Australia does baling wire diplomacy\u2014practical, pragmatic and proudly makeshift.<\/span><\/p>\n
Oz rural tradition decrees a bloke with baling wire can fix a gate or fence or shed or even a tractor.<\/span><\/p>\n
Baling wire diplomacy is adequate to the moment. Imagination is useful, not always essential. Flair is optional, adaptability vital.<\/span><\/p>\n
The urban version of the baling wire habit is duct tape diplomacy. Tape the thing up, keep it going.<\/span><\/p>\n
Baling wire philosophy\u2014the duct tape dictum\u2014is that of a status quo power. We like things as they are. Long may it continue.<\/span><\/p>\n
The dictum drives Australia to be a great joiner. Membership matters. We want to be in the club, at the table, in the game.<\/span><\/p>\n
Asia drives the joiner instinct. Australia seeks to be Asia\u2019s odd-man-in.<\/span><\/p>\n
When your only natural regional ally is New Zealand, the constant need is to create the habit of belonging. To be in the club is to have a voice.<\/span><\/p>\n
Big powers do grand strategy. Australia pitches in with practical stuff. That\u2019s the limitation and strength of the baling wire way. Australia helps keep the show on the road and even moving. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n
If baling wire is the mode, what are the enduring mindsets or attitudes?<\/span><\/p>\n
The three pillars of Oz diplomacy and strategy are the US alliance (the Menzies tradition); multilateralism and the UN (the Evatt tradition); and the region (the Spender\/Casey\/Keating tradition).<\/span><\/p>\n