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It only been these past few decades that
Australia has begun to pursue a relatively independent foreign policy,
from under the shadows Britain and the US. Australia's unique
historical circumstances have led to the development of a certain set
of attitudes and characteristics that underlie its foreign relation's
behaviour. Among other characteristics there has been a
dependency syndrome, first with Britain, and then with the US, an
acute sense of geographic isolation from the European cultural
hearthlands and a corresponding sense of threat from Asia, and an
attempt to identify and project an Australian identity to the outside
world.
Australia's early history was dominated by British outlooks and
interests, reflecting the immigrant population that was overwhelmingly
of British stock. Australia was a mere home away from home, a
far-flung outpost of the Empire. The hearts and minds of most
Australians were rooted in the pastoral English countryside, even for
those who had never set foot in Europe. In virtually every realm
of life - social, political, cultural - Australians looked to London for
guidance and support.
Underlying the cocksuredness and feigned rugged independence was
a deep insecurity arising mainly from Australia's geographical isolation
from the hearthland. Australia's earliest settlers felt this
isolation most profoundly, as communications with the Mother Country
were extremely slow; a letter from 'home' would take many months to
arrive.
Australia in relation to Britain was not only antipodean in the
geographical sense. From nearly every perspective there existed
enormous contrast with the home country. Environmentally much of
Australia appeared hostile and unforgiving; dry, strangely scented
Eucalypts, exotic fauna, and the searing light of the Australian
sun. Culturally, in terms of the general region, Australia
confronted the orient, and in fact was part - geographically at least -
of the oriental 'other' world. Australia's population was sparse
by comparison to the rest of the world, and especially with those
densely populated and potentially hostile territories of the 'Near
North'. Within Australia itself, there is a sense of wide-open
space that further adds to the feelings of isolation and aloneness.
With the exception of New Zealand, Australia clung more tightly
to Mother England than any other part of the empire. So it should
be no real surprise that Australia's relations with the outside world
were for a very long period of its history mediated in a very direct
sense through London. It was only in the very early 1970's that
Australian cinemas stopped playing 'God Save the Queen' before the movie
began, when all the audience would obediently stand and sing along, save
for those very few ratbag proto-republicans who remained seated.[1] Loyalty to
England permeated Australian society, and whilst from the outside such
loyalty may have been viewed as bizarre, from within it seemed
completely normal and everyday.
Whilst the other British colonial dominions shed their foreign
policy dependence on Britain many decades ago,[2] Australia (and New
Zealand) lingered, reluctant to let go of Mother England's increasingly
tattered apron strings, seemingly terrified of being left alone or
abandoned. The British parliament conceded full foreign policy
independence to the dominions in the 1931 Statute of Westminster,
however complementary legislation to bring the Statute into force was
not enacted in Australia until 1942, and even then Australian
governments continued to stress the ties of dependence rather than
independence.[3] The efforts to engage and maintain the attention of
Britain in the region go back to the earliest times in Australian
history. As early as the late 1800's New South Wales provided
support to British forces in the Sudan (1885), and later Australian
colonies joined in supporting the British in South Africa (Boer War) in
1899-1902, and in China (Boxer Rebellion) in 1899-1900.
Later, in 1914, hundreds of thousands of Australians would
patriotically and enthusiastically volunteer to defend the British
Empire[4]
fighting for King and Country under the Union Jack. Such seeming
puerile and unquestioning support for the Empire had a practical
underlying rationale: it constituted down-payment on the 'insurance
policy' which, it was thought, would keep Britain engaged in the
Australian region should Australia require assistance in the event of
conflict in the future. Unfortunately, the only time in history that
Australia needed to call on this insurance policy was in 1942, and with
Britain pre-occupied with her own fight for survival Australia was, for
most practical purposes, abandoned. A near half-century of foreign
policy subordination to Britain had apparently not paid off, despite
considerable sacrifice by Australia in terms of both money and men in
aid of the Empire, in particular during the First World War.
Australia's worst nightmare seemed about to be realised; that of the
oriental hordes descending from the north to overrun the nation.
