Australia plays the victim — again
Share - WeChat
They provoke, accuse, and then play the victim. It's a familiar tactic employed by Australia in the South China Sea.
On October 19, the PLA warned off an Australian P-8A warplane using defensive flares over the Xisha Islands. Yet, the Australian Defence Minister calls it a "routine patrol", repeatedly emphasizing "freedom of navigation". But is that really the case?
And here's the irony — China is one of Australia's largest trading partners. So why is Canberra "protecting freedom of navigation" by provoking the very routes that carry its own trade? As a close US ally, Canberra often uses these staged confrontations to demonstrate its allegiance.
Today's Top News
- China warns Japan against interference
- Nation's euro bond sale shows investors' confidence
- No soft landing for Tokyo's hard line
- Commerce minister urges US to increase areas of cooperation
- Strong demand for China's sovereign bonds signals global confidence
- Ministry urges Japan to 'maintain self-respect'
Editor's picks




























