Punching at exactly our weight

08 September 2010How should Australia respond to the changing power balance in the region, asks Brian Toohey in Inside Story

“The government is of the opinion that discussion of [the ANZUS treaty’s] meaning is almost certain to narrow its meaning… We will only tend to embarrass each other if we try, whether in public or private, to explore such topics. In the government’s view such exploration is bound to weaken rather than strengthen the reliance we can place on ANZUS.”

— Sir Garfield Barwick, Minister for External Affairs, October 1963

IT’S A PITY Sir Garfield didn’t share this powerful insight with the Australian public rather than confining it to a minute to his department. His candid assessment of the elusive meaning of the ANZUS treaty has ongoing relevance to the current Australian debate about the challenge posed by China’s growing economic and strategic power. Barwick wrote the minute after American officials made it plain in high-level talks that ANZUS did not oblige the United States to send troops to help Australian forces in Malaysia during the period of its “confrontation” with Indonesia. His department didn’t really need to be told. Senior diplomats were well aware that the United States had been a reluctant party to the 1951 treaty and only signed after ensuring that the wording precluded an automatic security guarantee…

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Photo: US defence secretary Robert Gates has cancelled production of the F-22 fighter, the plane best suited to air-to-air combat against the Chinese air force. Matt Hintsa/ Flickr

Noticeboard

13 January 2012

The Summer 2012 issue of Quarterly Access examines the recent East Asia Summit, bilateral alliances in the Asia Pacific, the future of Timor-Leste, women's participation in peace processes and more.

Read QA online: http://www.aiia.asn.au/qa/qa-vol4-issue1

02 December 2011

Applications are now open for a unique training opportunity for selected individuals develop the skills, networks and knowledge needed to be effective in forging a more sustainable future.

21 October 2011

Michael Wesley, director of the foreign policy think tank, the Lowy Institute, has won the third John Button Prize for writing on public policy.

Dr Wesley won the $20,000 award for his book, There Goes the Neighbourhood: Australia and the Rise of Asia.