In fact, the first tentative steps towards some form of foreign
policy independence began in 1937 with the re-establishment of the
Office of External Affairs, after a break of some decades. The
process was continued with the establishment of foreign missions in
Tokyo, Washington and Ottawa in 1940. However, as an indication of
how Australia viewed itself in the world, the High Commission in London
was not considered a mission to a foreign country.[5] This attitude was
emphatically underlined by the presence of the then Australian Prime
Minister, Robert Menzies, in London in 1941 for an extraordinary period
of four months, whilst Australia confronted the most dangerous threat in
its history. Feted by the British press, and adored by sections of
British society, there even emerged the bizarre proposition that Menzies
would transfer his career to Westminster, and even more bizarrely,
become the Prime Minister of Britain.[6] The humiliating fall of
Singapore to the Japanese in 1942 marked the beginning of a slow
awakening in Australian society. Britain had blinked, and
Australia was now isolated and needing a new great and powerful
friend. In December 1941 the new Labor Prime Minister, John Curtin
appealed to the USA for military assistance, marking a turning point in
which Australia's foreign policy shifted from its reliance on Britain as
its protector, to dependence on the US.[7] The US was the only power
with the resources to turn back the Japanese in the Pacific, and a
coincidence of overlapping interests in the Pacific after the bombing of
Pearl Harbour ensured US involvement and protection for Australia.[8]
The US had literally 'saved' Australia, and Australia now had to show
gratitude.
Australia now had to steer a course between its old traditional
British Imperial linkages, and its new and seemingly more promising
alliance with the US. For many years before the Second World War,
Britain had in fact been in economic decline having barely recovered
from the disaster of the First World War. Since the beginning of
the 20th century the USA, Germany and Japan had developed significant
industrial capacities and competed with Britain for world market
share. For a long time the Imperial system protected Britain from
this competition through a system of trade preferences amongst the
colonies and dominions of the Empire. The gradual decline of
Britain as a world power, and the emergence of the USA, and later Japan,
as major world economic and/or military powers, forced Australia to
re-orientate its foreign policy thinking.
The period just after the war was a time of intense foreign
relations activity for Australia, due mainly to the efforts of the then
Foreign Minister Dr HV Evatt. Whilst simultaneously pledging his
loyalty to Britain, the Empire and to the Western Alliance, Evatt was
frequently abrasive in his criticism of the UK and the US on many
important issues. For the probably the first time Australia was
seen to project itself as a sovereign power, and Evatt was responsible
for lifting the profile of Australia onto the world stage, in particular
through the United Nations. The principal tenant of Evatt's
foreign policy was that 'Australia's voice must be heard.'[9]
By the end of the 1940's the conservatives led by Menzies
returned to office, and the deepening Cold War pulled Australia even
closer into the US-led Western Alliance. The familiar pattern of
unquestioning Australian foreign policy support to its protector
continued, but now the protector had changed. Australia was now
paying most of its premiums to the US. Adventures in Korea and
Vietnam in particular were undertaken as payments in gratitude for the
US saving Australia during the Pacific War, and also as down-payments on
possible future calls on US military protection. By the mid-60's
Prime Minister Holt was 'all the way with LBJ',[10] replacing the
saccharine sycophancy of his anglophile predecessor.
Australia attempted to attract and maintain UK interest in the
region, but the Second World War had seriously weakened British power in
the world, a fact not openly acknowledged in Australia at the
time. By the end of the 1960's Britain had relinquished nearly all
its colonies in Asia, and, more devastating in terms of
its clear impact on Australia and Australians, had joined the European
Common Market. Australians were now considered 'foreigners' in
Britain, and Australian commodity exports to Britain were seriously
affected. Australia was being forcibly cut loose by Mother
England, and in the main Australians were probably psychologically
unprepared for this.
The end of the conservative era in Australia in 1972 signalled
the beginning of a transition to a more questioning Australian foreign
policy approach. The incoming Whitlam government moved quickly to
shake some of the cobwebs out of the foreign policy establishment.
