CANBERRA ā Australia will always put its national interests ahead of economic interests in its troubled relationship with China, a senior Australian lawmaker said Wednesday after a White House official predicted Sino-Australian tensions will persist.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, deputy leader of Australiaās ruling conservative Liberal Party, said China remained a āvery important economic partnerā despite bilateral disputes that have disrupted tens of billions of dollars in trade in Australian commodities including coal, wine, beef, barley, wood and lobsters.
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āWe will not put economic interests first,ā Frydenberg told reporters.
āWe will put the broader national interest first and that means standing up with a very clear and consistent sense of where our national interest is and that is what we have done,ā he added.
Frydenberg spoke after White House Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific Kurt Campbell said there was a āharshnessā in Chinaās approach to Australia that āappears unyielding.ā
āI would have thought we were basically settling in for the long-haul in terms of tensions between China and Australia,ā Campbell told an Asia Society webinar late Tuesday.
A clash over vaccine diplomacy this week was the latest rift in bilateral relations, which plummeted last year when Australia called for an independent investigation into the origins of and responses to COVID-19.
Australia on Tuesday denied Chinese government and state-media allegations that it was interfering in the rollout of Chinese vaccines in Papua New Guinea.
While an increasingly assertive Chinaās relations have soured with several countries, Australia has been singled out for special treatment through a ban on government minister-to-minister contacts.
Campbell said China appeared to have attempted to ācut Australia out of the herd and to try to see if they can effect Australia to completely change how it both sees itself and sees the world.ā
āThe United States . . . have tried to make clear that weāre not going to leave Australia on the field. Thatās just not going to happen,ā Campbell said.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin dismissed Campbellās characterization of Chinese policy toward Australia and denied Beijing was interfering in other countries' internal affairs.
āChina welcomes all constructive suggestions and well-intentioned criticisms, but will never accept any condescending, preaching or lecturing and will resolutely follow its own path,ā Wang said.
Frydenberg said Australia was ādefinitely living with a different China than weāve seen in years prior.ā
He said Australia had protected its national interests by barring Chinese communication giant Huawei from involvement in the nationās 5G networks, outlawing covert foreign interference in domestic politics and canceling deals struck by an Australian state government under Beijingās Belt and Road infrastructure initiative.
Frydenberg has also personally blocked Chinese investment applications in Australia on national interest grounds.
āIāve increasingly seen foreign investment applications that have been pursued not necessarily for commercial objectives but for strategic objectives and, as you know, Iāve said ānoā to applications that in the past may have been approved,ā Frydenberg said.
Wang accused Frydenberg of āhyping the āChina threat theoryā and making irresponsible remarksā for his own political interests.