Category: defence

  • Canberra Data Centres has booked more than $1 billion in Commonwealth contracts since launching in 2007 to meet the storage needs of the federal government, passing the milestone with the signing of a new 10-year deal with Defence last month. The $91.5 million Defence contract is double the value of its previous most lucrative contract…

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  • Defence minister Richard Marles says he is considering options to accelerate the development of a local nuclear-powered submarine building industry but won’t rule out entirely foreign-made vessels to plug a capability need being driven by China’s military build-up. After war drills created tension in the Taiwan Strait, the acting Prime Minister Mr Marles said China’s…

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  • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has launched a Defence Strategic Review to examine investment priorities to ensure sufficient capabilities are maintained, among other priorities. According to the terms of reference of the review, the purpose of the review is to consider the priority of “investment in Defence capabilities and assess the Australian Defence Force’s structure, posture…

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  • Aerospace giant Airbus will be the lead partner for Defence’s space research program, aimed at ensuring Australian forces have assured access to satellite services. Adelaide space companies Inovor Technologies and Shoal Group will support the new program alongside consulting multi-national Deloitte. The Airbus arrangement was announced in an update to Defence’s Resilient Multi-mission Space STaR…

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  • Australia faces its “most complex” strategic circumstance since the Second World War, Defence minister Richard Marles said Wednesday, urging Australia’s researchers to form more partnerships that build technological capabilities for Defence. In a pre-recorded address to the Australian Defence Science, Technology and Research Summit in Sydney, the Defence minister and deputy prime minister said the government…

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  • Accounting multinational KPMG will be paid nearly $10 million over the next eight months to assist with the implementation of the 10-year, $10 billion REDSPICE cyber program, which aims to significantly bolster the capabilities of the Australian Signals Directorate. The Australian Signals Directorate (ASD) – the nation’s online spy agency – has entered into a…

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  • CSIRO has secured the largest government contract to date from the Defence Innovation Hub to develop advanced respiratory protective equipment for the Australian Defence Force. The respirator technology was developed by the agency in partnership with manufacturers and university researchers, and uses metal organic material rather than carbon based absorbent material to provide protection against…

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  • Some of the Public Service’s biggest users of outside contractors are not ensuring the outsourced workers are properly qualified, inducted or discharged, the national audit office has found, putting Commonwealth assets at risk. The Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) has released three reports on the management of contractors by the Department of Defence, Services Australia…

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  • Troop cuts, defence budget hikes, billions in military aid and the spectre of war with China. It’s been a busy week for warmongers and war profiteers. British foreign secretary Liz Truss addressed the NATO summit in Madrid to lay out the Tory’s foreign policy vision.

    High on the agenda was threatening China. In an interview with Times Radio she said the “free world” had to ensure Taiwan could defend itself:

    This is a thing that we’re discussing with our allies.

    Lessons of Ukraine

    In a keynote speech during the conference, she warned that a miscalculation from China could lead to disaster:

    I do think that with China extending its influence through economic coercion and building a capable military, there is a real risk that they draw the wrong idea that results in a catastrophic miscalculation such as invading Taiwan.

    Truss drew on the example of Ukraine to highlight why she wanted to increase support for Taiwan. China considers Taiwan, a US ally, part of its territory:

    We should have done things earlier. We should have been supplying the defensive weapons into Ukraine earlier.

    She added

    We need to learn that lesson for Taiwan. Every piece of equipment we have sent takes months of training, so the sooner we do it, the better.

    Troop cuts

    Contradictory though it may seem, troops cuts are being talked up alongside a defence budget increase.

    As Liz Truss has it:

    We all need to recognise that warfare now is different to warfare as it was 100 years ago, or 200 years ago.

    The thinking seems to be that a move away from conventional military deployments and towards new technological solutions is what is required:

    We need to make sure that the defence capability we have is fit for purpose for the modern world – and we face all kinds of new threats, whether it’s cyber threats, threats in space, new technology, new weaponry, and what’s important is the overall shape of those forces.

    Unhappy general

    The 10,000 cut to troop numbers was not well-received by the head of the army, general Patrick Sanders. In a recent speech he had hyped the threat of Russia, comparing the current political moment to 1937 and the rise of Hitler.

