling.
 
.
Like Canada and Australia didn't want to do more business with ASEAN countries. They always do. But you can not offer them the market
Sorry bro you forget Asean has 650 million people.
650 million hungry people that want to do business, to consume products. Lots of potentials.
China has 1.4 billion people but you are fat and lazy, refuse to buy Canada, Australia products.
 
.
Sorry bro you forget Asean has 650 million people.
650 million hungry people that want to do business, to consume products. Lots of potentials.
China has 1.4 billion people but you are fat and lazy, refuse to buy Canada, Australia products.
This is the first time in my life to hear Chinese are fat and lazy compared with Asean people
 
.
This is the first time in my life to hear Chinese are fat and lazy compared with Asean people
Yes you are like an overweight fat cat.
Too fat to move around.
Time to do some exercises
ASEAN doesn't have a market for what canada is selling. Actually ASEAN is in the business of selling what Canada is selling.
Canada is a rich country with vast resources. The Canadians laugh on your threat. Rediculous.
 
.
The reporter forgot Australia banned Huawei first. Which is also a violation of WTO rules. China's counterattacks are reasonable.

I thought Autralians were fully prepared for China's revenges for what they did to China. Turns out they look like they are suffering from China's surprise attacks. I don't understand "anglosphere" mindset. You did bad things to other. Never expect any consequences to come?
If Australians do bad things and get punished, how dare they slaughter civilians in Afghanistan?
Some countries are accustomed to doing whatever they want with the United States, and they are not afraid of any consequences.
 
.
By Charles BurtonContributor
Mon., Nov. 16, 2020timer3 min. read


As the world ponders the spectacle of Donald Trump’s desperate efforts to sabotage the legitimacy of the U.S. election, on other side of the planet, China is seizing the moment to launch a full-court press to weaken the Western alliance through economic coercion, starting with drastic measures levelled against our anglosphere ally, Australia. The implications for Canada and our relations with the Biden administration are immediate and dire.
Earlier this month, Chinese importers were abruptly told to stop importing a wide range of commodities from Australia, including barley, sugar, red wine, timber, coal, lobster, copper ore and copper concentrates. Consequently, tonnes of stinking dead rock lobsters sat on the tarmac at the Shanghai Airport and thousands of crates of Australian wine caught in customs limbo. This outrageous affront follows China’s specious imposition of anti-dumping duties on Australian barley, and beef export suspensions. The South China Post reported that a ban on Australian wheat could be next.
Australia will have no choice but to reciprocate by blocking imports from China, as Beijing’s actions are in gross violations of the terms of its 2001 accession to the World Trade Organization. It also opens up the way for China to curry favour with the Biden administration by offering the market for these commodities in a side trade deal with the U.S. So much for the protections of the 2014 Australia-China Free Trade Agreement that Canada has long craved to duplicate.

China’s anger is fired by numerous factors, including Australia’s call for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus, and Australia’s ban of Chinese telecom giant Huawei from its 5G network due to national security concerns. But Beijing is especially furious over legislation to address China’s covert, corrupt and coercive political operations to influence Australian politicians with, as a recent report by the U.K.’s Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) notes, “life-changing amounts of money.”
The Chinese Communist Party newspaper China Daily has threatened that Australia will “suffer further pain” for fuelling anti-China sentiment by sanctioning Chinese companies, sending warships to China’s doorsteps in the South China Sea and “colluding” with Washington, concluding that “Australia will pay tremendously for its misjudgment.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin recently said, “We want to urge some people in Australia to earnestly reflect on its own misdeeds, do more to enhance mutual trust … and create the good conditions and atmosphere for practical co-operation between the two countries.”
Chinese diplomats in Australia have issued statements suggesting that, to set things right, Australia should sign up to Beijing’s $1.5 trillion Belt and Road infrastructure initiative and begin a “new direction of co-operation.” One could imagine a future with Chinese military bases at the Port of Darwin and elsewhere along the Australian coast.

China of course wants Canada to interpret all this as an affirmation of the appeasement policy that Ottawa continues to adopt in the face of horrendous hostage diplomacy and of Beijing’s arbitrary termination of Canadian agricultural import contracts that we have seen over the past two years.



Those who have urged that we treat the panda kindly, lest he show his claws and draw blood with his fangs, will urge that Canada continue ignoring the strong recommendations of Commons committees to support endangered Hong Kong democracy activists or to sanction Chinese officials complicit in the Uighur genocide. That perspective implies it would be best that Canada simply risk our alliance with the U.S. by releasing Meng Wanzhou, approving Huawei 5G and continue to allow PRC acquisition of Canadian dual-use technologies.

While Australia has strongly supported Canada over Kovrig and Spavor, it is unlikely that Ottawa will dare to stand with Australia in the face of Chinese bullying, beyond our usual carefully worded “expression of concern.” But Australia’s relations with China today are almost certainly Canada’s tomorrow. As the RUSI report notes, citing the ex-Australian PM and China scholar Kevin Rudd, “the Chinese Communist Party despises and takes advantage of weakness, while it respects strength.”


Is Canada better off giving into Chinese disdain, or should we do the right thing and standing up to China’s bullying violations of the norms of international diplomacy and trade? It is high time our government gave Canadians a clear and unambiguous answer.



====================================================================================

ASEAN countries should take this OZ v CN trade war into considerations when doing trade with China
China has emerged as the savior of this world.
 
. .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom