July 12, 2023:
Information Clearing House
-- NATO has no place
in Asia and should stick to its original
focus, that is the security of the
Transatlantic region, former Australian
Prime Minister Paul Keating has argued. The
Labour politician, who served in office from
1991 to 1996, also warned against attempts
to “circumscribe” China.
In his statement published on Sunday,
Keating appeared to refer to a recent report
in Politico, which claimed French President
Emmanuel Macron had blocked NATO’s plans to
establish a liaison office in Japan.
The former premier lauded the French head
of state for “doing the world a service”
by apparently emphasizing the military
bloc’s focus on Europe and the Atlantic.
According to Keating, the alliance’s very
existence past the end of the Cold War
“has already denied peaceful unity to the
broader Europe.”
Exporting such “malicious poison to
Asia would be akin to Asia welcoming the
plague upon itself,” he insisted. The
former prime minister warned that NATO’s
presence on the continent would negate most
of the region’s recent advances.
Keating went on to describe NATO
Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg as the
“supreme fool” on the international
stage who is conducting himself like an
“American agent.”
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He cited a comment Stoltenberg made back
in February when he called for the West not
to repeat the “mistake” it had made
with regard to Russia, suggesting it should
work to contain China.
The former Australian leader noted that
the NATO chief conveniently ignored the fact
that “China represents twenty per cent
of humanity and now possesses the largest
economy in the world.” He added that
Beijing, unlike Washington, “has no
record of attacking other states.”
Over the weekend, Politico cited an
anonymous Elysee Palace official who claimed
that Paris is against NATO expansion beyond
the North Atlantic. “NATO means North
Atlantic Treaty Organization,” the
French presidential staffer reportedly
emphasized.
Back in May, the Japanese ambassador to
the US, Koji Tomita, revealed that his
country was working toward opening a NATO
liaison office in Tokyo, which would become
the bloc’s first in Asia. Prime Minister
Fumio Kishida confirmed the plans to
Japanese lawmakers, noting that Tokyo did
not intend to join the US-led organization.
Commenting on the news, Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning advised NATO
against “extending its geopolitical
reach.” The diplomat pointed out that
the “Asia-Pacific does not welcome bloc
confrontation or military blocs.”