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spmetla
01-20-2018, 01:41
Canada, Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom.

Not sure what hole I was hiding in but I hadn't seen this concept floated even though it's been about for a while. Guess it's a alternate for the above countries if the UK leaves the EU, NAFTA breaks down between US and Canada and other things.

http://www.canzukinternational.com/about


CANZUK International was founded in January 2015 as The Commonwealth Freedom of Movement Organisation, and is the world’s leading non-profit organisation advocating freedom of movement, free trade and foreign policy coordination between Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom (the “CANZUK” countries).

Our campaign advocates closer cooperation between these four nations so they may build upon existing economic, diplomatic and institutional ties to forge a cohesive alliance of nation-states with a truly global outlook.

Our proposals ensure that Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom not only sustain economic prosperity and quality of life, but develop travel and employment opportunities for each of their citizens as part of a global initiative of Commonwealth countries.

Our work has been recognised by senior government officials and diplomats across the world, and we have engaged millions of citizens within these countries to support and campaign for our proposals.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CANZUK

Contrary views[edit]
Although the UK is in the process of leaving the EU, CANZUK is not legally credible until the UK's departure.[19]

Critics such as Nick Cohen suggest that CANZUK is a 'fantasy' and that the project would not make sense as a geo-political construct in the 21st Century, here he emphasises the gradual separation that has occurred between each of the states in both legal and political culture since the end of the British Empire.[20] Additionally, it has been argued that geographical separation might still limit the value of any such union, this is in keeping with mainstream economic opinion that considers the 'distance and the size of trading partners matter more than historical links in determining trading relationships between countries'.[21]

In academia, Duncan Bell criticises contemporary 'Anglospheric discourse' and concludes that modern political commentary is 'a pale imitation of previous iterations' lacking broad spectrum support across the political left-right dichotomy.[22]


Public opinion[edit]
Public opinion polling conducted by YouGov in 2015 found that 58% of British people would support freedom of movement and work between the citizens of the United Kingdom and the citizens of Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with 19% opposed to the idea and 23% undecided.[23] 70% of Australians said they were supportive of the proposal, with 10% opposed to it; 75% of Canadians said they supported the idea and 15% were opposed to it and 82% of New Zealanders stated that they supported the idea, with 10% opposed.[24] The research also found that British people valued free mobility between the UK and Canada, Australia and New Zealand higher than they did with free mobility between the UK and EU at 46% to 35%.[24]

Further polling conducted in January 2017 found support for free movement of people and goods with certain limitations on citizens claiming tax-funded payments on entry across the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand to be 64% in the UK, 72% in Australia, 77% in Canada and 81% in New Zealand, with undecideds included.[25]

It is an interesting concept, pooling economic power, military power, and markets would make CANZUK a large world player. The major issue of course be who in their right mind would want to give up more of their regional power to another supra-national organization. Australians probably wouldn't want Canada and the UK determining their economic policies. New Zealand would probably not be happy paying taxes for a national defense it doesn't really need.
On the upside it would provide a united front against regional competitors. A CANZUK negotiating with China, the US, or the EU would have more weight than any of the member nations individually. By pooling defense budgets and standardizing equipment they'd reduce per-unit cost without having to join US or EU dominated multi-national development of major defense items (aircraft, ships, subs, vehicles, tanks).

It would also in effect justify the UK/CANZUK seat on the security council by remaining a great power of sorts which would also allow it to more strongly make it's opinion felt as opposed to being the US little brother.

Obstacles such an organization would have would certainly be in the independent movements. Would Quebec want to be part of such a hypothetical greater anglosphere? Would Scotland still peruse total independence such as Ireland, independence and join the EU, or change it to more independence within CANZUK turning it into CANZNIWES (Change UK to Northern Ireland, Wales, England Scotland). Also would these nations want to retain the Queen as Head of State and accept London as it's capital organizational Capital while 'English' affairs would be represented in a new separate English Parliament. Perhaps keep the Queen and monarchy there but have a new Capital in a newly formed non-State organization like the US has with the District of Columbia.

Realistically I couldn't see this happening short of a very hard UK-EU divorce and a total dissolution of NAFTA. It seems like a dreamy way to try and rebuild empire and be a big fish in the pond again. However if the US continues to slowly disengage from the world and the EU lacks the will to lead then perhaps a CANZUK organization could represent or lead when liberal-democratic ideas are challenged by regional powers.

Arguments for it:
In the Trump era, the plan for a Canadian-U.K.-Australia-New Zealand trade alliance is quickly catching on
http://business.financialpost.com/opinion/in-the-trump-era-the-plan-for-a-canadian-u-k-australia-new-zealand-trade-alliance-is-quickly-catching-on

CANZUK defence alliance: Start small, think big
https://canzuk.org/canzuk_defence_alliance_start_small_think_big.php

All the Queen's Ships
https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2017-01/all-queens-ships

CANZUK: after Brexit, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Britain can unite as a pillar of Western civilisation
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/09/13/canzuk-after-brexit-canada-australia-new-zealand-and-britain-can/

Arguments against it:
Sentiments and statistics: why CANZUK won’t fly
https://medium.com/@dijdowell/sentiments-and-statistics-why-canzuk-wont-fly-7bd0cef28ff

Why CANZUK is a completely bollocks idea
http://peterjnorth.blogspot.com/2017/02/why-canzuk-is-completely-bollocks-idea.html

Furunculus
01-20-2018, 02:14
It is simpler than that:
There is value in cooperation and collaboration, it has been the foundation of every geopolitical alliance the world has ever seen.
But it is always a trade off between your political weight, and the congruence of your aims with the relative weight of those you seek to influence.

