World

Australia, China hold ‘professional’ defence talks

This comes just days after Beijing condemned Canberra’s Aukus submarine deal

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 23 Mar 2023 4:30PM

Australia, China hold ‘professional’ defence talks
The half-day talks between Chinese and Australian defence officials are the latest sign of re-engagement after a diplomatic freeze, despite jostling over Beijing’s expanding diplomatic and military influence in the Pacific. – AFP pic, March 23, 2023

SYDNEY– China and Australia held defence talks focused on regional security issues, officials said today, just days after Beijing condemned Canberra’s plan to deploy a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.

Australian defence officials hosted a team from the People’s Liberation Army for the discussions in Canberra yesterday, an Australian defence spokesman said.

The half-day talks were the latest sign that China and Australia are re-engaging after a diplomatic freeze, despite jostling over China’s expanding diplomatic and military influence in the Pacific.

China warned Australia, Britain, and the United States they were walking “a path of error and danger” after their March 13 announcement of a long-term deal to equip Australia with nuclear-powered submarines armed with cruise missiles.

Australia plans to buy up to five US nuclear-powered submarines, then build a new model with US and British technology. 

The decades-long deal has sparked debate about the cost – hundreds of billions of dollars over three decades – and the strategy of binding its future defence closely to the US and Britain.

Australia’s centre-left Labor government has worked to repair relations with China since coming to power in May last year. 

Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles, who spoke twice last year with China’s Gen Wei Fenghe on the sidelines of regional meetings, said he was pleased that “normal dialogue” had resumed.

He declined to give further details of the discussions.

This week’s talks – “conducted in a professional atmosphere” according to the Australians – were the first formal meeting of the two countries’ defence officials since 2019.

China suspended high-level diplomatic meetings and slapped hefty tariffs on key Australian exports such as barley, beef, and wine in 2020 at the height of a bitter dispute with the former conservative government. – AFP, March 23, 2023

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