999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

One Chinese political donation does not a scandal make

2017-01-02 04:06:29Hon.BobCarr
Peace 2017年3期

?

One Chinese political donation does not a scandal make

By Professor the Hon. Bob Carr, Director of the Australian-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney.

Let’s be clear. Efforts by any country to subvert Australia should be investigated, monitored and brought to light Yes, let’s ban donations from non-citizens. Let’s go further still - my own suggestion - and ban any donations that might reasonably be suspected as seeking to influence Australian foreign policy.

However, almost a week after ABC’sscreened its episode, we have evidence of donations by two Chinese to Australian political parties, Two. This is the paltry revelation that produced this week’s sensational headlines along the lines of ‘China buys our politics’, ‘Chinese cash’ in Farfax newspapers and ABC bulletins.

The finance pages of the Australian media feature large Chinese entities. Some are state-owned, such as State Grid and Yancoal. There are six Chinese banks and six airlines, many resource companies. There’s the Chinese Investment Corporation, part-owner of the Port of Melbourne. Gina Rinehart has a Chinese consortium as a partner in Kidman.

There are 300 companies in the China Chamber of Commerce in Australia.

There have been 1500 rich Chinese immigrants since 2012.

Yet with the dust settled we have this revelation: two donors. And one of those two donors, as’s Simon Benson reported yesterday, is in fact an Australian citizen.

Let’s tease that out. If you insist on classing a naturalized Australian who was born in China as a foreigner, well that’s a big step. Discard naturalization and make the determinant their country of birth and, whoa! That opens a Pandora’s box. One that would have seen Dick Pratt (born in Gdansk), Frank Lowy (bon in Czechoslovakia) plus any number of Greek-born Australians or Lebanese-born Australians banned from donating to Australian parties. Big step, that.

Back to that single big donation from a Chinese national. Were there a strategic and systemic attempt by the Chinese to buy influence in Australia, may we have expected something more? Donations from the large companies, many state-owned? Fat cheques from some of those l’ve listed above (and that’s hardly an exhaustive list)? Not a cent apparently.

Some operation. Some Beijing puppet master. As an attempt to buy the politics of a nation-state it would not make a case study at the CIA’s Langley headquarters (since a third of the CIA’s exemplary covert action in the 1970’s involved funding overseas political parties). It would have been derisorily dismissed in any Russian academy of subversive science.

Let’s assume ASIO briefed Australian political parties on the two men (as Fairfax andreported) and the parties kept soliciting donations from them. I doubt if the Liberal Party national director or ALP national secretary would have heard something from ASIO they considered alarming and then placed their parties and leaders at risk (and consigned their own careers to the dustbin) by pressing ahead and seeking money from entities ASIO said were proven high-risk sources. That would have been worse than a crime, a blunder.

Might it be assumed that the ASIO brief was far from conclusive?and Fairfax produced two examples of the mobilization of Australia’s Chinese community. Let’s examine them. First, there were rallies for the 2008 Olympics. This was around nine years back, and we’re still bruised? Second, the large crowds welcoming Premier Li Keqiang when he visited in March. Any different from the Jewish community mobilization for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this year? It was a good deal less than the joyous Indian celebration when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited in 2014.

These dark references to mobilization are barely stronger than last year’s China panic: ‘Mao commemoration concerts.’ In the end there was no evidence of support from any of the Chinese media here or from Chinese diplomats in Australian. The notion of Mao concerts - repellent, to be sure - melted into thin air.

There is scant evidence of the 1.2 million Chinese in Australia being mobilized on foreign policy questions such as the South China Sea. The biggest issues in the Chinese community in the last federal election, according to some political campaigners, were Safe Schools and Muslim immigration. Liberal and Labor organizers will tell you there wasn’t a murmur about Scarborough Shoal or the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands. I doubt a single federal MP has received a delegation on the subjects. In any case, many migrant communities reserve the right to lobby our government on foreign policy matters that touch their country of origin: Irish, Greeks, Macedonians, Turks, Tamils, Rohingya, Cypriots, and Jews in respect of Israel. It’s striking, in fact, there has been so little from a community as vast as the Chinese. Perhaps they’re too busy with business and professional life and getting their kids into university.

