A Labor government created the problem with Indonesia, but
only the Prime Minister can fix it. So far, he has done nothing other
than place fresh impediments in the path of a solution, writes Barrie
Cassidy.
Tony Abbott insists he'll have a foreign policy with a Jakarta focus
and not a Geneva focus. To this point, Geneva will be well pleased.
To be fair, the Prime Minister was placed in a no-win situation by the previous government on the Indonesian spy scandal.
But
that is no excuse for making a bad situation even worse. There were so
many options to consider short of an apology, and he took none of them.
In
the competitive world of domestic politics, it would have galled Abbott
that the Leader of the Opposition, Bill Shorten, should point to the
Barack Obama precedent; that is, concede, apologise, call for a review
and promise it would never happen again.
Galling because the
intelligence agencies breached the boundaries under Labor's watch;
galling because the Prime Minister was protecting the secrecy doctrine
behind international spying; and galling because nobody likes to be
criticised when they are doing their best to clean up after somebody
else.
But all that aside, so far, Abbott’s best is not good enough.
If
the leader of the world's superpower can swallow his pride and
apologise to Germany's Angela Merkel, then why can't the leader of a
middle ranking power apologise to Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, or at least
behave a little more conciliatory?
Abbott is right to argue that
Australia should not apologise for "reasonable intelligence gathering".
But tapping the phones of the Indonesian President and his wife goes
beyond reasonable.
And to try to justify the tapping with talk of
"protecting our country", implies that in some way, Australia regards
Indonesia, the target of the taps, as a threat.
To this point, the rhetoric has only exacerbated the problem. Abbott
was wrong to use the term "if" when talking about Indonesia being upset.
Clearly they are. He was wrong to say he regrets they are embarrassed
by the media reporting. They say it should be Australia who is
embarrassed. And not by the media reporting, but by the nature of the
allegation: that the spying involved tapping the mobile phones of the
President and his wife.
The Coalition's supporters among the shock
jocks can shout from the rooftops that Australia should tell the
Indonesians to "get stuffed".
But they have to then accept the consequences.
Source : ABC.net
Home »
» Abbott’s best is not good enough
Posting Komentar