A choice remark: āWeāre now defending the fact that weāre in Aukus.
āIf we werenāt in Aukus, we wouldnāt need to defend it. If we didnāt have an aggressive ally like the United States ā aggressive to others in the region ā thereād be nobody attacking Australia. We are better left alone than we are being āprotectedā by an aggressive power like the United States.
āAustralia is capable of defending itself.
āThereās no way another state can invade a country like Australia with an armada of ships without it all failing. I mean, Australia is quite capable of defending itself. We donāt need to be basically a pair of shoes hanging out of the Americansā backside.ā
Look I have a really busy month ahead of me but also strong disagreement that deserves a nuanced reply. Also Iāve seen your other posts and I think you warrant the courtesy of thoughtful response as you are not a hack commentator.
Unfortunately I donāt really have time at the moment to write something researched. So instead I would like to basically raise a couple of points that if youāre curious you could look into to understand why I disagree and point you to a good book and a neat podcast (that I personally find kinda pro status quo and irritating but thoughtful and well worth thinking about).
Privileging taiwan will upset the rules based order and conventions on recognising nations. Maybe thatās worth it, Iām not so sure.
War is usually not the right response, as mentioned in the other comment by the other commentator in many other complex scenarios diplomatic solutions and nuanced approaches are warranted. Simplistic reasoning about invasion would have us going to war against the USA over their invasion of Iraq and that probably would have just got a lot more people killed pointlessly.
The usa is an untrustworthy ally and unlikely to transition peacefully to a multipolar world. Alignment and arms build up can escalate the likelihood of tension (In this book https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/200277862-girt-by-sea the authors, IR and defense academics, point out that pac islands have seen the aukus subs as a sign of australia moving away from a goal of regional stability and do not trust that they are defensive weapons platforms).
China is pretty transparent about what it wants, the one china policy. They do not show interest in expanding to colonial holdings etc. Horrible neighbour, like all countries really see aus-indonesia relations, but the world is full of horrible neighbours and war mostly just makes everything worse for the little guys.
China is not a magical happy land of wonder and peace but it is often criticised uniquely for doing the same shit other countries have done. We usually recognise that there would be no point to war with the UK for justice in their treatment of India and the Bengal famine, the USA for all their horrible treatment of south america and illegal bombing of cambodia (which influenced the rise of pol pot), creating the conditions for daeshās success etc, the abhorrent french treatment of their colonies, or for example australiaās ongoing internationally illegal treatment of assylum seekers and genocide against the native people. Stabilising the world is probably not going to happen down the barrel of a gun, amusingly that is maoist thinking haha.
Thereās a podcast āaustralia in the worldā run by the intitute for international affairs: https://australiaintheworld.podbean.com/ half their eps get me apoplexic with rage :P but they are interesting stuff. Recently there was one https://australiaintheworld.podbean.com/e/ep-133-what-might-cooperate-with-china-where-we-can-actually-mean/ which talks about how most analysis places no war with china as the most likely outcome and thus in that light we need to consider how current actions make that more or less likely, and influence how productive future relations are likely to be.
Soz I have basically just thought vomited. Hopefully you found something of value. That book is quite good btw! not exactly leftist but definitely interesting stuff.
Iāll lay my cards out on the table. I have some good friends from Taiwan. By and large, theyāre not fans of the current US policy, seeing it as potentially more likely to antagonise China than to help. Theyāre fans of the status quo staying exactly as it is. But theyāre really not fans of China. They idea of China invading Taiwan is an absolute terrifying existential dread for Taiwanese people. One of my friends is lucky enough to already have citizenship in NZ and partly reside here in Aus thanks to that. Another has spent some serious effort researching options to move money somewhere that couldnāt be seized by China if they did invade and he decided to flee, including some greyish legality bank accounts in other countries, and looking at cryptocurrencies. Iām not sure 100% where exactly he stands on that right now.
