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China wanted to ‘drive Australia to its knees’, Biden’s Indo-Pacific adviser says

  • Kurt Campbell said Beijing has tried to ‘break’ Canberra by ramping up economic pressure on the US ally
  • He also noted that the US is not leaving the Indo-Pacific, and ‘the country is not in decline’

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Kurt Campbell, the White House coordinator for Indo-Pacific affairs. Photo: AFP
China is conducting “dramatic economic warfare” against Australia and has tried to “break” the US ally, contributing to increased anxiety about Beijing in the region, the White House’s Indo-Pacific coordinator, Kurt Campbell, said in a speech to a Sydney think tank on Wednesday.
US President Joe Biden raised the treatment of Australia, which has been subject to trade reprisals by Beijing, in his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping as an example of behaviour that was backfiring because Xi’s advisers were not providing effective feedback, Campbell told a Lowy Institute conference.

“China’s preference would have been to break Australia. To drive Australia to its knees,” Campbell said.

Campbell underlined the United States’ commitment to new security and economic alliances in the Indo-Pacific, including the defence technology pact with Canberra and London, known as Aukus, and the Quad of India, Japan, US and Australia.
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These groups would also focus on technology, education, climate and pandemic cooperation, to show the US was bringing value to Asia, he said.

“The United States is not leaving the Indo-Pacific, and we’re not in decline,” he said, adding there appeared to be a belief among “ideological advisers around President Xi that somehow the United States is in this hurtling decline”.

02:25

Xi Jinping and Joe Biden call for mutual respect and peaceful China-US coexistence

Xi Jinping and Joe Biden call for mutual respect and peaceful China-US coexistence

Beijing’s lack of communication over its build up of nuclear deterrent capabilities, hypersonic and anti-satellite systems was of concern to the US, he said, calling them “practices, that, if they continue, run risks of triggering an unforeseen crisis, or a misunderstanding.”

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