Former prime minister Paul Keating said expanding NATO’s ties with Asia would be like exporting poison.
Albanese and Scholz will on Monday announce an agreement for Australia to sell 100 Queensland-made Boxer heavy weapons carriers to Germany in a $1 billion deal that is believed to be one of the nation’s biggest defence export contracts.
“This agreement will boost Australia’s sovereign defence industry,secure local jobs and contribute to Australia’s economic growth,” Albanese said.
French President Emmanuel Macron is seeking to kibosh a plan by NATO officials to open a liaison office in Japan,insisting the proposal would take the alliance too far away from its North Atlantic geographical boundaries.
“We are not in favour as a matter of principle,” an Elysee Palace official told reporters on Friday. “As far as the office is concerned,the Japanese authorities themselves have told us that they are not extremely attached to it.”
Albanese will attend the annual NATO summit for the second year running as part of the so-called “IP4”:a group of four non-member states in the Indo-Pacific comprising Australia,South Korea,Japan and New Zealand.
In a statement issued on Sunday,Keating said:“President Macron of France is right to warn NATO away from any expansion into Asia,reminding all and sundry of NATO’s Atlantic design and focus.”
Claiming that “the Europeans have been fighting each other for the best part of 300 years”,Keating said:“Exporting that malicious poison to Asia would be akin to Asia welcoming the plague upon itself.