    Yesterday, The Times reported that Sanders had been disciplined by Boris Johnson for suggesting the cuts were “perverse”.

    The troop cuts row has also come at a time when the UK government has pledged an additional £1bn in military aid to Ukraine. Which, among other things, should be seen as a windfall for arms firms as The Canary has argued previously.

    Speaking at the NATO conference, Johnson said:

    UK weapons, equipment and training are transforming Ukraine’s defences against this onslaught.

    New trends in war

    There is more than an atom of truth in the notion that war has changed forms. Big military deployments are off the menu post-Afghanistan. But it is true of both modes of warfare that there are massive profits to be made.

    It can be safely assumed that a large part of the new £1bn package of military aid will go to defence firms. And the general shift away from boots on ground towards new military technology will also fill the coffers of military corporations.

    What’s missing, as ever, is any discussion of socially and economically just global security models.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Petty Officer Photographer Jay Allen, cropped to 770 x 403, licenced under Open Government Licence.

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • The Department of Defence will pay Amazon Web Services and Microsoft nearly $12.5million over the next 15 months for ‘professional services’ to support Defence projects using the US tech giants’ software and infrastructure. The contracts come through the massive whole-of-government deals the companies hold with the Commonwealth, but one was not declared by Defence within…

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  • Australian scientists have led this year’s Queen’s Birthday Honours, making up over half of those awarded Companion of the Australian Order. Of the nine people made Companions of the Australian Order, five were recognised for their contributions to science. These scientists are Queensland Governor Dr Jeanette Young, astrophysicist Emeritus Professor Anne Green, Antarctic ecologist Dr…

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  • The Department of Defence has revealed more detail on the diverse multi-vendor ‘Secret’ Cloud Services it is seeking, including the need to “rapidly establish” infrastructure with deals potentially being signed by the end of the year. In an approach to market for Tranche One released on Wednesday, Defence said it is seeking expressions of interest…

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  • More Defence programs will likely be cut to help pay for substantial new cyber powers for Australia’s spy agency, with just 15 per cent of the funding set aside for REDSPICE by the former government being new, according to an ASPI report. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) released its annual Cost of Defence report…

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  • The Department of Defence will pay KPMG $55 million a year to be the lead systems integrator on its massive data uplift program, less than a year after the consulting giant acquired a local firm specialising in the area. The latest deal continues a steep rise in federal contracts for the global consulting giant. KPMG…

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  • The sober ‘Notice to Industry’ issued by Defence outlining a plan to go to market for multi-vendor Secret Cloud Services belies the intensity of the scramble across the defence and intelligence communities in the preceding weeks. The Defence notice outlined its plans to go to market to secure a multi-vendor cloud infrastructure including IaaS, PaaS…

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  • The Department of Defence has unveiled details of a planned approach to market to transform its information technology operating environment to progressively establish diverse multi-vendor ‘Secret’ Cloud Services hosted in Australia. Defence last week outlined a three-tranche acquisition plan for cloud services capable of handling data at the ‘Secret’ security classification, including infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS), platform-as-a-Service…

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  • Four New South Wales-based companies will share in $23 million in Commonwealth grants as part of the latest federal government Modern Manufacturing Initiative cash splash. Grant recipients announced on Monday operate in the recycling, defence, pharmaceuticals and MedTech sectors. The grants come from the second round of the Modern Manufacturing Initiative’s Integration and Translation streams….

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  • Queensland-based rocket company Gilmour Space Technologies has secured a $15 million deal to develop and launch satellites for the Department of Defence by mid-2023. Gilmour Space will develop a prototype satellite using their G-class satellite bus for Australia’s space force and will be deployed through the firm’s proprietary Eris rocket at an Australian launch site….

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  • There has been a “failure” by the Coalition to deliver adequate Defence capability over the last decade, with the cancelling of programs such as the recent drone surveillance initiative overshadowing productive investments of late, according to shadow Defence minister Brendan O’Connor. Defence Minister Peter Dutton faced off against Mr O’Connor at a debate at the…

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  • Better data and public reporting is needed as a starting point to improve Indigenous recruitment and retention in Defence, particularly around STEM and cyber, a new Australian Strategic Policy Institute report has found. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) report – “Building Genuine Trust” – includes 56 recommendations under 12 areas of focus, looking at…

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  • From manufacturing biplanes to AI operated drones, 2022 marks the 95th anniversary US aerospace manufacturer Boeing’s operations in Australia. It has been a productive relationship, with manufacturing operations and collaborations spanning countless generations of aircraft technology. Operations in Australia are Boeing’s largest outside of the United States. Boeing Australia has a staff of 4000 working…

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  • THE VILLAGE EXPLAINER: By Dan McGarry

    If the coming election goes to Australia’s Labor party, Penny Wong is very likely to become Foreign Minister. So when she speaks, people across the region prick up their ears.

