Australian Poll: Quiet on the Foreign Policy Front

A lively campaign has barely touched upon Australia's increasingly important and complex foreign relations, Fergus Hanson writes for ISN Security Watch.

Australians will go to the polls on Saturday, 21 August, and while election campaigning has been firmly grounded in domestic matters – as most modern elections are - what is striking here  is the almost complete lack of focus on foreign policy.

A quick glance at the two candidates’ CVs explains why: Neither has had much of anything at all to do with foreign affairs.

Foreign policy novices

In April this year, in his first external pagespeech on foreign policy, opposition leader Tony Abbott opened with these disarming remarks: “As the leader of the party, obviously it’s my challenge to rise to areas of expertise and understanding that haven’t been my forte in the past. It’s always an interesting challenge.”   

Incumbent Prime Minister Julia Gillard is also an unknown when it comes to foreign policy. She only came to power a few months ago without any background in international affairs. (On external page24 June she was promoted from deputy prime minister after ousting her former boss, Kevin Rudd.)

After the leadership coup, foreign policy analysts were left poring over the scantest of external pageevidence to try and decipher how she might operate on the international stage.

The contrast with the previous election is striking. As a former diplomat and the western world’s first Chinese-speaking leader,  Kevin Rudd came to power promising a flurry of new international activity and quickly earned the moniker ‘external pageKevin 747’ for his hyperactive global travel schedule.

The state of play in foreign affairs

The fundamentals of Australian foreign policy, such as the centrality of the US alliance, are accepted by both sides. But there are considerable differences in nuance that will pose serious challenges.

In Afghanistan, Australia recently suffered the death of its external page18th soldier; seven of those deaths came this year alone. Not surprisingly, there is some external pageunease in the electorate about Australia’s continued participation in the war - particularly as America’s European allies begin to withdraw.

On the trading front, relations with Australia’s external pagesecond largest export market, Japan, have soured after a diplomatic external pagesnubfollowed by the then-Rudd government making good on a promise to external pagetake Japan to the International Court of Justice over its ‘scientific’ whaling program.

Relations with New Delhi are also on the rocks after the Rudd-government external pagereversed a decision by its predecessor to sell it uranium, and then mishandled a spate of external pageattacks on Indian students living in Australia.

On climate change the Australian government’s credibility on the world stage has been blackened. Though the government talked the talk in the years leading up to Copenhagen, just months before his ouster, Rudd announced that he did not plan to introduce an emissions trading scheme in Australia until external pageat least 2013. So much for climate change, in Rudd’s earlier words, being  external page“the great challenge of our generation.”

And on Australia’s immediate doorstep challenges also abound. Fiji’s military dictator, Frank Bainimarama, is now firmly external pageentrenched; Papua New Guinea (a former Australian colony) is experiencing a resources external pageboom that will be hard to manage given weak governance; and Australia’s relations with Indonesia, while solid at a government-to-government level, need external pagea lot of work.

It’s a crowded international agenda for whoever wins on 21 August. The big question though is how the future leader will respond.

Growing into the role

Gillard, who isexternal pagejust ahead in most polls, has moved on from her youthful flirtation with external pagesocialism and appears as external pagecommitted to the US security alliance as anyone.

Her defense minister has external pageruled out any increase in troop levels to Afghanistan and tried to sketch a clear exit strategy, but he has also announced he is stepping down after the election.

Gillard has gotten off to a rough start on the foreign policy front.  Her first failure was a external pageproposal to have refugees trying to reach Australia by boat first register themselves in East Timor – a proposal external pageEast Timor rejected out of hand.  

The biggest factor shaping a Gillard foreign policy could be her choice of foreign minister. Incumbent Finance Minister Stephen Smith had been playing understudy to his old boss, Kevin Rudd, but his hold on the job now seems tenuous. When she became prime minister, Gillard promised Rudd a external pagesenior ministry if re-elected, which many external pageassume will be the Foreign Ministry. 

Should that be the case, the public would expect some continuity with Rudd’s past foreign policy objectives:  pursuit of a temporary UN Security Council seat, continued work on nuclear non-proliferation and perhaps even an attempt to revive his external pageill-fatedAsia-Pacific Community proposal. Without a country to run, he might step up his activism, though it is difficult to envision relations with either Japan or India rebounding anytime soon.

Abbott, for his party, went somewhat further in outlining his worldview in an April external pagespeech to the Lowy Institute. He pointed to the centrality of the US alliance, but idiosyncratically said that the “Anglosphere was the heart of the Western alliance” - a notion Australia’s close friends in Asia might find rather quaint, if not offensive.

Abbott rejects Gillard’s plans to seek a temporary UN Security Council seat as a waste of time and effort, and has also proposed rebuilding relations with India by reconsidering the sale of uranium. He also said his government “would be prepared to consider doing more” in Afghanistan.

Just when it seemed like there would be no serious discussion of international issues in this campaign, Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop external pagedebated against Foreign Minister Stephen Smith a week before election day. While it was a reasonably substantive debate, it tended to focus on box ticking, stock-standard foreign policy lines.

Reflective of the campaign’s lack of foreign policy attention, it was only in the Q&A after the debate that a journalist accused the two parties of not having “said anything substantial about China during this election campaign,” even though it is “the single biggest question in this region.”

Smith hit back, saying, “I'm very happy to respond to the first question I've received in the campaign on China.”It’s an extraordinary reality given the huge challenge the next government will face managing relations with an increasingly assertive China, which is also Australia’s single external pagelargest trading partner.

While both candidates are new to foreign affairs and there could be some initial uncertainty in the direction of Australian foreign policy, there is no reason to panic. One of Australia’s longest serving prime ministers, John Howard, came to office with little foreign affairs experience, yet he grew into a very active international player.

 

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