Hysteria builds over the Solomon Islands-China security pact

April 25, 2022
Issue 
One of the many propaganda maps being churned out, this one from Deutsche Welle.

Australia鈥檚 initial effort to convince the Solomon Islands that its decision to make a with Beijing was simply not appropriate was part plea, part threat.

Senator Zed Seselja found time, despite the election campaign, to Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare that Canberra remained dedicated to supporting the security needs of the Solomon Islands, and would do so 鈥渟wiftly, transparently and with full respect for its sovereignty鈥. The country remained part of the 鈥淧acific family鈥, he said, before urging the Solomon Islands to reject the security pact with China.

Honiara did not change course, prompting a range of overblown reactions.

David Llewellyn-Smith, former owner of the Asia Pacific foreign affairs journal The Diplomat, took leave of his senses by that a Chinese naval base in the Solomon Islands would lead to 鈥渢he effective end of our sovereignty and democracy鈥. He suggested this was 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 Cuban missile crisis鈥.

The Labor Party is one of the greatest intelligence failures since the World War II. Leader Anthony Albanese, seeking some safe mooring in a lacklustre campaign, was . 鈥淭he security agreement between China and the Solomons is a massive failure of our foreign policy 鈥 We are closer here today to the Solomon Islands than we are to Perth. That shows how strategic they are to Australia.鈥

His belligerent note might have been stronger were it not for his deputy, Richard Marles, the Pacific islands were sovereign entities and needed to be treated as such and that China鈥檚 offer of development assistance should be 鈥渨elcome鈥.

Rupert Murdoch鈥檚 News Corporation responded by seeking to find a Chinese 鈥淩ed鈥 under Marles鈥 bed.

Labor said it was inappropriate to have only sent a junior minister and that Foreign Minister Marise Payne should have gone to bully the Solomon Islands into submission.

The message being fanned is that deputy sheriff Canberra failed, leaving it to the United States. 鈥淭he United States very much relies upon Australia and sees Australia as playing that key role in the Indo-Pacific鈥, lamented Albanese. 鈥淎ustralia and Scott Morrison have gone missing.鈥

The government poured water on that by a fair share of oriental deviousness was at play. Not only had Defence Minister Peter Dutton been advised by intelligence to not attack the security pact, the agreement . by Radio 3AW host Neil Mitchell Dutton, Dutton said: 鈥淵ou asked the question about bribery and corruption 鈥 we don鈥檛 pay off, we don鈥檛 bribe people, and the Chinese certainly do.鈥

This clean-linen view of Canberra鈥檚 conduct ignores such inglorious chapters as the , in which the Australian Wheat Board paid $300 million in kickbacks between 1999 and 2004 to the Iraq regime via Alia, a Jordanian trucking company. These arrangements, which breached UN Security Council sanctions imposed after Baghdad鈥檚 invasion of Kuwait in 1991, were unmasked in 2005.

Australia鈥檚 failure to change minds in Honiara led to the paladins of the US imperium being sent in. US President Joe Biden鈥檚 National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Kritenbrink and National Security Affairs Indo-Pacific chief Kurt Campbell all travelled to the small Pacific Island state.

National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson , oblivious to the fact that the Solomon Islands was not a protectorate of the Five Eyes. Officials from the US, Japan, New Zealand and Australia had 鈥渟hared concerns about [the] proposed security framework between the Solomon Islands and the People鈥檚 Republic of China (PRC) and its serious risks to a free and open Indo-Pacific.鈥

The Washington Post 聽some home truths about an empire facing decline. The unipolar world that came into being after the demise of the Soviet Union had ended, Henry Olsen wrote. 鈥淥ur adversaries can fight back, and they are increasingly using every means at their disposal to push back against American influence.鈥

While the Solomon Islands is divided on the security deal with China, Sogavare . He parliament that he had no intention 鈥渢o ask China to build a military base in Solomon Islands鈥. He said he felt 鈥渋nsulted鈥 by such suggestions and that there was only one side to pick 鈥 鈥渙ur national security interest鈥.

Danny Philip, his confidant and a former Prime Minister, they should know better. 鈥淧eople in Australia know very little about Pine Gap in the middle of the desert, the military base of the United States.鈥 There were 鈥渁greements that open up all major ports in Australia that are not being seen by all the citizens of that country,鈥 he said.

Pre-emptive action on the part of Australia, possibly with help from the United States, cannot be ruled out. Some are even

David Llewellyn-Smith, a former Sydney Morning Herald and Age commentator, said Australia 鈥渟hould invade and capture Guadalcanal such that we engineer regime change in Honiara鈥.

鈥淭his is Australia鈥檚 Cuban missile crisis 鈥 This is your chance to actually do something real for once and to dramatically turn your election fortunes while you鈥檙e at it,鈥 Llewellyn-Smith frothed. 鈥淚t is your Tampa, only this time for real. Force a direct confrontation with Beijing over the Solomons using any and all means necessary. Get the backing and military support of Washington and drive China out of the South Pacific.鈥

[Dr Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]

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