{"id":11384,"date":"2013-12-16T12:00:19","date_gmt":"2013-12-16T01:00:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=11384"},"modified":"2014-02-01T22:03:11","modified_gmt":"2014-02-01T11:03:11","slug":"the-abbott-strategic-trifecta-alliance-interests-and-values","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/the-abbott-strategic-trifecta-alliance-interests-and-values\/","title":{"rendered":"The Abbott strategic trifecta: alliance, interests and values"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>In his words about the argument with China, Tony Abbott quickly scored the trifecta: alliance, interests and values. These are the three things nations go to war for. And within days of China\u2019s announcement on November 23 of its new air defence zone, Abbott had ticked all three boxes.<\/p>\n Abbott\u2019s trifecta is striking on many levels, not least because we’re such a long way from anything that should be worth a conflict with China. If the Prime Minister\u2019s framing of the argument is taken at face value, we are not as far from that precipice as we\u2019d like to imagine, easing towards the summer slowdown of the Oz Christmas.<\/p>\n The Economist stated both the obvious need and the odious omen with its editorial<\/a> on the Japan-US (and Australia and South Korea) face-off with China:<\/p>\n The region must work harder to build some kind of architecture where regional powers can discuss security. If such a framework had existed in Europe in 1914, things might have turned out differently.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n This first of a series of four columns on Abbott\u2019s trifecta will build on my recent efforts on the US alliance and the alliance trilateral with Japan<\/a>, the iron in the idiom<\/a> Abbott injected into his comments on China compared to the softer line that could have been expected from Labor and the John Howard context for Abbott\u2019s embrace of Japan as an ally<\/a>.<\/p>\n To begin, see Abbott\u2019s words invoking the trifecta at a press conference on November 28, putting values and interests and alliance into the equation. Here’s the Prime Minister\u2019s response<\/a> to a question about Australia\u2019s calling in of the Chinese Ambassador to protest the declaration of the air defence zone:<\/p>\n I think it\u2019s important for Australia to stand up for its values. We have to be reasonable and proportionate about these things and have to treat other countries and their leaders with respect and with courtesy but where we think Australia\u2019s values and interests have been compromised I think it\u2019s important to speak our mind and we believe in freedom of navigation \u2013 navigation of the seas, navigation of the air \u2013 and I think there is a significant issue here, and that\u2019s why it was important to call in the Chinese Ambassador and put a point of view to him.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Tick the values and interests boxes. Note that in so joining values and interests in the one phrase, Abbott is breaking the rule repeatedly preached by the political master who made him, John Howard. The Howard mantra was always about the need to focus on the interests that united China and Australia, keeping these completely separate from their differing values. The mantra was that interests should bring Australia and China together, while too much about values could drive them apart.<\/p>\n To complete the trifecta, bringing in a \u2018strong\u2019 alliance with the US and a \u2018strong\u2019 alliance with Japan, see Abbott\u2019s response a few moments later to the obvious follow-up question: \u00a0‘Prime Minister, are you concerned about China\u2019s reaction? Do you think it could damage our trade with that country’? Abbott replied:<\/p>\n China trades with us because it is in China\u2019s interest to trade with us. We have good products, we have good reliability as a supplier, we can supply at competitive prices and I hope that is always the case. I expect China to be a strong and valuable economic partner of ours because it is in China\u2019s interest to be a strong and valuable economic partner of ours. I think China fully understands that on some issues we are going to take a different position to them. We are a strong ally of the United States, we are a strong ally of Japan, we have a very strong view that international disputes should be settled peacefully and in accordance with the rule of law and where we think that is not happening, or it is not happening appropriately, we will speak our mind.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n