While the Bush
administration continues to push and celebrate significant
successes for democracy in the Middle East, China is on an opposing
mission in Asia, where it continues to block the spread of
democracy.
The most recent target of Chinese diplomatic pressure is
Australia, America's most reliable ally in the Pacific - or in the
world, for that matter. Less than a week after China announced its
new "Anti-Secession" law, by which Beijing claims the right to
attack democratic Taiwan if it sees fit, a Chinese official
demanded Australia amend its 50-year-old alliance with the United
States.
Australians fought beside Americans in every war of the 20th
century - from World War I through World War II, Korea, Vietnam and
both Gulf wars. The war in Vietnam was just as controversial in
Australia as it was in the United States, but the Aussies never
abandoned their friends in America.
Australia has not flinched from our alliance in the 21st century.
When the Indonesian military began its scorched-earth operations
against East Timor in September 1999, Australia deployed a
peacekeeping force there even as the much larger Indonesian army
continued to conduct its punitive operations. Because of
Australia's immediate and strong response, the United States had to
deploy only a handful of technical specialists to help out in East
Timor.
Canberra invoked the alliance when the United States was
attacked on Sept. 11, and Australia has participated in every
campaign of the war on terrorism, including Iraq and Afghanistan.
The war has not been without cost to Australia: In October 2002, Al
Qaeda-linked terrorists blew up a nightclub in Bali, Indonesia,
killing 92 Australians. Other Australians, soldiers and civilians
alike, have lost their lives fighting alongside Americans in Iraq,
Afghanistan and other battlefields of the war on terrorism.
Australia also shares with the United States a critical security
interest in defending democracies in Asia. In August 2001,
then-deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage visited
Canberra and later commented that he could not imagine Australia
not supporting the U.S. in any major conflict in Asia - even in
Taiwan.
Ever since, Beijing has sought to drive a wedge between Canberra
and Washington. On the very day China passed its so-called
"anti-secession" law, the Chinese Foreign Ministry's top Pacific
policy official, Mr. He Yafei, told an interviewer from The
Australian, "If there were any move by Australia and the U.S. in
terms of that alliance [ANZUS] that is detrimental to peace and
stability in Asia, then it [Australia] has to be very careful,"
adding that this was "especially so" in the case of Taiwan.
Beijing's message was clear: Australia had better not help the
United States to defend Taiwan - or else.
Australia's foreign ministry immediately released a statement that
Australia had no intentions of amending any facet of the treaty
with America and that the alliance remains strong. But there is
more going on here than indirect threats from old men in China's
foreign ministry. China is one of Australia's largest trading
partners with about $20 billion dollars a year trade both ways, and
Beijing has suggested a bilateral free-trade agreement was possible
to further sweeten the pot.
That China would challenge an American alliance as strong as our
relationship with Australia sends a clear signal that the Chinese
are ready to test the extent of their new and growing power in the
region and, perhaps, the resolve of the United States and
Australia. In the last four years, as China has emerged as the
economic superpower of the Asia-Pacific region, it increasingly has
sought opportunities to challenge American power in the region and
replace the United States as the dominant diplomatic
presence.
The Chinese also have begun to effectively translate their trade
and investment clout into political influence. China now gives
military assistance to the Philippines, another long-time ally of
the United States, and props up dangerous, despicable regimes in
North Korea, Burma and elsewhere.
It is right that the Bush administration take pride in its
accomplishments toward democratization in the Middle East. But it
needs to keep an eye on China, too. It has dropped the ball in the
Far East in recent weeks. The Chinese have picked up that ball and
begun to run with it.
Dana Dillon is a senior policy analyst in the Asian Studies Center at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in The Asian Wall Street Journal