Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard has named Indonesia as one
of five Asian powers that the nation will focus on as she announced a
new direction for Australian foreign and economic policy.
In a
white paper released on Sunday by Gillard’s government titled
“Australia in the Asian Century”, Gillard identified China, India,
Indonesia, Japan and South Korea as the nation’s key partners, citing
factors including demography, investment and trade.
“We also
have the benefits that come from a track record of engagement with the
nations of our region,” Gillard said in the 312-page paper.
“Our
principal relationships with China, India, Indonesia, Japan and the
Republic of Korea have strengthened in recent years. Our alliance with
the United States remains as strong as ever [....] Whatever else this
century brings, it will bring Asia’s rise.”
‘The paper said for
Australia to thrive in the Asian century required the nation “to have a
clear plan to seize the economic opportunities that will flow and
manage the strategic challenges that will arise”.
However,
experts at the University of Indonesia (UI) said that security
considerations were evident in the white paper, despite its predominant
focus on economic issues.
Hariyadi Wirawan, the head of UI’s
international relations department, said that the paper evinced a clear
parallel with US President Barack Obama’s “Asia pivot” policy,
especially given defense budget cuts.
Although the paper did
not dwell on defense, its subtext was countering China’s growing
influence, Hariyadi told The Jakarta Post over the telephone. “Since a
meeting between Julia and Obama, there has to be a kind of deal on how
to manage things in the Asia Pacific region, with China getting more
assertive,” he said.
According to Hariyadi, the US has been
courting Australia as a more significant partner in the region to
bolster Western interests in Asia and the Pacific. “This is also a kind
of confirmation that the West will not leave the region, leaving
[other] nations to face China alone in possible conflicts in the
future,” he said.
Makmur Keliat, head of the international
relations post-graduate program at UI, agreed, saying that Australia’s
pivot toward Asia was not done independently and was closely aligned
with US policy as part of developing a regional security architecture.
“Whoever the US President is, whether Democrat or a Republican, the
Pacific has always been considered an inseparable part of the US.”
“The
US has to be included in any regional integration initiatives in Asia
to avoid the bitter experience with the European Union, when the US was
left behind,” he said.
On Indonesia’s options, Makmur said it
was important to keep ASEAN’s central role in the region, while
Hariyadi said that Indonesia should develop a new design to balance its
relations with China and the West.
“We cannot follow either one or the other, as we have far greater national interests,”Hariyadi said.
The
white paper’s principal focus was on economic issues, such as boosting
Australia’s annual per capita income from A$62,000 (US$64,311) to
A$73,000 by 2025, reaffirming that Asia would continue to drive demand
for Australia’s energy and mineral resources, and focusing on expansion
outside the energy and mining sectors.
Indonesia is Australia’s
fourth largest trading partner in ASEAN and 12th largest trading
partner overall. Australian investment in Indonesia remained steady in
2011 at $5.4 billion, while Indonesian investment in Australia rose 11
percent to $454 million.
The white paper also touched regional
defense and security ties, saying that: “Cooperative relations among
the pre-eminent powers in the region — China, India, Indonesia, Japan
and the United States — will be fundamental to regional security and
prosperity”.
It also stated that: “We accept that China’s
military growth is a natural, legitimate outcome of its growing economy
and broadening interests. It is important that China and others in the
region explain to their neighbors the pace and scope of their military
modernisation, to build confidence and trust.”
Gillard’s Asia
pivot evoked the efforts of previous prime ministers, notably Bob Hawke
and Paul Keating, who also tried to forge stronger ties with
Australia’s closest neighbors — moves that were quashed by John Howard.
Australia’s goals for the Asian Century
• Boosting per capita income 20 percent to A$73,000 by 2025
• Ensuring more business leaders are ‘Asia-literate’
• Maintaining strong fiscal position, triple-A sovereign credit rating
• Placing Asian studies at core of school curriculum
• Prioritizing learning Mandarin, Hindi, Indonesian and Japanese
• Ensuring 10 Australian universities are in world’s top 100
Source : thejakartapost.com
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