Wednesday, 26 November 2008

Murdoch: Australia to join NATO due to Asia Pacific role

Rupert Murdoch, in a new role as security policy analyst, has made the bold assertion that Australia should be invited to join NATO due to our role in the Asia Pacific region. Murdoch kicked off Australia's bid as part of his address for this year's ABC Boyer Lecture, titled 'A Golden Age of Freedom' at the Sydney Opera House. The address was also picked up by Fora.tv as their lead story. NATO, ASEAN Regional Forum, East Asia Summit, the UN...Australia is soon to be in more groups than Murdoch is on company boards.

Woolcott: Asia doesn't want Rudd's new Asia Pacific Community

Richard Woolcott, the PM's Envoy, said on ABC2's News Breakfast that PM Rudd's concept of the Asia Pacific Community has had a lukewarm response after his initial tour of 13 countries in the region. It will be interesting to see whether things will change as the financial crisis deepens, perhaps leaders in the region will see the value of a broader body to deal with issues that cut across political, economic and social divides. Woolcott seems to think that exisiting bodies can adequately deal with these issues.

Woolcott is set to head off again soon to consult and engage leaders and others in the region, including Obama and the new US administration. His report to Rudd is due in mid-December this year.

Monday, 24 November 2008

PM Rudd views Asia Pacific through US lens

On 20 November, our PM gave a speech to the Kokoda Foundation dinner on the Asia Pacific and foreign policy entitled, 'Towards an Asia-Pacific Century". The speech has a lot of useful new information but the choice of a US-Australia forum to reveal detail on the Asia Pacific, with no Asian analysts or government reps on the program seems to indicate that Australia's policy on the Asia Pacific might be seen through the lens of our relationship with the US.

Important issues covered include the emphasis on the G20 as the body with the most potential for resolving global issues, "Its strategic economic weight and its representative nature provide the G20 with potential for real long term authority."

Also he mentioned the importance of engaging our partners in the region, of hearing their insights, "China and India as two emerging economic giants must be part of solutions to global economic and financial challenges, they must be a formal part of the solution, the considered solution to global economic and financial challenges."

However, Rudd's audience was dominated by US interests - Ambassador Richard Armitage, Stanley Roth, former Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia in the Clinton Administration, Lieutenant -General Fraser, Deputy Commander US Pacific Command and Ambassador Robert McCallum. Strange that nobody from our region was there at a Kokoda Foundation event focused on the Asia Pacific region. The dinner was part of the Kokoda Foundation's 'Australia-US Strategic Trilogy' but you would have thought the views of analysts or government from the region would be sought.

Rudd provided more detail on his proposed Asia Pacific Community (APC) initiative, "we have started a constructive dialogue on the development of a broad-ranging, effective forum for engagement between regional countries." In response to a question from the audience on whether the APC was in the region's best interests, he said "we in the Australian Government remain completely open." I have heard that the PM's envoy, Richard Woolcott, has provided initial feedback to the PM on his meetings with regional leaders. It seems the cool reception that Rudd's APC idea has received in the region has not dampened the PM's enthusiasm for it. I wonder whether the PM will release Woolcott's report?

Also interesting was Rudd's comments on the US engagement with Asia by Bush, "I think an outstanding success of the Bush Administration has been the way it’s managed the China relationship in what could have gone radically in the wrong direction and I think it speaks well of the outgoing administration in terms of our interests and stability in this region."

Rudd also revealed some of his priorities for discussions with the new Obama administration, which included "what we can do more broadly across the region, hence our proposal for an Asia-Pacific community, and hence why we wish to engage our American friends in due season on that."

Monday, 10 November 2008

RA Connect Asia: Report on Chinese Language Education in Australian Schools

Alert: there will be a live interview on Tuesday 11 November at 10.45am EST on Radio Australia's Connect Asia program, with Dr Jane Orton on the report on Chinese Language Education in Australian Schools.

USyd to train students from the Asia Pacific in human rights

Sydney University has announced that it has won a grant from the EU to train post graduate students from the Asia Pacific region in human rights. Partner universities include Gadjah Mada University in Indonesia, Kathmandu Law School in Nepal, the University of Colombo in Sri Lanka, and Mahidol University in Thailand.

The program includes an initial semester and one week intensive course at USyd followed by study at a partner university. Students will do a combination of electives, research dissertation and an internship. The EU grant will fund 30 students from the region for two years, including travel, fees, and per diems.

This USyd announcement is timely given that ASEAN Secretary General Surin Pitsuwan affirmed ASEAN's push to establish its first human rights body for the 41 year old grouping of Southeast Asian nations. Surin delivered the keynote address at the South East Asian Press Alliance 10 year anniversary dinner on Saturday night in Bangkok.
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Thursday, 6 November 2008

Sheridan misses the point on PM Rudd and Asia

Yesterday's Australian Literary Review  has a piece by Greg Sheridan on PM Rudd and Asia. Sheridan has some interesting comments on Rudd's vision for relations with Asia, especially China, and the US but spoils it by waffling on foreign policy analysts which sounds tired and whingeing.

He misses the point in questioning whether Rudd is a "panda hugger". It is not an either/or proposition - the point of speaking Mandarin and learning about China is that you can understand issues and make informed decisions, it doesn't mean you automatically become pro-China. And what does pro-China mean anyway? Does it mean you support the government, or that you have Chinese interests at heart? Asia literacy is about opening up opportunities for understanding and cooperation, not siding with Asian governments. Sheridan's piece has a nice plug for DFAT and Asian languages though.
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