    Without the least disrespect to her recent forebears, she could be one of the most acute, incisive and insightful FMs in recent history.

    Whether she’ll be any more effective than them is another matter.

    Australia has a long tradition of placing prominent front-benchers into the role, and then pointedly ignoring their efforts, their advice and their warnings. It’s as if government leaders find their greatest rival and send them trotting off around the globe, more to keep them from making mischief at home than to achieve anything noteworthy while they’re gone.

    In Australia, it seems, foreign policy is domestic policy done outdoors.

    If she achieves nothing more, Wong would be well served to look closely at the people supporting her, and to spend considerable effort re-organising and in fact re-inventing DFAT.

    Its disconnection from other departments, especially Defence and PMO, has created an internal culture that spends more time feeding on itself than actually helping produce a persuasive or coherent foreign policy.

    Ensuring foreign policy’s primacy at the cabinet table is a big ask, but it will be for naught if the department can’t deliver. There are significant structural matters to be dealt with.

    Rolling development and aid into the department was a significant regression that hampered both sides. Volumes can be written about the need to distinguish development assistance from foreign policy, and many of them could be focused on the Pacific islands region.

    The two are mostly complementary (mostly), but they must also be discrete from one another.

    It’s far more complicated than this, but suffice it to say that development aid prioritises the recipient’s needs, while foreign relations generally prioritise national concerns. The moment you invert either side of that equation, you lose.

    Exempli gratia: Solomon Islands.

    It’s well known that Australia spent billions shoring up Solomon Islands’ security and administrative capacity. Surely after all that aid, they can expect the government to stay onside in geopolitical matters?

    Applying the admittedly simplistic filter from the para above, the answer is an obvious no.

    Aid is not a substitute for actual foreign relations, and foreign relations is definitely not just aid.

    So is Penny Wong correct when she calls the CN/SI defence agreement a massive strategic setback? Sure.

    Is she right to call Pacific Affairs Minister Zed Seselja “a junior woodchuck”, sent in a last minute attempt to dissuade Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare from signing the agreement?

    The idea of a minister responsible for the complex, wildly diverse patchwork of nations spanning such a vast space has value. But in terms of resources and policy heft, Seselja rides at the back of the posse on a mule.

    There are good reasons to devote an entire office to Pacific affairs. There are also blindingly good reasons to keep the Foreign Minister as the primary point of contact on matters of foreign policy.

    That means the role—and yes, the existence—of the Pacific Affairs ministry needs a ground-up reconsideration. Notionally, it fulfills a critical role. But how?

    It’s fair to say that Wong is more insightful than those who describe Solomon Islands as a fly-speck in the Pacific, or a Little Cuba (whatever the F that means). But in the past, Labor’s shown little insight into the actual value and purpose of foreign policy.

    For the better part of four decades, neither Australian party was fussed at all about the fact that there had been few if any official visits between leaders. Prime Ministers regularly blew off Pacific Islands Forum meetings.

    In Vanuatu’s case, the first ever prime ministerial visit to Canberra was in 2018. Why aren’t such meetings annual events?

    Australia is rightly proud of its pre-eminence in development assistance in the Pacific islands. But that never was, and never will be, a substitute for diplomatic engagement. And you can’t have that without a functioning diplomatic corps whose presence is felt equally in Canberra and in foreign capitals.

    But even that’s not enough. Penny Wong has yet to show in concrete terms how she plans to address what could accurately be called the greatest strategic foreign policy failure since WWII: Leaving Australia alone to guard the shop.

    In 2003, George W. Bush was rightly vilified for characterising Australia’s role in the region as America’s Sheriff.

