Kevin Rudd voiced his concerns about US-China relations during an interview with the ABC’s 7.30.

Kevin Rudd voiced his concerns about US-China relations during an interview with the ABC’s 7.30.Credit:Bloomberg

“In fact,I’ve been struggling for the last 24 hours to find a time when a Chinese paramount leader has attacked the US by name.

“[We need] to encourage both Beijing and Washington to move in the direction of a new strategic framework of managed strategic competition.”

Advertisement

Rudd also disagreed with former prime minister Paul Keating’s long-standing assessment that the US was trying to contain China.

“I’ve got a lot of time for Paul – he and I are friends and colleagues and I respect so much of what he’s done for Australia,” Rudd said.

Former prime ministers Kevin Rudd and Paul Keating differ in their assessments of China.

Former prime ministers Kevin Rudd and Paul Keating differ in their assessments of China.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen

“But I think I would suggest that it’s important for us also to analyse how the strategic environment in Asia and the Indo-Pacific and,for that matter,globally is changing because of China’s own military rise.”

“Certainly,what drives I think Australian strategic thinking is how do we deter our friends in China from taking a premeditated,premeditated military action against Taiwan,which would then be a fundamental destabilisation of the strategic status quo.”

Keating has long argued that Australia should not be pulled into a conflict over the future of Taiwan.

Get a note directly from our foreigncorrespondentson what’s making headlines around the world.Sign up for the weekly What in the World newsletter here.

Most Viewed in World

Loading