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David Brophy 中國恐慌 澳大利亞替代偏執和迎合的選擇

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Dr David Brophy

Dr David BrophyMA PhD Harvard
Senior Lecturer in Modern Chinese History
Phone +61 2 9114 0778 Fax +61 2 9351 3918
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The University of Sydney
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自傳
我研究了中國西北地區的社會和政治曆史,尤其是新疆Uyghur自治區,及其與伊斯蘭和俄羅斯/蘇聯世界的聯係。 在2011年獲得博士學位後,我在澳大利亞國立大學的澳大利亞中國中心曾在澳大利亞中國澳大利亞中心擔任博士後研究員,然後於2013年來到悉尼大學。我的第一本書《 Uyghur Nation》(2016年) 在20世紀初期,中國和蘇聯之間的Uyghur民族主義政治。 我目前擁有一個弧形發現早期職業研究獎學金,該研究名為“現代內部早期內部的帝國和宗教”,其中探討了十七世紀對清興的內部觀點。
Biography
I study the social and political history of China’s northwest, particularly the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, and its connections with the Islamic and Russian/Soviet worlds. After finishing my PhD in 2011, I spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Australian Centre on China in the World, at the Australian National University, before coming to the University of Sydney in 2013. My first book, Uyghur Nation (2016), is on the politics of Uyghur nationalism between China and the Soviet Union in the early twentieth century. I currently hold an ARC Discovery Early Career Research Fellowship, for a project entitled “Empire and Religion in Early Modern Inner Asia,” in which am exploring Inner Asian perspectives on the rise of the Qing in the seventeenth-eighteenth centuries.

中國恐慌:給加拿大人敲響警鍾

作者:約翰·普萊斯 2023 年 5 月 16 日

在加拿大努力應對外國幹涉中國的指控之際,約翰·普萊斯寫道,政治家們應該明智地閱讀大衛·布羅菲的新書。  

中國恐慌:澳大利亞替代偏執和迎合的選擇

作者:大衛·布羅菲。 拉籌伯大學出版社,2021年6月1日,32.99

加拿大總理賈斯汀·特魯多(Justin Trudeau)在三月份宣布就建立外國影響登記處進行公眾谘詢時,指出澳大利亞是加拿大的榜樣。

4月,加拿大-中華人民共和國議會委員會主張加拿大“努力加入四邊安全對話和AUKUS安全協定”,澳大利亞在這兩項協定中發揮著重要作用。

澳大利亞似乎代表了加拿大政府在打擊“外國幹涉”方麵所希望走的道路。 然而,在加入“澳大利亞”潮流之前,人們可能想閱讀大衛·布羅菲教授的重要新書《中國恐慌:澳大利亞對偏執和迎合的替代方案》。

布羅菲是悉尼大學維吾爾曆史專家,他並不是中國的辯護者。 他仔細剖析了澳大利亞對中國產生恐慌的途徑,並得出結論:“當代對中國的一係列反應加起來,導致澳大利亞政治急劇右傾——走向更加仇外、種族主義的澳大利亞——並且隻能激起澳大利亞類似的民族主義反應。” 中國。”

作者表示,這種恐慌“更多的是澳大利亞政策的產物,而不是政策的動機。” 準確地說,這是一個故意決定的結果,目的是讓澳大利亞遠離與中國的長期深入接觸,並在維護美國在該地區主導地位的運動中發揮積極作用。”

布羅菲表示,此類政策是危險的,因為美國在該地區的霸權“現在幾乎完全具有軍事性質”。

“中國威脅”

在《中國恐慌》的八章中,前五章探討了情報機構、智庫和媒體如何構建生動的“外國幹涉”故事。 與中國肆無忌憚對抗的道路是在澳大利亞間諜機構的要求下開始的。

布羅菲表示,澳大利亞安全情報組織 (ASIO) 承擔了“越來越多的公共角色,從 2017 年起發出警告,稱澳大利亞正在以‘前所未有的規模’發生外國幹涉。” 布羅菲相信,曆史學家最終會對澳大利亞如何走上這條道路有更準確的了解,“但我們可以有信心地說,安全機構已經走在了前麵。”

加入 ASIO 反華行動的還有澳大利亞戰略政策研究所 (ASPI),該研究所由彼得·詹寧斯 (Peter Jennings) 領導,他曾為約翰·霍華德 (John Howard) 提供有關伊拉克戰爭前情報的建議。 作者表示,ASPI“現在充當了對華‘強硬’戰略的信息交換所。”

布羅菲的觀察可能會在加拿大引起強烈反響。 CSIS(加拿大安全情報局)多年來一直在積極宣傳“中國威脅”。 澳大利亞和加拿大都與美國密切結盟,而且都是“五眼”間諜聯盟的成員,該聯盟還包括新西蘭、英國和美國。