Remaining Australian troops were immediately pulled out of Vietnam and
'Red China' was recognised diplomatically. Despite a more
'radical' leftist rhetoric, the Whitlam government remained completely
committed to the American alliance, and differences in foreign policy
with their conservative opponents were ultimately more of style than of
substance.[11] The Whitlam government merely accelerated the pace of
change within Australia's foreign policy, change that the moribund
conservative governments of the late 60's and early 70's were
politically unable to make. The conservative government that
followed after Whitlam continued on with this more independent foreign
policy style, 'adopting many which conservatives had criticised when
they had been advocated by the Whitlam government.'[12]
The Hawke-Keating period of government (1983-1996) saw the
further development of a multilateralist approach in Australia's foreign
policy, and an activist role for Australian foreign ministers, firstly
under Bill Hayden, and then under Gareth Evans.[13] Great political and
economic changes occurred in the international system during this
period, in particular, the rise of Japan as a rival to the US in the
economic realm, the emergence of East Asia as a world economic
powerhouse, and the demise of the Soviet Union and subsequent ending of
the Cold War. The bipolar paradigm of the Cold War had collapsed,
and the US emerged as the world's sole superpower.
Although the Australia-US alliance remained important to
Australia, a new foreign policy approach was needed. Before Evans,
the interpretation of Australian foreign policy was through the lens of
dependency upon the US, mainly through the central institution of the
ANZUS alliance.[14]
From the mid-80's Australian foreign policy emphasis increasingly
shifted to multilateralism and coalition-building within international
relations, and collective security within a regionalist setting.[15] Australia
identified itself as a 'middle power' capable of acting as an honest
broker on the international stage. Australia began to more view
itself as one of a group of states with liberal-democratic traditions
which could act in concert to influence the larger powers, recognising
the limits of a 'middle-power' state acting unilaterally.[16]
Nevertheless, the familiar pattern of reliance upon a great protector
remains. For all the rhetoric of 'closer engagement with Asia',[17] the US
remains the central factor in the actual execution of Australian foreign
policy. For all the treaties with the countries of Southeast Asia,
most Australians would know that should Australia call for assistance in
time of need, such assistance will not come from within the region, at
least certainly not in any active form. Australia's 'Near North'
will remain an area of instability for some decades to come, and the
source of most security threats to Australia. Despite Australia's
high profile in the UN, this organisation is slow to react and
politically unreliable. Thus, despite seemingly radical changes in
policy stances Australia will probably continue paying its political
dues to the US in order to secure US military backing in times of
threat.
Notes
Like me, for instance.
John Fitzpatrick (1997) 'European settler colonialism and national security ideologies in Australian history' in R Leaver and D Cox (eds), Middling, Meddling, Muddling: Issues in Australian foreign policy, Allen and Unwin, St Leonards: pp 100
Fitzpatrick (1997) pp 100
Notwithstanding later signs of equivocation in some parts of the Australian community, and forced conscription that caused bitter splits in society and within the ALP in particular.
Peter Edwards (1997) 'History and foreign policy' in FA Mediansky (ed), Australian Foreign Policy: The New Millenium, McMillan, South Melbourne: pp 5
Fitzpatrick (1997): pp101
Gary Smith el al (1996), Australia in the World: An introduction to Australian Foreign Policy, Oxford University Press, Melbourne: pp 101
Smith (1996): pp 101
Edwards, PG (1981) 'Historical Reconsiderations II: on assessing HV Evatt', Historical Studies, vol 21:83, October 1981: pp 45
Richard Leaver (1997) 'Patterns of dependence in post-war Australian foreign policy' in R Leaver and D Cox (eds), Middling, Meddling, Muddling: Issues in Australian foreign policy, Allen and Unwin, St Leonards: pp 72
Edwards (1997): pp 10
Edwards (1997): pp 10
Smith (1996): pp 108
Leaver (1997): pp 72
Leaver (1997): pp 89
Smith (1996): pp 111-113
Dept of Foreign Affairs and Trade (1997) In the National Interest: Australia's Foreign and Trade Policy White Paper, Parliamentary and Media Branch, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Barton: paragraph #8
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