    Bush hails 'sheriff' Australia
    Bush hails ‘sheriff’ Australia. Source: BBC News

    But the Americans weren’t the only ones who walked away, leaving Australia alone to engage with the region. The UK and the EU (minus France in their patch) rolled back their diplomatic presence substantially.

    Even New Zealand agreed to restrict its engagement in large areas in deference to its neighbour. The most enduring presence was provided by organisations without any meaningful foreign policy role: UN development agencies and multilateral financial institutions.

    Since the beginning of the War on Terror, there has been a consistent and often deliberate draw-down on the capital provided by democratic institutions, multilateral foreign policy, and indeed any collective course-setting among nations.

    Post Cold-War democratic momentum has been squandered on an increasingly transactional approach to engagement that’s begun to look alarmingly like the spheres of influence that appeal so much to Putin and Xi.

    This hasn’t happened in the Pacific islands alone. The UN has become an appendix in the global body politic, one cut away from complete irrelevance. ASEAN and APEC are struggling just as hard to find relevance, let alone purpose, as the Pacific Islands Forum or the Melanesian Spearhead Group.

    Australia has “led” in the Pacific islands region by being the largest aid donor, blithely assuming that all the other kids in the region want to be like it. But that “leadership” masks a massive gap in actual influence in shaping the agenda in a region that’s larger and more diverse than any other in the world.

    The data’s there if people want it. This isn’t a particularly contentious… er, contention, if you’re among the far-too-small group of people who actually live in and care about the future of the region.

    In a regional dynamic defined and dominated by transactional bilateralism, China holds all the aces. The only hope anyone has of slowing its growth in the region is through meaningful multilateralism that treats Pacific island countries as actual nations with national pride and individual priorities. Instead of silencing them, their voices should be amplified and defended, not by Australia alone, but by every other democratic nation with the means and the will to do so.

    If we can’t respect the equal standing of nations, we can’t protect their integrity.

    Scott Morrison may indeed be one of the worst exemplars of this blithe disregard for actual foreign policy engagement. He’s certainly won few friends with his world-class foot-dragging on climate change. America’s suddenly renewed interest in the region is an indication that they’ve woken up to the Bush administration’s mistakes.

    It’s also clear they don’t trust Australia to play Sheriff any more. Kurt Campbell’s upcoming visit to the region is just the latest in a series of increasingly high profile tours of the region.

    So yes, Penny Wong is justified in saying that China’s advances in the Pacific derive at least in part from Australia’s lack of a coherent and effective foreign policy.

    But foreign policy is not made at home. It’s not Australia’s interests alone that matter. And subjugating Pacific nations in compacts of free association isn’t a substitute for actual policy making.

    Pacific island nations will not defend Australia’s national interests unless they share those interests. The only way that Australia—and the world—can be assured they do is by actively listening, and by incorporating Pacific voices into the fabric of a renewed and revitalised global family.

    Dan McGarry was previously media director at Vanuatu Daily Post/Buzz FM96. The Village Explainer is his semi-regular newsletter containing analysis and insight focusing on under-reported aspects of Pacific societies, politics and economics. His articles are republished by Asia Pacific Report with permission.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has suggested that military alliances like Nato could build up “greater danger” in the world, and should ultimately be disbanded.

    Corbyn acknowledged the transatlantic alliance was not going to be scrapped immediately but added that people should:

    look at the process that could happen at the end of the Ukraine war.

    He said he did not blame Nato for Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine but asked:

    Do military alliances bring peace?

    ‘The best way of bringing about peace’

    The Islington North MP said he wanted to see:

    some kind of much deeper security discussion, as indeed Nato was having a security discussion with Russia until last year.

    Corbyn, a long-standing critic of Nato, told Times Radio:

    I would want to see a world where we start to ultimately disband all military alliances.

    The issue has to be what’s the best way of bringing about peace in the future? Is it by more alliances? Is it by more military build-up?

    Or is it by stopping the war in Ukraine and the other wars… that are going on at the present time, which are also killing a very large number of people?

    And ask yourself the question, do military alliances bring peace? Or do they actually encourage each other and build up to a greater danger?

    I don’t blame Nato for the fact that Russia has invaded Ukraine, what I say is look at the thing historically, and look at the process that could happen at the end of the Ukraine war.”

    POLITICS Ukraine
    (PA Graphics)

    ‘You have to appeal to people’

    The ex-opposition leader lost the Labour whip over his response to the equalities watchdog’s report into antisemitism in the party.

