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Abbott tells US to welcome China's rise
Posted 18 July 2012, 11:42 AEST
Posted 18 July 2012, 11:42 AEST
Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott uses a Washington speech to urge the US to have more confidence in itself and not "begrudge" the rise of China.
In a speech to the conservative American think tank the Heritage Foundation in Washington, Mr Abbott said the US should welcome the growing strength of the Asian powerhouse, and even foster it.
But he used the opportunity to criticise the Australian Government's carbon tax and recent cuts to Defence spending, describing any move to weaken military capability as "irresponsible".
"As a result of Defence cuts in the recent budget, Australia's Defence spending as a percentage of gross domestic product is now at its lowest level since - wait for it - 1938," Mr Abbott said in response to an audience question.
"So that is quite a concern given that we do not live in a benign environment, we do not live in benign times.
"I don't say that savings are impossible in Defence, but I do think that it is irresponsible to save money in Defence in a way that compromises your military capability, given that Australia's military capabilities are not vast to start with."
His criticism follows recent comments from the head of the US Pacific Command in Hawaii, Admiral Samuel Locklear, who warned Australia that Defence spending was not something that could be turned off when economic conditions worsened.
Mr Abbott is in Washington with a host of other Australian MPs - including Kevin Rudd - as part of the annual Australian American Leadership Dialogue.
He used his speech to the Heritage Foundation to lay out his foreign policy credentials, and focused largely on the growing economic and military strength in Asia and how the US should respond.
"Obviously, China's increasing economic strength is being matched by increased military capability," he said.
"Still, the richer and more sophisticated a people become, and the more access they have to information, the less likely they are to be impressed by militarism.
"Stronger countries have more and more capacity to make trouble but they also have less and less incentive to do so.
"A China that was freer as well as richer would be the best guarantee of peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region.
"The right response to the rise of China is not to begrudge its growing economic strength but to welcome it and even to foster it."
Rise of Asia
Mr Abbott acknowledged that the rise of China, along with the economic troubles in America, has prompted debate about whether the US has passed from being a dominant power, to one in decline.
However, he said the US still remained the world's largest economy, and other countries continued to instinctively look to America whenever disasters strike or disaster looms.
He said the rise of Asia, was not a repudiation of Western values, but a vindication of them.
"What's remarkable is that right now, perhaps for the first time, the world appears to have more confidence in America than America has in itself," Mr Abbott said.
"America needs to believe in itself the way others still believe in it.
"Australia wills America to succeed because a strong America means a safer world."
But he said the US should not take Australia's support entirely for granted, arguing that Australia's foreign policy should be driven by domestic values and interests - even though they are likely to be closely aligned with America's.
"The United States and Australia are separate legal entities but few Australians would regard America as a foreign country," Mr Abbott said.
"We are more than allies, we're family. Around the world we seek no privileges, ask no favours, crave no territory.
"Australia doesn't have to choose between our neighbours and our friends because our neighbours are also our friends and because our best friends are increasingly at home in our neighbourhood."