Stephen FitzGerald

STEPHEN FITZGERALD. Donald Trump. Seizing the opportunity to strengthen relations with countries in Asia.

Kim Beazley, as shocked as anyone by the election result, has said: We do have one advantage going for us with a Trump presidency, and thats this. We are a member of the only American alliance that the Trump people unreservedly approve of. So at least weve got a basis of a discussion with them. Kim seems to believe this is some kind of plus. But I think it is frightening. The favoured client of the Trump people! If that is true, what does it say about us, and the expectations of us in regional and international affairs as the Trump presidency gets into stride?

Bob Carr said to his fellow panellists on ABC News 24 on Wednesday that they must stop normalising Trump, the Trump phenomenon and the coming Trump presidency, stop saying well weve had this kind of thing before, like Reagan for example. You can see this normalising already in the first responses of Malcolm Turnbull and Julie Bishop. But as Bob said, you have to understand that Trumps win expresses a complete shift in the US political scene and its not going to change after Inauguration day.

But I see the shock is an opportunity. I cant remember an occasion when Australians either followed with such interest, or recoiled in such widespread shock and disbelief at a momentous event in American politics. Theres an opportunity here for this sudden moment of clarity to be translated into a total re-thinking of our relations with the United States and a rejection of the whole position of reflexive acceptance of US strategic assessments and policies and alliances, particularly in Asia, and of getting involved in Americas wars. And instead becoming a well-intentioned critic of US policies, and responding plainly and if necessary publicly to the periodic attempts of Washington officials to browbeat Australian politicians and officials.

We should seize this opportunity, now, to vastly strengthen our relations with the countries in Asia, our primary geostrategic region, and work in partnership with them to try to manage the disruption and limit the damage from a potentially rogue and wrecking US President in our region. How? Heres one possibility.

As we know, China is intent on challenging or changing at least some of the rules of the international order, if not for the whole world, certainly for the Asian region. The setting up of the AIIB was one example. But its the One Belt One Road concept that foreshadows different rules more broadly, a prospect inherent also in Chinas idea of communities of shared destiny. President Obama, conceding that the world is changing and the rules are changing with it, has said the United States not China should write the rules. I didnt agree with that even from Obama, and Id be quite fearful of a President Trump re-writing the rules of the international order.

In any event, China will go on doing what it has begun, and it has the political and economic and strategic power to do so. We must recognise that, but this does not mean we should not try to influence it or head off any change that is unacceptable. As it has been extending its influence into its neighbouring countries, each one has been endeavouring to manage in its own way this new projection of power and influence and the rules China would like to bring with it.

Rather than resisting Chinas bid to change the rules, or just standing by and leaving it to China, why should not Chinas friends and neighbours within this region try to work together with China on these matters? This would entail proposing to China that regionally we need the stability and security of a community, not in an EU sense, but rather a loose connection of countries with mutually agreed rules. And work our way towards mutually acceptable positions and even an agreed document, a kind of charter for a new Asia.

This is not to suggest surrender to Chinese suzerainty but rather the reverse, but in collaboration with China not in confrontation, a welcoming regional response to Chinas renewed power and influence rather than the more negative response proposed by the US. And in recognition of the great change and volatility in the world, and in Asia what the great Australian international relations scholar Coral Bell in 2007 called The End of the Vasco da Gama Era - surely cause for revisiting the rules with our Asian neighbours and making new ones that fit the contemporary realities of our world. With Trump as president, or with possibly like-minded successors, we may need the collective security of a rules-based Asian international order.

Dr. Stephen Fitzgerald was formerly Australias Ambassador to China.

Stephen FitzGerald

Stephen FitzGerald AO is a Board Member of China Matters, Distinguished Fellow of the Whitlam Institute, Associate Professor, Australia China Institute for Arts and Culture at Western Sydney University. He was the first Ambassador of Australia to the PRC.