Australian and Chinese diplomatic relations appear to have stalled after the Australian government continued to remain stalwart in the face of Beijing’s refusal to back down on punitive trade sanctions imposed on Australia which, the Chinese regime called “beyond reproach.”
Speaking at a press conference on June 22, the spokesperson for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Wang Weibin said that Beijing’s measures were taken with a “view to protect the legitimate rights.”
“The measures are legitimate, lawful and beyond reproach,” Wang said reiterating that Australia needed to work with China to develop the China-Australia comprehensive strategic partnership.
“China needs to remove the sanctions,” Albanese said. “And that will go a long way toward restoring improved relations.”
Albanese, who was speaking to the ABC 7:30 report on June 23 said that while there had been a breakthrough in diplomatic relations in the past few weeks the relationship remained challenging.
“There’s a long way to go. It will be a problematic relationship,” Albanese said. “China has sanctions against Australia that should be removed, they’re damaging the Australian economy and jobs, but they’re also causing damage to the Chinese economy.”
Beijing’s punitive economic coercion swept up eight major Australian exports—beef, seafood, wine, honey, lamb, wheat, coal, and timber—after previous Foreign Minister Marise Payne called for an inquiry into the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2020.
Beijing’s Piecemeal Offering
China broke its freeze on diplomatic relations with Australia with the Chinese Defence Minister Wei Fenghe hosting Australia’s new deputy prime minister and minister for defense, Richard Marles, for dinner.Marles said the meeting, which took place in Singapore on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue defense summit on June 10, was a welcomed one and allowed Australia’s new Albanese government to have “a very frank and full exchange” between “two countries of consequence in Indo-Pacific region.”
However, since this meeting little has changed in the relationship with Beijing continuing to say that Australia must change if it wants the economic coercion to end.
Opposition Defence Minister Andrew Hastie has previously said that the meeting between Marles and Wei Fenghe was not “a Nixon goes to China moment.”
Don’t Trade Away Australia’s Values or Sovereignty
“The test of any meeting is the outcome it delivers. And so I'd like to know whether or not the Chinese have withdrawn their 14 demands,” Hastie said. “Whether they’ve apologized for the lazing of our P-8 crew in the Arafura Sea in February, and indeed, the P-8 crew in the South China Sea, which was intercepted by a Chinese fighter last month.”He also warned the Australian government should not trade away Australia’s values or its sovereignty in any discussions with China.
Intimidation Tactics
A J-16 Chinese military jet had released flares as it flew close to the side of the Australian P-8 aircraft while the P-8 was on its regular maritime surveillance flight in international airspace in May.The Chinese jet then accelerated and cut across the nose of the Australian plane, before releasing a “bundle of chaff” containing small aluminum pieces, some of which were “ingested” into the P-8’s engine.
“Quite obviously, this is very dangerous,” Marles said.
“Other countries do the same,” Marles said. “We are deeply invested in the rights of freedom of navigation in the South China Sea ... This is a body of water that is deeply connected to Australia because of our trade, which goes through there.”