此後,《中國恐慌》探討了澳大利亞的左翼和右翼如何癡迷於中國,從而損害了良好的政策。

布羅菲的作品生動地捕捉到了新的“國家安全視角”如何扭曲澳大利亞華人社區的看法,以至於“華人在澳大利亞的存在就被視為具有安全影響”。 布羅菲表示,當前對中國的反應非但沒有捍衛澳大利亞華人所珍視的權利,反而“使這些權利麵臨風險”。

澳大利亞媒體大肆宣揚“中共影響力”範式,導致種族仇恨迅速升溫。 作者指出了一個重要的先例,其中一些人描述了“‘9/11 之後穆斯林覺醒’的經曆。”在澳大利亞出生的華人也有類似的感受,布羅菲表示,他們現在正在努力解決自己的中國身份問題。 ”,“不是中國幹涉的結果,而是澳大利亞對此的偏執。”

為了抵消這種敵意,布羅菲建議,反種族主義“必須與對澳大利亞外交政策和該國世界定位的批評結合起來”。

《中國恐慌》在其“冷戰校園”一章中特別敏銳地概述了大學麵臨的真正風險。

布羅菲寫道:“我認為,現在籠罩校園的戰爭語言為國內政府幹預奠定了基礎,這些幹預對大學的自治和獨立構成的風險比中國所做的任何事情都要大。”

布羅菲證明,無論在校內還是校外,他從未麵臨過任何壓力來改變他對中國的言論。 另一方麵,通過關注大學與中國的關係,最近的爭論損害了大學

澳大利亞的城市,使得停止資金削減變得更加困難。

此外,基礎研究和軍事研究之間的界限在澳大利亞大學“幾乎消失”,因為它們“自願融入澳大利亞、美國和私人跨國國防利益”。

布羅菲表示,昆士蘭大學孔子學院的威脅並不比日本國際交流基金會更大。 更相關的是美國研究中心,它“對校園或更廣泛的社會具有更大的政治影響力”。

布羅菲:批評中共並非“反華”

布羅菲明確表示,批評中國共產黨政府絕不是種族主義或“反華”。 他還指出,具有諷刺意味的是,許多人在談到中國時都宣揚這一觀點,但在以色列問題上卻忽視了這一點,“讓猶太複國主義的批評者和巴勒斯坦權利的支持者經常被攻擊為反猶太主義者。”

那些相信中國不會犯錯的人可能會覺得布羅菲的一些觀點難以接受。 他用兩章概述了他對新疆維吾爾人以及香港鬥爭的同情和複雜性。 作為維吾爾民族主義專家(他的第一本書是《維吾爾民族》),這並不奇怪。

正是因為布羅菲作為獨立學者擁有無可挑剔的資曆,對中國政府在這些領域的政策持批評態度,所以他反對妖魔化或孤立中國的論點是令人信服的。 聯邦新民主黨與保守黨一致敲響反華鼓聲,最好傾聽。

布羅菲指出了中國恐慌的另一個方麵,這很可能引起加拿大許多人的共鳴。

他寫道:“作為一個卓越的外部敵人,中國使白人澳大利亞對這片土地的主權要求正常化,並使澳大利亞土著人的權利無效。”

每個加拿大人都應該有機會閱讀這本重要的書。 這是對加拿大政府和媒體大量宣傳中國恐慌的重要製衡。

大衛·布羅菲 (David Brophy) 將於太平洋時間 5 月 24 日星期三下午 4 點/東部時間晚上 7 點在網絡研討會上談論他的書《中國恐慌:澳大利亞對偏執和迎合的替代方案》。 在這裏注冊。

約翰·普萊斯 (John Price) 是全球研究中心副研究員、維多利亞大學名譽教授(曆史)、加中焦點顧問。

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China Panic: A wake-up call for Canadians

by John Price  

As Canada grapples with allegations of foreign interference by China, John Price writes that politicians would be wise to read David Brophy’s new book.

  

China Panic: Australia's Alternative to Paranoia and Pandering

By David Brophy. La Trobe University Press, June 1, 2021, 32.99

When announcing public consultations with the intention to set up a foreign influence registry in March, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pointed to Australia as a model for Canada.

In April, the Canada-People’s Republic of China Parliamentary Committee advocated that Canada “make efforts to join the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue and AUKUS security pact,” both pacts in which Australia has an anchor role.

Australia, it would seem, represents the path that the Canadian government would like to follow in its quest to combat “foreign interference.” Before jumping on the ‘Down Under’ bandwagon, however, people might want to read professor David Brophy’s important new book, China Panic: Australia’s Alternative to Paranoia and Pandering.

A specialist in Uyghur history at the University of Sydney, Brophy is no apologist for China. He carefully dissects Australia’s pathway to panic regarding China, concluding: “The suite of contemporary responses to China add up to a sharp move to the right in Australian politics — towards a more xenophobic, racist Australia — and can only provoke a similarly nationalistic response from China.”

