

Dungeons and dragons: The China threat fiction
September 7, 2021
China is an increasingly authoritarian state, actively asserting its will regionally and within its own borders giving rise to a dangerous fiction.
It is sensible policy for Australia to be wary of Chinas rise and, where appropriate, hold China to account for its actions. However, there is no evidence that Chinas endgame is to pose a military or political threat to Australia.
In anopinion piecepublished last week, former prime minister Paul Keating declared, The Morrison government is pushing Australia towards a confrontation with Beijing, mainly to be seen as a fawning acolyte in Washington.
The Morrison government is wantonly leading Australia into a strategic dead end by its needless provocations against China. China is not the old Soviet Union.
Keating pointed out, unlike the Soviet Union, China does not pose a daily threat of nuclear Armageddon. Its great problem, he says, is that it [China] is now a state as large as the United States, and with the potential of being much larger an unforgivable sin for American triumphalists.
And that sin has radiated over those Australians with a fawning, obsequious attitude to the US. How dare China shirt-front American economic pre-eminence!
No evidence of wholesale Chinese infiltration
Three years into Australias tough, and far-reaching, foreign interference laws, there has yet to be one conviction, let alone a matter even reach the courts in relation to any alleged Chinese foreign interference in Australia.
Yet Chinese-Australians continue to be demonized and Australians who advocate constructive engagement with China that should not in any way compromise our sovereignty are relentlessly attacked for their views.
The China hawk story that Australias sovereignty is under threat from China is absurd alarmism.
As Keating says, It is true that China, like all big states, has become ruder as it has got bigger. Under Xi Jinping and in its new foreign policy adolescence its grand coming out it expects other states to afford it deference and jump to its tune. But big states are invariably rude.
Comprehensiveresearch conducted by ANU academic Dr Dirk van der Kley found key Chinese groups to have been a dismal failure in influencing Australian government policy.
Essentially, the China threat narrative serves three purposes:
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Supporting the federal governments political agenda by talking up foreign threats at a time of numerous domestic policy failures;
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Attracting research dollars, from the Australian government, US government and other foreign entities to drive this narrative; and
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Supporting US foreign policy and strategic ambitions in the Asian region (ie: ensure that China can never rise to a point of economic and technological parity with the US).
US wants primacy not democracy
In 2015, Robert Daly, the director of the Wilson Centers Kissinger Institute on China and the United States, one of the USs leading China experts, made this bold assessmentof the US/Australia narrative that Chinas ideology makes it a danger to global stability. The former US diplomat said:
Even if they [China], just as a thought experiment, adapted our constitution and our laws wholesale, we should still try to limit their growth, merely because we [the United States] shouldnt have a peer competitor.
Daly, who favours constructive engagement with China, was making a counter-argument to this ideology during a televised debate.
Daly says the endgame of US foreign policy hawks is damaging Chinas economy at any costs, even if it means pushing back hundreds of millions of ordinary people back into poverty.
The debate moderator, prominent US journalist and author, John Donvan responded: Whats wrong with that?
Essentially US foreign policy is to halt the rise of Australias most important trading partner, it has crafted a narrative based on democratic shared values to launch a propaganda war.
In Australia it is a Cold War run by individuals right-wing politicians, academics, think tanks and journalists who will not lose their jobs or suffer personal financial loss as a result of the destruction of Australias most important trade relationship.
These individuals, and groups support, and seek alliances with other nations who have appalling human rights records and are not in any way functioning liberal democracies. It is an argument run by ideologues and they will partner with anyone who opposes China.
The last time the United States ventured into Asia to wage war on a communist regime, at least two million civilians were slaughtered and five decades later the communist leadership, of tiny Vietnam which the mighty Americans failed to topple, is still in place.
In August 2021, that same disastrous scenario played out in Afghanistan as the United States and its allies, including Australia, pulled out of the nation it invaded two decades earlier. As the Taliban overran the entire country, and the countrys US-backed president, Ashraf Ghani, was whisked over the borders to safety. The coalition forces left behind thousands of Afghans whod aided them since 2001, Afghans facing harsh retribution for helping American and Australians.
Democracy is a very easy concept to sell in the west, yet there is blissful ignorance of the fact that, in the entirety of human history no country has invaded other nations and killed more people in the name of democracy and freedom than the United States of America.

Marcus Reubenstein
Marcus Reubenstein is an independent journalist with more than twenty-five years of media experience, having previously been a staffer with a federal Liberal Party senator from 1992 to 1994. He spent five years at Seven News in Sydney and seven years at SBS World News where he was a senior correspondent. As a print journalist he has contributed to most of Australia’s major news outlets. Internationally he has worked on assignments for CNN, Eurosport and the Olympic Games Broadcasting Service. He is the founder and editor of Asian business new website, APAC Business Review.