
Journalists鈥 aggressive questioning of聽to the National Press Club on August 10 again showed how the bourgeois media stirs animosity towards China.
The reporting of Press Club address, according to Sinologist , 鈥渞evealed as much about the reporters themselves as it did about the content of the Ambassador鈥檚 remarks鈥.
was Australia鈥檚 first ambassador to the People鈥檚 Republic. He observed that 蚕颈补苍鈥檚 speech was 鈥渇riendly, conciliatory and constructive鈥. It highlighted 鈥渢he benefits of the economic relationship鈥 and 鈥淏eijing鈥檚 willingness to reset and stabilise our relations鈥 including 鈥渓isting a number of specific issues鈥 for collaboration.
Yet, the ambassador was confronted with the worst of Australian journalism. It was almost a competition in belligerence. was the most aggressive, yet much of the bourgeois media lauded him.
, from the right-wing Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said 蚕颈补苍鈥檚 speech was 鈥渃ore, boilerplate CCP [Chinese Communist Party] messaging about mutual benefit, proper handling of differences聽and China never seeking hegemony, expansion or a sphere of influence鈥. These sentiments, it seems, only 鈥減rove鈥 China鈥檚 hostility.
Tensions between the United States and China continue to grow, with the US provoking China over Taiwan despite its official 鈥溾.
鈥淲e oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo from either side; we do not support Taiwan independence; and we expect cross-Strait differences to be resolved by peaceful means,鈥 the said in May.
But the drive to war, perhaps over Taiwan, is real. The unthinkable is being thought聽and planned for.
罢丑别听's major parties聽means it can play a central role. It also indicates that nothing has been learned from decades of subservience to US ruling class interests.
Pelosi's provocation
Democrat speaker Nancy Pelosi鈥檚 鈥渧isit鈥 to Taiwan had one aim: to raise Beijing鈥檚 ire. It achieved just that: the live-fire drills, missile launches and the invective from Beijing were inevitable.
Pelosi, the White House and the Pentagon knew China would respond this way. While speaking of 鈥渄e-escalating鈥 tensions, the federal government remains in lock-step with US imperialism.
There is a predictability about all of this.
Ever since China moved from being 鈥渨orkshop to the world鈥 to becoming a threat to US economic supremacy, an endless demonisation campaign has been waged by the West and its media.
President Barack Obama first sought to preclude China from regional free-trade arrangements and shifted the bulk of its naval and air-force capability into the South China Sea. China reacted, supposedly 鈥減roving鈥 its growing aggressiveness. The cycle repeats and today the majority of Australians have been won to the idea that China is a threat.
Taiwan is now the trigger point, with China鈥檚 claim to Taiwan being used to manufacture a threat to the West.
This was a position the US and Australia were happy to accept. when聽Prime Minister Gough Whitlam declared 鈥渢he Australian Government recognises the Government of the People鈥檚 Republic of China as the sole legal Government of China聽[and] acknowledges the position of the Chinese Government that Taiwan is a province of the People鈥檚 Republic of China鈥.
No subsequent Australian government has seen the need to alter that.
With its policy of 鈥, the US has managed to create division and discord. While not recognising Taiwan as a separate state, it maintains its pledge to support it if it is endangered.
A cynical and dangerous chicken and egg situation then follows: Taiwan is armed and supplied with US weaponry. China reacts. Taiwan must be supported.
US President Joe Biden has, at least twice publicly, stated that if it were deemed to be necessary.
Defence review announced
The Anthony Albanese government announced on August 3 that its new looking into 鈥渇uture strategic challenges鈥, 鈥渢he force posture it needs by 2032鈥33鈥, 鈥渋nvestments required鈥 and 鈥渇unding needs鈥 would report back in early 2023. Some have said it is a way to trim the sails. But it defends the expenditure of billions of dollars being spent on the Australia, United Kingdom and US military alliance (AUKUS)聽and the nuclear submarines.
It states: 鈥淎ustralia, the UK, and the US are examining the full suite of requirements that underpin the delivery of the nuclear-powered submarines.鈥
It states euphemistically that it will 鈥渉elp ensure we maximise the potential of this and other AUKUS partnership initiatives in Australia鈥檚 best strategic interests鈥.
AUKUS will remain in place and with it the stationing of hypersonic missiles, nuclear submarines and 鈥渙ff the shelf鈥 submarines as an interim measure.
The Labor government claims to be trying to repair the Australia-China relationship, but continuing the policies of the former Coalition government says otherwise.
China鈥檚 policies regarding Taiwan are unambiguous, if dangerous. So much of its rhetoric is tied to domestic politics and the need for national legitimacy.
President Xi Jinping and the CCP use nationalism and nationalist symbols to maintain a sense of unity as the country pursues its path to capitalist dominance. It uses historic humiliations, meted out by Western imperialism, as motivation to promise a unified, 鈥済reat鈥 China.
The US is using Jinping鈥檚 refusal to bargain over Taiwan to bait the China. It is a dangerous game to be playing.
As the danger grows, the Labor government has pledged to continue a policy developed by the Coalition to spend on further militarising the region.
This is being sold to us as being essential to counter a Chinese threat. Living standards may crumble, but Australian workers鈥 growing impoverishment is a sacrifice to ensure US hegemony.
[Submissions to the Defence Force Review can be made .]