    Although he was reinstated as a Labour member after a suspension, Keir Starmer has refused to readmit him to the parliamentary party.

    Corbyn said:

    I think it’s a wrong, totally unjustified decision.

    He declined to rule out starting a breakaway party, possibly based on his peace and justice project.

    I don’t know what the future is going to bring. I am focused on representing my constituency, being a Member of Parliament and on saying to the Labour Party: to win the next election, you have to appeal to people.

    And you have to appeal to people on the basis of economic justice and changes in the power structures within our society.

    Abandoning policies that would achieve that, particularly public ownership, is not going to excite people.

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • The University of Adelaide in partnership with the University of New South Wales is the second recipient of $50 million through the federal government’s trailblazer program to support innovation in the defence sector. The Concept to Sovereign Capability (CSC) program will receive the funding over the four years and is being undertaken in partnership with…

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  • The Department of Defence has funded 345 of university and industry’s cutting edge technology projects with $258 million over the last six years, but none appear to have made it procurement or export level outcome yet. Defence Industry Minister Melissa Price has defended the “forward looking program” after low translation rates and application assessment time…

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  • Less than five per cent of projects funded by federal government’s flagship Defence innovation program have gone on to export success and only seven per cent have been close to acquisition by Australian Defence forces in the last six years. The low translation rates are despite $441 million being poured into the projects by Defence…

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  • Eight leading Australian-owned space and defence companies have formed a new consortium to capitalise on increased funding from the federal government and the need for sovereign space defence capabilities around satellites and situational awareness. The Australian Defence Industry Space Capability Alliance (ADISCA) was revealed at the Australian Space Forum on Thursday, claiming to be able…

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  • There are nearly 150 members on the federal government’s nuclear-powered submarines taskforce, including officials from a range of federal departments and 10 contractors who the Defence department has declined to name, but no state government representatives. The taskforce was established in September last year on the day Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced a nuclear-powered submarine…

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  • Labour published a dossier on Tory defence spending this week. It shows the Tories have wasted billions of pounds on military projects over the last ten years. But the report isn’t quite the ‘gotcha’ Labour thinks it is, because the party isn’t much better itself. This is especially true when it comes to its own military plans.

    Dossier

    There’s no doubt Labour’s Dossier of Waste makes some good points. It lists multiple, terrible examples of massive sums being wasted on defence projects. Some of the most ridiculous include:

    • £4m for an IT system which ended up being cancelled.
    • Over £5m for “Useless Ear Defenders”.
    • Scrapping a whole fleet of Hercules aircraft worth over £2bn.
    • £64m worth of wastage through “admin errors”.
    • A £325m overspend on procuring Protector drones (the programme also overran by 28 months).
    • The MOD being fined £31m by the Treasury for “granting MOD retrospective contract approvals” for 36 different contracts.
    • A £1bn overspend on Astute submarines.
    • Another £1bn overspend on a nuclear warhead storage facility.
    • A projected £333m overspend on what the report terms “Submarine Nuclear core production capability”.

    Clearly, Labour has a point. There does look like massive waste. And according to the report:

    None of its [the MOD’s] 36 major projects are rated ‘green’ – meaning that the project is on time and in budget – which makes it the worst performing department in Whitehall, with the lowest proportion of projects rated green.

    Labour is “completely missing the point”

    But there’s more to this debate than Labour = good and Tories = bad. Labour’s alternative vision also has shortcomings. For a start, it leaves out the massive cost of the wars which Labour started in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) general secretary Kate Hudson levelled her own criticisms too, telling the Morning Star: 

    Labour calling for ‘better management’ of vast and wasteful spending on increasing militarisation is just completely missing the point.

    Britain needs to spend on health, on climate change, on infrastructure – meeting the needs of the people, not ratcheting up global tensions and pouring money into military hardware.

    Stop the War Coalition convenor Lindsey German also weighed in:

    It is a travesty for Labour politicians to complain that we need nuclear warheads developed more quickly and more tanks aimed at killing working people in other countries.

    They should be arguing for less money on militarism and weapons, and more on housing, education and healthcare.

    She added that it was time to learn the lesson of recent wars:

    That would both improve the security of millions of people and show recognition that the 21st-century wars have only made the world much more dangerous.