It’s an arrogant assumption among (Anglo) journalists that the Chinese in Australia are so simple they can be corralled and marshaled by Chinese agents. Or that, in the age of social media, they will buy a pro-Beijing line because it appears ex cathedra in a Chinese-language paper.

The ABC’s Chris Uhlmann wrote that Andrew Robb lobbies for a ‘Communist Party-backed trade park’. This struck me as a curious formulation. Uhlmann was referring to the Rizhao trade park supported by the local government council. It would make as much sense to indict Robb for arriving in China via a ‘communist-backed’ international airport, travelling to central Beijing on a ‘communist-backed’ expressway and staying in a ‘communist-backed’ hotel.

China’s political system is one-party, Marxist-Leninist. So this point (‘communist-backed’) can be leveled at every aspect of its life, from sewage systems to dental surgery. Of course Australians would be united in wishing China had pluralist politics and competitive elections. But for now it doesn’t and we deal with China as it is. That means, among all else, watching out for whatever it may do in domestic Australian affairs.

, briefed by ASIO, produced one example of possible Chinese espionage, brought to light by an ASIO raid on the home of a retired intelligence official, Roger Uren, married to Chinese Sheri Yan. The raid took place in 2015. It has not resulted in a prosecution.

Given this gauzy instance is the only examplehad, and that too after an ASIO briefing, either the Chinese spies are hopeless or our boys, steeled in Cold War combat against the Russians, are too good for them.

Australia has an overseas intelligence-gathering agency. It is called ASIS. It might be assumed that it gathers espionage in China. Maybe that’s what countries do. Spy on one another and try to block others from spying on you. Just a thought.


登錄APP查看全文

主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲欧美不卡视频| 欧美精品啪啪| 国产乱人乱偷精品视频a人人澡| 国产乱子伦一区二区=| 国产成人精品亚洲77美色| 小蝌蚪亚洲精品国产| 中国美女**毛片录像在线| 五月天久久综合国产一区二区| 亚洲午夜福利精品无码不卡| 性激烈欧美三级在线播放| 成人亚洲视频| 中文字幕 91| 欧美亚洲另类在线观看| 中文字幕1区2区| 久久久受www免费人成| 成人在线天堂| 久久视精品| 国产丝袜啪啪| 精品福利视频网| 国产欧美日韩va| 天天色综网| 久久亚洲黄色视频| 精品撒尿视频一区二区三区| 精品人妻无码中字系列| 日韩黄色大片免费看| 日本黄色不卡视频| 高清亚洲欧美在线看| 素人激情视频福利| 久久人妻xunleige无码| 日本一区中文字幕最新在线| 免费在线成人网| 亚洲美女视频一区| 综合亚洲色图| 国产成人91精品免费网址在线| 欧美一区日韩一区中文字幕页| 精品国产中文一级毛片在线看 | 毛片久久网站小视频| 毛片a级毛片免费观看免下载| 伊人福利视频| 日韩黄色精品| 亚洲男人天堂2020| 一本久道久久综合多人| 国产欧美视频在线观看| 中文字幕久久精品波多野结| 欧美亚洲香蕉| 国产黑人在线| 欧美在线精品怡红院| 91国语视频| 久久精品日日躁夜夜躁欧美| 国产精品尤物铁牛tv| 99手机在线视频| 国产成人久久777777| 欧美影院久久| 99视频在线精品免费观看6| 国产成人啪视频一区二区三区| 亚洲av中文无码乱人伦在线r| 亚洲欧美成人综合| 精品视频一区二区三区在线播| 99精品国产自在现线观看| 午夜福利视频一区| 亚洲精品视频免费| 午夜无码一区二区三区在线app| 无码人妻免费| 国语少妇高潮| 亚洲 成人国产| 国产男女XX00免费观看| 亚洲女同欧美在线| 一级爆乳无码av| 国产成人91精品免费网址在线| 91亚洲视频下载| 久久综合色天堂av| 无码AV高清毛片中国一级毛片 | 亚洲欧美极品| 成·人免费午夜无码视频在线观看| 亚洲美女一级毛片| 免费国产黄线在线观看| 欧美A级V片在线观看| 97久久人人超碰国产精品| 九九九精品成人免费视频7| 国产玖玖玖精品视频| av在线无码浏览| 青青草原偷拍视频|