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Mike Qadder
‘Wilfully blind’: Labor MPs blast Paul Keating over China, AUKUS

ByMatthew Knott and James Massola
Updated March 15, 2023 — 7.52pmfirst published at 7.30pm

Speaking on the ABC’s 7.30, Marles said he had huge respect for the achievements of the Hawke-Keating government but added: “It’s a government that finished in 1996. And our responsibility is to be governing the country in the national interest in 2023.”

Marles said Keating’s intervention had not shaken his belief in AUKUS because Australia’s dependence on international shipping routes meant it needs a long-range submarine capability.

“It’s wrong to think about our national interest being confined to the continent, we need the collective security of our region,” he said.

He strongly defended Wong’s performance, saying in less than a year she was already “one of the greatest foreign ministers we’ve had”.

Former Labor leader Bill Shorten told Sky News: “I think the strategic nature of China has changed in the last year. They’re not the same China they were in the ’90s.”

Victorian MP Raff Ciccone, the chair of the Senate foreign affairs, defence and trade committee, said: “Keating’s comments were unfair and ill-informed, and he should reflect on his conduct.”

Noting Keating was “not privy to current intelligence” from security agencies, Ciccone said it was “very unfair that he attacked the work of Richard Marles, Penny Wong, [Defence Industry Minister] Pat Conroy and the prime minister who have been able to achieve an outstanding AUKUS deal with our closest allies, the United States and the UK, and repaired the relationship with the Pacific”.

Victorian Labor MP Julian Hill, chair of parliament’s defence subcommittee, said Keating had been a brilliant prime minister but “our strategic circumstances have changed and the hard reality is we cannot afford not to do this [purchase nuclear-powered submarines]”.

“I dearly wish that the world was as he thinks it is, but it simply is not,” Hill said.
“Australia faces the biggest military build-up since World War II and if we don’t face that reality we surrender our sovereignty.”

Assistant Foreign Minister Tim Watts said: “Any reasonable observer would recognise the success Penny Wong has had rebuilding relationships in the Pacific and South-East Asia while stabilising our relationship with China. I’ve seen that up close.”

NSW Labor MP Jerome Laxale praised Wong and Marles for re-establishing good relations with Pacific Island nations “after the Morrison government had trashed it”, saying: “I respectfully disagree with Mr Keating there.”

Underlining his increased isolation on foreign policy and national security from the party he once led, Keating revealed he had approached Albanese’s office for a meeting in February about the AUKUS pact but had not received a response.

He also received no reply from Albanese in the same month when he emailed the prime minister a “long paper” on the importance of a sovereign foreign policy.

“I don’t think I suffer from relevance deprivation, but I do suffer concern for Australia as it most unwisely proceeds down this singular and dangerous path,” he said.

Labor sources said they did not believe Wong and Keating had spoken in several years and that Keating was frustrated she had taken a different stance from him on China.
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