Now
that America has China in its sights both New Zealand and Australia
are going to have to tread a balancing act between its traditional
ally in the Empire and its own economic interests.
US
Ambassador warns NZ not to trust China
MSN,
4
October, 2018
The
United States Ambassador to New Zealand says we should be wary of
China's growing influence here.
New
Zealand is a small country caught in a gravitational pull between the
world's two superpowers, China and the United States, both of which
have a strong influence over the Government's foreign policy
approach.
US
Ambassador Scott Brown believes New Zealand should look to the US as
a more trusted ally than China. He answered questions from Kiwis on
RadioLIVE on Wednesday morning, where he defended the United States'
history of perceived international meddling.
"I
believe we're a country for good," Mr Brown said. "We're
not taking people's land - we are usually going in because there are
issues around the world and that's why we still have troops in
Germany and obviously in North Korea."
He
was responding to a Kiwi who called the radio station to ask why New
Zealanders should trust the United States - "with a history of
interfering in other countries' regimes" - over China.
"Have
we made mistakes? Of course, but I think every country makes
mistakes," the Ambassador retorted.
"We've
been here since the Treaty of Waitangi signing, and we were here
during World War II when New Zealanders were fearful that the
Japanese were going to be here."
The
difference between the US and China is "we have freedom and
democracy," the Ambassador claimed.
"Kiwis
and the US may not agree on everything, but at the end of the day
those shared common values that we've had forever stand strong,"
he said. "When we don't agree, at the end of the day we're still
going to grab a beer and a pizza and talk about it."
He
reflected on recent tension between China and New Zealand, sparked by
the Defence Force explicitly naming China as a threat before spending
$2.3 billion on anti-submarine aircraft.
In
response, China lodged "stern representations with New Zealand".
"If
you disagree with China, especially with their new policies, as they
did when you guys issued your new defence strategy paper, they said
'Listen, you've got to change your words'," Mr Brown said.
The
New Zealand Government stood by the words used to describe China's
presence and said it would not be correcting any "wrong words."
"New
Zealand is a sovereign nation and whether the United States was
telling us to do that or China or any other country, it comes down to
our right to see things as we see it in a very responsible way,"
Acting Prime Minister Winston Peters said at the time.
Ambassador
Brown credited Mr Peters for standing up to China. He said China is
"not an enemy, they're a competitor, and they've got to start
playing by the rules".
"I
believe [the United States] play by the rules and so does New
Zealand."
US
President Donald Trump's escalating trade war with China reached new
heights in September when he imposed US$200 billion (NZ$300 billion)
worth of new tariffs on Chinese imports.
As
an employee of the Trump administration, Mr Brown has some incentive
to encourage other nations to be suspicious or distrustful of China.
Others
who have warned about Chinese influence in New Zealand include
University of Canterbury professor Anne-Marie Brady and former US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
During
his RadioLIVE Mr Brown also lauded the "great relationship"
between New Zealand and the US, referencing the Australian and New
Zealand firefighters that travelled to California in August to help
fight wildfires.
He
went on to criticise China for its claims to the South China Sea. The
area, through which about US$5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes
each year, is contested by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan
and Vietnam.
"That's
why we are traversing through with our navy those areas to make sure
that they stay free and open so that other countries like New Zealand
and Australia don't have to pay a toll the next time they want to
trade," Mr Brown said.
Prime
Minister Jacinda Ardern doubled down on New Zealand's "independent
foreign policy" on Tuesday, telling The AM Show New Zealand has
"an independent foreign policy and we always will".
The
Chinese have held sway over New Zealand to the extent that National
had a spy in their ranks - list MP Yang Jian had spent 15 years
studying and working with Chinese military intelligence at the
PLA-Air Force Engineering College and Luoyang Foreign Language
Institute.
- New research paper lays bare China's influence campaign in New Zealand
- Concerns raised over political donations and directorships offered to former ministers and relatives
- Chinese-owned New Zealand dairy farms said to possibly being used to test advanced missile technology
- A major research paper into China's soft-power campaign in New Zealand has detailed how dairy farms have been used for near-space balloon launches by a Chinese company developing "high-precision monitoring" of Earth from satellites.
The
study also details extensive links between China and former New
Zealand politicians and their families, and also highlights
significant political donations.
University
of Canterbury professor Anne-Marie Brady, the author of the research
paper, said she was disturbed by her findings.
"This
is about our democracy and about our sovereignty. Anybody who reads
the report will find this troubling," she told the Herald.
Brady
said the influence campaign being waged in New Zealand would be of
concern regardless of its source.
"It'd
be the same if it was any country: it's not about China, but it's our
country and our democracy where we value freedom of speech and
association. It's our right to choose our government."
Former
National Party leader Don Brash, named in the report over his
directorship of a Chinese-owned bank, agreed China was looking keenly
at New Zealand.
"China
clearly does want to extend its influence and cultivate people they
think might help them do that, as, of course, all major powers do,"
he said.
A
request sent to the Chinese embassy in Wellington for comment on the
report was not answered.
Both
Prime Minister Bill English and Labour leader Jacinda Ardern
downplayed the report while on the campaign trail today.
"I
don't see any obvious sign of things that are inappropriate,"
English said.
Ardern
said she had not seen any demand for New Zealand to follow
Australia's
lead in launching an inquiry into foreign interference, but said she
would explore the issue further.
"I
don't think that's something that's necessarily come up... as being
an issue. But I am interested in that work that was done in
Australia, I would like to take a closer look when there is a little
bit more time available," she said.
Brady,
currently in Washington DC as a fellow with the Wilson Centre, is
fluent in Mandarin and based much of her research on Chinese-language
media both here and in China.
Her
report, "Magic Weapons: China's political influence activities
under Xi Jinping", was published earlier this week and builds on
the methodology behind a similar study in Australia that followed
investigations into the subject by the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation.
"The
focus of media attention has been on Australia, but the People's
Republic of China's efforts to guide, buy or coerce political
influence abroad are widespread," Brady wrote, noting New
Zealand is far from immune to actions by state or state-linked actors
operating a under broad "United Front" on behalf of the
ruling Communist Party of China.
Clive Hamilton who has written extensively on climate change and the dangers of geoengineering has also done research on the influence of China on Australia for which he was pilloried.
Clive Hamilton who has written extensively on climate change and the dangers of geoengineering has also done research on the influence of China on Australia for which he was pilloried.
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