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The West is not coming to Australia’s rescue. We need new alliances (Australian Lowy Institute International Security Program Director)

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OPINION
The West is not coming to Australia’s rescue. We need new alliances
Sam Roggeveen
Contributor
June 16, 2021 — 9.02am


The summits of the G7 group and the NATO alliance over the past few days have produced an avalanche of headlines about a growing anti-China mood among Western nations and an appetite to stand up to Beijing’s assertiveness.

Let’s hope the Australian government is not taking these headlines too seriously, because the harsh truth is that there will be no Western alliance to contain China, and no united democratic front against Beijing’s authoritarianism. The sooner we realise this and build it into our foreign and defence policies, the safer we will be.

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French President Emmanuel Macron speaks at the end of a NATO summit in Brussels.CREDIT:AP


It’s important to stress that this is not an argument about Western “decline”, which is a vastly overstated prospect. The European Union is a massive and vibrant economic actor, and NATO is one of the most successful alliances in modern history. The United States remains fantastically powerful, and that won’t change in our lifetime. It has a resilient and growing economy, favourable demographics (lots of young people), tremendous capacity for innovation, a huge military, and it is surrounded by vast oceans to the east and west and friendly neighbours to the north and south.

But of course, China is huge too. Even if we accept all the pessimistic prognoses about China’s economic future – ageing population, ballooning debt, environmental disasters – it is safe to assume that a country which already boasts the world’s second-largest economy will hold on to that mantle, and might even ascend to first place.

That in turn raises the stakes of any geopolitical contest between China and the West, especially for Europe, which has no obvious reason to get involved. Why would NATO deal itself into such a high-stakes contest when China poses no conceivable military threat to Europe? You might argue that Europe has economic interests to protect, but European nations have not had a substantial military presence in Asia for decades, while their economic ties to Asia have grown.

Doesn’t Europe have an interest in protecting democracy from the rise of authoritarianism? Perhaps, but China is not an ideological exporter. While it certainly wants to defend its own political system from Western liberal influences, it shows no signs of wanting to impose its model on the world as the Soviet Union once tried.

Many of these same arguments apply to the United States, but the difference is that Washington already has a substantial security presence in Asia and a network of alliances. It is trying to defend a position of leadership which it has held for decades. That is a powerful motivation. The United States may decide that holding on to leadership in Asia is so important that it ought to engage in a fierce contest of economic and political systems in order to defend its status.

But is leadership alone enough of a motivation? Will the US engage in such a costly contest, and risk a potentially catastrophic war, just to preserve its status? Because there really is no other pressing reason for the US to go all-in. China is no more of a threat to America’s cherished democratic principles than it is to Europe’s political systems. America is also one of the most secure nations in the world – it cannot be invaded or militarily coerced. And as for protecting its economic interests: well, if Europe can grow its economic ties with Asia even though it has no military presence there, why can’t the US do the same?

None of this is to say Australia is friendless and that our alliance with the US is worthless. An American withdrawal from Asia is a very distant prospect. But while the US will remain an important partner, the Morrison government should assume that the credibility of America’s alliance commitments in Asia will diminish over time. China’s rise means the costs to America of meeting its commitments to allies have risen sharply, while the incentives for doing so are diminishing. And that means allies will no longer believe, deep in their bones, that the US will be there for them in a military emergency

Does that mean Australia is entirely on its own? No, the United States, and to a lesser extent Europe, will remain important partners, particularly when it comes to selling high-tech weapons and sharing intelligence. But if there is a natural security partner for Australia in this era it is not to be found among the Western nations with which we have traditionally partnered.

The obvious candidate is Indonesia, south-east Asia’s leader and future economic player of global standing. Jakarta and Canberra should work towards a new era of strategic co-operation built on the common objective of keeping maritime south-east Asia free of domination by China.

The days of Western dominion in Asia are over. Australia’s security must rest on a deep and enduring connection with its neighbours.

Sam Roggeveen is director of the International Security Program at the Lowy Institute. Connect with Sam on Twitter.

 
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Gordan Chang of Australia. :enjoy: Lets hope Australia high level people listen to his advice! :enjoy:
 
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the truth of the matter is that australia (and other western nations including the u.s.) are consumer driven economies that can't produce goods cheap enough to consume on a massive scale; they can deny it all they want but the fact is that they all need China as their trading partner.
 
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Australia and Indonesia are actually competing regional powers with an overlapping sphere of influence.
But some bribe Indonesian serving the US imperialism will try hard to convince us Indonesia shall serve US interest by giving up West Papua while going hard at China for SCS. @Reashot Xigwin

Then they claim this is true patriotic Indonesian. :rofl:
 
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Interesting point of view from USA side. Fresh conversation


U.S. National Security Policy in the Indo-Pacific: A Conversation with Senator Tammy Duckworth
 
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China being their biggest trade partners.
All these badmouthing and talks of containing China are inviting bad vibes and bad joss to themselves.

Then strangely instead to reflecting on their own action, they blamed China.

What can we all say?
 
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Interesting to see what kind of financial assistance USA will give in relation to SEA defence capability development. From Indonesia perspective, it could be related with F 16 block 72 potential procurement where soft loan is possibly provided.



11 AUGUST 2021

US increases military assistance to Southeast Asia
by Jon Grevatt


The US government has outlined a commitment to increase financial assistance to countries in Southeast Asia to support regional defence and security capability development.

The intention reflects Washington's growing effort to counter China's assertiveness in Southeast Asia and is also being channelled through increased diplomatic ties: US Secretary of Defense Lloyd J Austin visited the region in late July, and Vice President Kamala Harris will do the same later this month.

 
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Indonesia, Australia to elevate defense, security ties in Indo-Pacific push

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(From right to left, Indonesian Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto, Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno LP Marsudi, Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne and Australian Defense Minister Peter Dutton attend a joint press statement following their two-plus-two meeting at the Foreign Ministry complex in Jakarta, on Sept. 9, 2021.(REUTERS/Indonesian Foreign Ministry)


Dian Septiari (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Fri, September 10, 2021

Indonesia and Australia announced on Thursday that they would expand military cooperation, including in education exchanges, and also bolster counterterror cooperation, as the two nations seek to deepen their security links amid an increasingly challenging Indo-Pacific environment.

Foreign and defense ministers of the two countries met for their first in-person meeting since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, amid increased security risks brought about by the flaring conflict in Myanmar and contentious developments in Afghanistan.

Indonesia was the first leg of a four-country Indo-Pacific tour by Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne and Defense Minister Peter Dutton, who are due to visit India, South Korea and the United States after concluding their two-plus-two talks in Jakarta.

 
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I am not sure how China is able to threaten Australia security?
 
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