Iām also extremely wary, by default, especially on Lemmy, of people trying to defend Chinese aggression. This platform has a lot of pro-China stooges, who pretend to have leftist beliefs but are more than happy to defend or deny atrocities committed by countries that arenāt even vaguely leftist, like modern-day Russia, or countries that pretend to leftism while embracing a large degree of authoritarian control over individual actions while allowing a lot of corporate exploitation of people, like China does. In other words: tankies. But Iāve seen you around before and I want to give you the benefit of the doubt.
As far as many of your bullet points: I donāt have any time for whataboutism. Itās an extremely dishonest and lazy form of argument. I donāt give a fuck if the West has also done bad in the past, or even if itās continuing to do so. That doesnāt excuse China invading independent countries, and doesnāt provide any sort of even vague excuse for suggesting countries shouldnāt support Taiwaneseās de facto independence remaining exactly as it is. That sort of whataboutism is the hallmark of tankies, and whether used deliberately for that reason or out of a sincere belief, it does nothing but undermine the argument of the person making it.
The bottom line is that China invading Taiwan would be exactly the same as Russia invading Ukraine. Itās an aggressive and illegal invasion of an independent country, done on the basis of some false arguments about the invalidity of that countryās right to its own self-determination. It should be, at the very least roundly condemned and the defending country given aid to help it defend itself. Even if direct military support is not involved.
Iām really sorry for your friends, their situations are horrible.
Iām about as far from a tankie as you can get lmfao, I am an anarchist, I want every single tyrant whether petty or not to stop or get the mussolini treatment - from landlords to kings. But gearing up for war footing is not about right or wrong; It is about whether or not millions of people dying, ploughsheers being melted to bullets, diplomatic options being burned, and peasants being dispossessed serves the political elite. That is the only way nations wage war.
Look at Iraq, Sadam was a horrible maniac and a tyrant. Is life better now? Did that war help anyone? I donāt think it did at all.
If the people of Taiwan are to maintain some political freedom war against a nuclear armed superpower is not the way. Countries are run by fucking maniacs and international law is broadly understood as supporting the PRCs position on Taiwan which complicates things and means direct intervention is very likely to escalate. Possibly to the use of nuclear bombs.
Iād recommend you read that book, I think youāll like it. They are in favour of the current USA led hegemony and the deeply unequal global order, so you donāt need to worry about secret leftism or secret authoritarianism masquerading as leftism. They just also see the asia-pacific with much more nuance than your average polly or ājournoā and see australia taking a more peaceful route into the future.
To be clear: their situation today is not horrible at all. Itās totally fine. It will only become horrible if a foreign country invades their home.
Again, comparing the idea of China invading Taiwan to situations like Sadam Hussain is a mistake. Because weāre not talking about one country interfering in another countryās internal issues. Weāre talking about one country providing a degree of protection to another against a third country invading them. Defensive military aid is a completely different question to invading a country for its internal practices, even if those internal practices are tyrannical. Weāre talking about a hypothetical situation where war has broken out regardless, and itās just a question of ensuring that the little guy doesnāt get totally overrun by a much bigger country.
Itās great to talk about taking a peaceful attitude into the future. But I donāt see any way the region can be peaceful with the threat of China invading other countriesā territory. Itās bad enough today with them using their military to invade other countriesā waters deep in the southern South China Sea. This isnāt the USA, or Australia as a proxy for the USA, being aggressive or upsetting peace. The peace is being upset by China.
Any discussion about Taiwan that doesnāt fundamentally start from the premise that it is an independent country and its people have the right to self-determination is not one to be taken seriously. Because itās either in bad faith or a level of ignorance that makes it impossible to take any conclusions seriously. And thatās not what I see from people like Keating who talk about friendly relations with China without acknowledging the very real possibility that China trying to invade Taiwan is a completely unacceptable action. And his talk about how it should just be left for China to invade because itās ānot a vital Australian interestā is just nationalistic bullshit, putting the lives of Australians ahead of anyone else.