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Dismal Diplomacy, Disposable Sovereignty: Our Problem with China & America

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As ‘America’s shoeshine boy in the South Pacific,’ Australia is accustomed to being told what to do. In the space of a mere five years, the subjugation of Australia’s national interest to that of the United States in provoking China under president Trump led us very quickly into a hostile relationship with the rising power of the People’s Republic of China, and trashed forty years of positive relationship building. Claiming to stand up against the newly aggressive nation under President Xi Jinping, Prime Minister Morrison has damaged Australia’s critical trading relationship with China as he acts to shore up his own political support against domestic challengers. As a result, Australia is now suffering serious Chinese blowback. This book describes the current unhappy situation and, based on Gantner’s forty years of work in cultural exchange with China, offers some modest suggestions on improving bilateral relations. With the United States pushing for containment of and confrontation with China, and an insecure Australia giving up its sovereignty to buy American protection, it is not at all certain that this will happen.

96 pages, Paperback

Published July 1, 2022

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April 7, 2022
Carrillo Gantner, theatre maker and onetime diplomat, makes a strong case for engagement with China - which is not to say an uncritical relationship - and a return to diplomacy, which is a concept that has been criminally neglected by the current Australian government, which prefers hairy-chested rhetoric to dialogue and considers its embassies abroad little more than consular services centres.
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