The Fallacy of the GAPF doctrine

One of the fallacies of the "great and powerful friends" [GAPF] doctrine of foreign policy is that in return for uncritical support of the super-power in foreign policy, we get security and economic benefits. It is a lie we tell, and sell to ourselves. Super-powers play power politics, and the weak get consumed and spat out.

Supposedly the Au-US FTA was one of the economic flow throughs of Australian support in Iraq, yet Chile and Singapore, who didnt support Iraq also got bilateral trade agreements with the US. Costa Rica was another who has FTA. the free-trade agreement is more managed trade, with Australia adopting American intellectual property laws, and US agricultural subsidies and quotas remaining.

Now we have the wheat fiasco . From the article;

AWB Limited has been suspended from a US-funded credit program over its involvement in the Iraqi oil-for-food program, which saw $200 million from the wheat company funnelled to former dictator Saddam Hussein.

AWB says the ban is unjustified, while the Grains Council has accused the US of trying to shut Australian growers out of the world market.

Note to John Howard, play power politics, or you will be rubbed from the global stage, leaving nothing more than a smear. The irony is dripping, super-powers act in their own interests, and muscle out the weak - where is your GAPF now?
Permalink, The Fallacy of the GAPF doctrine, Nov 2005, cam

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