

Australia: a frontline state in the new Cold War
December 14, 2022
On 15 November 2022, during the G20 summit in Bali (Indonesia), Australias Prime Minister Anthony Albanesetoldjournalists that his country seeks a stable relationship with China. This is because, as Albanese pointed out, China is Australias largest trading partner. They are worth more than Japan, the United States, and the Republic of Korea combined. Since 2009, China has also been Australias largest destination for exports as well as the largest single source of Australias imports.
For the past six years, China has largely ignored Australias requests for meetings due to the latters close military alignment with the US. Now, in Bali, Chinas President Xi Jinpingmade it clearthat the Chinese-Australian relationship is one to be cherished. When Albanese was asked if Xi raised the issue of Australias participation in several military pacts against China, he said that issues of strategic rivalry [were] not raised, except for in general comments.
Former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd recentlysaidthat the impetus for the deep freeze between Australia and China six year ago was the US doctrine of strategic competition. This outlook is clarified in the 2022_US National Security Strategy_, whichassertsthat China is Americas most consequential geopolitical challenge. In Bali, US President Joe Bidensaidthat the US and China must manage the competition responsibly, which suggested that the US might take a less belligerent posture towards China by not pressuring them through US military pacts in Asia and by reducing the intensification of the crisis over Taiwan. Rudd suggests that Bidens shift in tone might have given Albanese the opportunity to reset relations between Australia and China.
Before Albanese left for Bali, however, newsbrokeabout a plan to station six US B-52 bombers, which have nuclear weapons capability, in northern Australia at the Tindal air force base. Additionally, Australia willbuild11 large storage tanks for jet fuel, providing the US with refuelling capacity closer to China than its main fuel repository in the Pacific, Hawaii. Construction on this squadron operations facility wouldstartimmediately and be completed by 2026. The $646 million upgrade includes new equipment and improvements to the US-Australian spy base at Pine Gap, where the neighbouring population in Alice Springsworriesabout being a nuclear target in a war that they simply do not want.
These announcements come as no surprise. US bombers, including B-52s, have visited the base since the 1980s and taken part in US-Australian training operations since 2005. In 2016, the US commander of its Pacific air forces, General Lori Robinson,saidthat the US would likely add the B-1 bomber which has a longer range and a larger payload capacity to these exercises. The US-AustralianEnhanced Air Cooperation(2011) has already permitted these expansions, although this has routinely embarrassed Australian government officials who would prefer more discretion, in part due to the anti-nuclear sentiment in New Zealand and in many neighbouring Pacific island states who are signatories of the 1986 Treaty of Rarotonga thatestablishesthe region as a nuclear-free zone.
The expansion of the Tindal air base and the upgrades to Pine Gap spy base are part of the overall deepening of military and strategic ties between the US and Australia. These ties have a long history, but they were formalised by the Australia-New Zealand-United States (ANZUS) Security Treaty of 1951 and Australias entry into theFive Eyesintelligence network in 1956. Since then, the two countries have tightened their security linkages, such as by facilitating the transfer of military equipment from the US arms industry to Australia. In 2011, US President Barack Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillardagreedto position a few thousand US Marines in Darwin and Northern Australia and allow US bombers frequent flights to that base. This was part of Obamas pivot to Asia, which signalled the US pressure campaign against Chinas economic advancement.
Two new security alignments theQuadrilateral Security Dialogue(Quad, restarted in 2017) andAUKUS(2021) further enhanced these ties. The Quad brought together India and Japan with Australia and the US. Since 1990, Australia has hostedExercise Pitch Blackat Tindal, a military war game on which it has collaborated with various countries. Since Indias air force joined in 2018 and Japan participated in 2022, all Quad and AUKUS members are now a part of this large airborne training mission. Australian officials say that after Tindals expansion, Exercise Pitch Black will increase in size. In October 2022, Prime Minister Albanese and Japans Prime Minister Fumio Kishida updated their 2007 bilateral security pact. The new reciprocal access agreement was signed in response to an increasingly severe strategic environment,accordingto Kishida, and it allows the two countries to conduct joint military exercises.
Chinas foreign ministry responded to news of the expansion of Tindal and Pine Gap bysaying, Such a move by the US and Australia escalates regional tensions, gravely undermines regional peace and security, and may trigger an arms race in the region.
Albanese walked into the meeting with Xi hoping to end Chinas trade restrictions on Australia. He left with optimism that the $20 billion restrictions imposed in 2020 would be lifted soon. It will take a while to see improvement in concrete terms going forward, hesaid. However, there is no word from China about removing theserestrictions, which limit the import of Australian barley, beef, coal, cotton, lobsters, timber, and wine.
These restrictions weretriggeredby then Prime Minister of Australia Scott Morrisonsinsinuationthat China was responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic. Even before that, in 2018, Australias governmentbannedtwo Chinese telecommunications firms (Huawei and ZTE) from operating in its jurisdiction. This was not a trivial policy change, since it meant adropfrom $19 billion in Australias trade with China in July 2021 to $13 billion in March 2022.
During the meeting in Bali between Albanese and Xi, the Australian side presented a list of grievances, including Beijings restrictions on trade and Australias concerns about human rights and democracy in China. Australia seeks to normalise relations in terms of trade while maintaining its expanded military ties with the United States.
Xi did not put anything on the table. He merely listened, shook hands, and left with the assurance that the two sides would continue to talk. This is a great advance from the ugly rhetoric under Scott Morrisons administration.
In October 2022, Chinas ambassador to Australia, Xiao Qian, gave anaddressin anticipation of the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Australia and China, which will be celebrated on 21 December. During this talk, Ambassador Qian asked his Australian counterparts if they saw China as a champion or a challenger of the international order. Australias government and press, he suggested, sees China as a challenger of the UN Charter and the multilateral system. However, he said, China sees itself as a champion of greater collaboration between countries to address common problems.
The list of concerns that Albanese placed before Xi signals that Australia, like the US, continues to treat China as a threat rather than a partner. This general outlook towards China makes any possibility of genuine normalisation difficult. That is why Ambassador Qiancalledfor Australia to have an objective and rational perception of China and for Canberra to develop a positive and pragmatic policy towards China.
Growing anti-Chinese sentiment within Australia poses a serious problem for any move towards normalisation. In July 2022, Chinas Foreign Minister Wang Yisaidthat Australia would have to correct several of its views on China before relations could advance. A recent pollshowsthat three-quarters of Australias population believes that China might be a military threat within the next two decades. The same survey showed that nearly 90% of those polledsaidthat the US-Australia military alliance is either very or fairly important. At the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore earlier this year, Australias Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marlessaidthat countries must engage each other through dialogue and diplomacy. China is not going anywhere. And we all need to live together and, hopefully, prosper together, he noted.
That Albanese and Xi met in Bali is a sign of the importance of diplomacy and dialogue. Albanese will not be able to get the trade benefits that Australia would like unless there is a reversal of these attitudes and the US-Australia military posture towards China.
First published in TRICONTINENTAL DECEMBER 8, 2022

Vijay Prashad
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor, and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. He is the chief editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, and a senior non-resident fellow at Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China. He has written more than 20 books, including The Darker Nations and The Poorer Nations. His latest books are Struggle Makes Us Human: Learning from Movements for Socialism and (with Noam Chomsky) The Withdrawal: Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, and the Fragility of U.S. Power.