This panic, says the author, “is much more a product of Australia’s policies than a motivation for them. To be precise, it’s the result of a deliberate decision to wrench Australia away from deep, longstanding engagement with China, and to assume an active role in a campaign to preserve American dominance in the region.”

Such policies are dangerous, says Brophy, because U.S. hegemony in the region is “now of an almost exclusively military nature.”

The 'China Threat'

Of China Panic’s eight chapters, the first five probe how intelligence agencies, think tanks, and the media constructed vivid tales of “foreign interference.” The path to unbridled confrontation with China started at the behest of Australia’s spy agencies.

The Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO), says Brophy, took on an “increasingly public role, issuing warnings from 2017 onwards that foreign interference was occurring at ‘an unprecedented scale’ in Australia.” Brophy believes historians will eventually have a more precise picture of how Australia entered onto this path, “but we can say with some confidence that security agencies have led the way.”

Joining ASIO in its anti-China campaign has been the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), headed by Peter Jennings, who advised John Howard on intelligence leading up to the Iraq War. ASPI, says the author, “now serves as a clearing house for ‘get tough’ strategies towards China.”

Brophy’s observations may echo loudly here in Canada. CSIS (the Canadian Security Intelligence Service) has been aggressively marketing the “China threat” for years. Australia and Canada are both closely allied to the United States, and they are both members of the Five Eyes spy alliance that also includes New Zealand, the U.K., and the U.S.

China Panic thereafter probes how both the left and the right in Australia became obsessed with China, to the detriment of good policy.

Brophy’s work vividly captures how the new “national-security lens” distorts perceptions of Chinese communities in Australia to the point where “the very presence of Chinese in Australia, are seen to have security implications.” Far from defending the rights that Chinese Australians value, states Brophy, current responses to China “puts these rights at risk.”

The media in Australia has binged on the “CCP influence” paradigm that has given rise to a rapid spike in racial animosity. The author points to an important precedent in which some people described the “experience of ‘waking up Muslim after 9/11.’” Something similar is being felt by Australian-born Chinese individuals, who, states Brophy, are now grappling with their Chineseness, “not as a result of PRC interference but because of Australian paranoia towards it.”

To counteract this animosity, Brophy suggests that anti-racism “has to be combined with a critique of Australian foreign policies and the country’s orientation to the world.”

China Panic is particularly perceptive in outlining the real risks to universities in his chapter “Cold-War Campus.” 

“The language of war that now envelops campuses has, in my opinion, laid the basis for domestic government interventions that present more of a risk to universities’ autonomy and independence than anything China is doing,” Brophy wrote.

Brophy attests that he has never faced any pressure, on or off campus, to modify what he says about China. On the other hand, by homing in on universities’ ties to China, recent polemics undermine universities in Australia and makes it much more difficult to stop funding cuts.

Furthermore, the line between basic and military research has “all but vanished” at Australian universities, as they have “willingly embedded themselves with Australian, American and private multinational defence interests.”

Nor does the Confucius Institute at the University of Queensland pose any more of a threat, says Brophy, than the Japan Foundation. More pertinent is the United States Studies Centre that has much greater “political influence on campus or in wider society.”

Criticizing the CCP isn't 'anti-Chinese': Brophy

Brophy is clear that criticizing the Chinese government of the CCP is not in any way racist or “anti-Chinese.” He also notes the irony in the fact many people proclaim this idea when it comes to China, but ignore it in the case of Israel, “allowing critics of Zionism and supporters of Palestinian rights to be frequently attacked as antisemites.”

Those who believe China can do no wrong may find some of Brophy’s views difficult to swallow. In two chapters, he outlines his sympathy for and the complexity of the Uyghurs in Xinjiang and the battles over Hong Kong. As a specialist in Uyghur nationalism (his first book was Uyghur Nation), this is not surprising.

Precisely because Brophy has impeccable credentials as an independent scholar, critical of Chinese government policies in these areas, his arguments against demonizing or isolating China are compelling. The federal NDP, which has aligned with the Conservative in beating the anti-China drum, would be well advised to listen.

Brophy points to another aspect of the China Panic that may well resonate with many in Canada.

“As an external enemy par excellence, China normalizes white Australia’s claim to this land and voids that of Indigenous Australians,” he wrote.

Every Canadian should have access to this important book. It is an important counterweight to the reams of government and media propaganda promoting the China Panic in Canada.

David Brophy will speak about his book China Panic: Australia’s Alternative to Paranoia and Pandering in a webinar on Wednesday, May 24, 4 pm Pacific/7 pm Eastern time. Register here.

John Price is an associate fellow at the Centre for Global Studies, professor emeritus (history) at the University of Victoria, and an advisor of Canada-China Focus

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