    Not enough

    Clearly, Tory overspending on military equipment is a real problem. Yet, according to some, Labour is hardly likely to be better. What’s needed is an entirely different approach to accountability. We also need an entirely new set of spending priorities. Priorities which move away from massive military projects and towards real-life, bread-and-butter security issues like health, transport, and education.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Cpl Holt, cropped to 770 x 403.

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • By Anneke Smith, RNZ News political reporter

    New Zealand’s condemnation of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council elections reflects a “hardening stance” towards China, says a leading defence analyst.

    Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta last week joined her Five Eyes counterparts to express “grave concern” over the erosion of democratic elements of the new electoral system.

    “Actions that undermine Hong Kong’s rights, freedoms and high degree of autonomy are threatening our shared wish to see Hong Kong succeed,” the joint statement reads.

    Pro-Beijing candidates swept the seats under the new “patriots-only” rules that saw a record-low voting turnout of 30.2 percent; almost half of the previous legislative poll in 2016.

    New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States are now urging the People’s Republic of China to respect protected rights and fundamental freedoms of Hong Kong.

    Director of 36th Parallel Assessments Dr Paul Buchanan said this reflected New Zealand’s cooling relationship with China as it increasingly aligned itself with its traditional partners.

    “It’s very clear something has shifted in the logic of the security community and foreign policy community in Wellington. I tend to believe it is Chinese behaviour rather than pressure from our allies, but it may be a combination of both,” he said.

    Increasing Chinese pressure
    New Zealand’s relationship with China has come under increasing pressure this year after it raised concerns about Chinese state-funded hacking and the treatment of Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang.

    Mahuta has previously said New Zealand would be “uncomfortable” with the remit of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance being expanded to include diplomatic matters.

    Dr Buchanan said it was not clear if last week’s joint statement on the Hong Kong elections was consistent with this stated independent foreign policy, or a sign New Zealand had abandoned this to better align itself with its traditional partners.

    “That’s an open question to me, because I can see that the government can maintain independence and say, ‘simply on the issue of Hong Kong and China we side with our traditional partners, but on any range of other issues, we don’t necessarily fall in line with them’,” he said.

    “On the other hand, maybe the government has made a decision that the threat from the Chinese is of such a magnitude it’s time to pick a side, get off straddling the fence and choose the side of our traditional partners because the Chinese values are inimical to the New Zealand way of life.”

    Dr Buchanan said a “hardening stance” towards China was in line with the contents of a new defence report that recently identified ‘China’s rise’ and its power struggle with the United States as one of the pre-eminent security risks in the Indo-Pacific.

    “This may be more reflective of the security officials’ concerns about China and that may not be shared by the entirety of the current government.

    General consensus
    “Although, the fact that the foreign minister signed off on this latest Five Eyes statement regarding Hong Kong would indicate that there is a general consensus within the New Zealand foreign policy and security establishment that China is a threat.”

    In response to the joint Five Eyes statement on Hong Kong, the Chinese Embassy issued a statement telling the members to stop interfering with Hong Kong and China’s affairs.

    Of particular concern, Dr Buchanan said, was China’s explicit assertion in this response it was led by China’s Constitution and the Basic Law, not the Sino-British Joint Declaration, in its administration of Hong Kong.

    “The Chinese now have said that the joint declaration signed in 1997, no longer applies and all that applies in Hong Kong is Chinese law.

    “So they’ve violated their commitment to that principle and that’s symptomatic of an increasingly-hardened approach to everything, quite frankly, of a policy matter under Xi Jinping.”

    Dr Buchanan said New Zealand, whose biggest trading partner is China, was positioned as the most vulnerable of the Five Eyes partners to any potential economic retaliation from China.

    “It would be pretty easy to see that if the Chinese are going to retaliate against anybody in the Anglophone world, it would more than likely be us because it’ll cost them very little, people have to change their dietary habits among the Chinese middle class, but it will have a dramatic effect on us because a third of our GDP is tied up with bilateral trade with China.

    “But the government has clearly signalled that it’s seeking to diversify. It has now signalled that on the diplomatic and security front, it sees the Chinese increasingly as a malign actor, and so whatever is coming on the horizon, this government at least appears prepared to weather the storm.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.