CCP spits dummy at H&H over Solomons

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New Zealand is not happy:

“We see such acts as a potential militarisation of the region and also see very little reason in terms of the Pacific security for such a need and such a presence,” Ardern told Radio NZ when asked if it would be acceptable for China to station its military vessels in the Pacific country.

“We do see this as gravely concerning.”

Ardern urged Solomons’ leaders “not to look beyond our own Pacific family” when considering the country’s security relationships.

More:

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has held crisis talks with counterparts from Fiji and Papua New Guinea over Solomon Islands’ proposed security agreement with China, amid mounting regional unease.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare will break his silence on the mooted pact on Tuesday morning in an address to his country’s Parliament.

…Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce suggested China was pursuing a base because it was “trying to restrict our capacity of movement and intimidate us”.

…Diplomatically, the Morrison government has taken an approach of trying to gently persuade Mr Sogavare to water down or abandon the security treaty with China.

…Both Fiji and Papua New Guinea contributed personnel to the Australian-led peacekeeping mission last year to Solomon Islands after violent anti-government protests broke out. Ironically, those efforts helped stabilise Mr Sogavare’s leadership.

…Albanese said Australia had “lost paint” in the Pacific because the Coalition government had failed to take seriously the No. 1 security threat to the Pacific: climate change.

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It is true that the Coalition has spent ten years pissing on the Pacific and that has played a role in this outcome. That has to be undone.

But it is not the be-all and end-all of the issue. Chinese money has corrupted Honiara just as it partially succeeded in doing in Canberra. So there is more to this than self-flagellation. This is objectively Australia’s Cuban Missile Crisis, regardless of how we got here.

Evidence for that was found in the CCP mouthpiece, Global Times, which went to town on yours truly for calling out the facts:

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It’s ridiculous that Australia, on one hand, has closely followed the US in condemning what it perceives Russia’s “brutal and unprovoked invasion” of Ukraine, but on the other, its elites bluntly threatened to invade its neighbor in the South Pacific and foster a regime change.

A Reuters report on Thursday saying that a proposal for a broader security agreement with China that would be sent to the Solomon Islands’ cabinet for consideration has caused shockwaves through Canberra. David Llewellyn-Smith, founding publisher of?MacroBusiness?and former owner of leading Asia-Pacific foreign affairs journal?The Diplomat, suggested a day later that Australia “must ready Solomon Islands invasion.” Calling the China-Solomon Islands deal “Australia’s Cuban missile crisis,” Smith said “If it must, the nation [Australia] should invade and capture Guadalcanal such that we engineer regime change in Honiara” to protect Australia’s “sovereignty and democracy.”

Australian elites threatened to invade Solomon Islands simply because the latter hopes to strengthen security cooperation with China. Canberra has carried out much military cooperation with the US, including signing the AUKUS deal that will help it acquire nuclear-powered submarines. Don’t Canberra’s actions pose a greater threat to China?

“This shows the hypocrisy and double standards of Australia’s frantic elites,” said Chen Hong, director of the Australian Studies Center at East China Normal University. Chen noted that it also lays bare Australia’s ingrained hegemonic and colonialist mentality toward South Pacific island countries. Australia has no respect for the Solomon Islands and other South Pacific island countries at all, instead, it has long regarded them as its backyard, treating island countries in the region as sphere of influence or even vassal states. “When these countries hope to expand relations with others, Australia instantly reacts hysterically,” Chen stressed.

Australia is trying to obstruct the Solomon Islands’ normal cooperation with China even with the threat of an invasion. This shows Australia’s obsession with hegemonism. Chen said Australia has long been seeking to be the “minor hegemon” in the South Pacific region. To this end, Australia maliciously distorted the security cooperation between China and the Solomon Islands.

The bilateral cooperation in law enforcement and security areas in fact is a response to last year’s riots in the Solomon Islands during which Chinese nationals there suffered great losses with their shops smashed, burned and looted and their personal safety in jeopardy. Given the presence of Chinese nationals in the Solomon Islands and with the development and expansion of normal ties between the two countries, it’s natural for the two sides to beef up security cooperation.

However, many Australian politicians, analysts and media outlets smeared this cooperation as a Chinese attempt to establish a military base in the Solomon Islands, hyping it would harm Australia’s interests and destabilize the region. Military expert Song Zhongping believes Australia is “experiencing persecutory delusions” in which whatever China does in the South Pacific region will be portrayed as “threats” to Australia. “This won’t help Australia win the trust of the island countries in the region, but will only expose Australia’s hysterical and ugly face,” Song noted.

No matter how hard Australia tries to twist the facts and smear China’s intention, the cooperation between China and the Solomon Islands and other South Pacific island countries will become more diverse and enriched. China has provided South Pacific countries with more options in terms of economic and security development. Cooperation with China is popular among locals as it is conducted on an equal footing, is mutually beneficial and has no political conditions attached.

The waning of the Australian influence in the South Pacific region is because of Australia’s hegemonic mindset toward those countries. No country in the region would expect Australia, which can easily threaten to invade, to truly help its development.

If only I was “Australia” or an “elite”. The ABC won’t even interview me lest I offend some snowflake!

The fact that the CCP is prepared to waste column inches on a solitary blogger is a classic case of glass-jawed propaganda. I touched a nerve when I described Chinese ambitions for hegemonic control of the South Pacific. Why else are they seeking to militarise the Solomons relationship?

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The truth is very straightforward. If Honiara enables a Chinese naval base then it is the beginning of the end of every democracy in the South Pacific.

At all costs, it must be stopped before it starts.

About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.