How much are you willing to compromise to achieve a given aim? How much is that aim worth, to you?

Every geopolitical alliance reaches a point where 'their' fundamental aims may have a price that you are no longer willing to pay.
The EU being a case in point. Canzuk, from this point of view, is nothing more than an attempt to find common aims at a lower price.
Its great, so long as it doesn't reach beyond the calculation of that same metric.

Pannonian
01-20-2018, 02:35
AFAIK Australia and New Zealand are already regional powers, with Australia looking towards SE Asia and New Zealand at SW Pacific. The UK isn't going to be joining anything there, and they don't need the UK to be a power in these regions. If anything, Australia are more likely to break further away from the existing tenuous political links with the UK. And if Australia need military backup in any confrontation in that region; Singapore is the signal lesson. And the UK is further reducing its military.

Furunculus
01-20-2018, 11:12
AFAIK Australia and New Zealand are already regional powers, with Australia looking towards SE Asia and New Zealand at SW Pacific. The UK isn't going to be joining anything there, and they don't need the UK to be a power in these regions. If anything, Australia are more likely to break further away from the existing tenuous political links with the UK. And if Australia need military backup in any confrontation in that region; Singapore is the signal lesson. And the UK is further reducing its military.

I always like to start from that nebulous construct: the great power.
Which I have always defined as a Middle power ** that is also a Regional power *** [and] without polar opposition within its own region.

So Canada would be a good example of a Middle power, but I would not consider it a Regional power.
India, for example, is a good example of a Regional Power, that is also a Middle Power.
However, that last part of my definition is important, because the resource required to contest and control its polar opposition within its own region, prevents it being considered a Great Power.
I would consider France and Britain to be Great Powers, though both are hanging in there by the skin of their teeth (particularly france!).

Do Australia and NZ (and the other FPDA countries) have an interest in seeking alliance with France and Great Britain?

The answer to that depends on whether they follow the eastern or the western method of geopolitics.
Bandwagoning or Balancing:
The east tends to be characterised by Bandwagoning - where the emergence of a new Regional hegemon results in lesser powers falling into its orbit, and following its geopolitical preferences.
Hence America has an absolute need to support Taiwan and Korea, because if it was seen to falter on either one it would likely lose both, then Japan would follow, and Asia would be entirely within the orbit of China.
The west tends to be characterised by Balancing - where the emergence of a new Regional hegemon results in a coalescence of lesser powers against the hegemon, often bringing in outside support.
The best example here is the european wars of the 19th Century. The triple-entente, the entente-cordiale, the anglo-polish agreement. Roping in America to swing the outcome on both occasions.

So, how do Australia and NZ respond to the rise of China?
I would say they are firmly in the Balancing category:

Cooperation between the United States, Japan, Australia, and India is here to stay:
https://thediplomat.com/2017/11/take-note-asias-quad-is-back/

The durian pact: the Five Power Defence Arrangements:
https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/durian-pact-five-power-defence-arrangements/

The Importance of Australia to the United States:
https://geopoliticalfutures.com/the-importance-of-australia-to-the-united-states/

So, to wheel this back around to the original question mark about Britain's utility to Australia:

Does Australia want the active support of one of the worlds few real Great Powers, that possesses the worlds second most capable expeditionary military function, and has demonstrated time and time again a willingness to employ it for elective warfare?

Unless they are clearly lost possession of their faculties, YES!
Does the same hold true for Japan, and the other FPDA countries? Yes it does.

---------------------------------------------------

http://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199743292/obo-9780199743292-0222.xml

** "middle powers can be distinguished from superpowers and smaller powers because of their foreign policy behaviour – middle powers carve out a niche for themselves by pursuing a narrow range and particular types of foreign policy interest. In this way middle powers are countries that use their relative diplomatic skills in the service of international peace and stability."

*** "A regional power is a state that projects influence in a specific region. If this power capability is unrivaled in its region, the state could rise to the level of a regional hegemon. The regional powers display comparatively high military, economic, political, and ideological capabilities enabling them to shape their regional security agenda."

Pannonian
01-20-2018, 12:18
When was the last time Australia looked to Britain for anything outside intelligence networking? They've locked themselves into the US Pacific front. We and Australia are similar to the smaller Italian city states, each with our own identities, but all looking towards America's Rome. We're not going to develop any relationship outside our mutual links with the US.

Furunculus
01-20-2018, 12:44
history can be a prison, my friend.

the last 250 years have been the atlantic centuries, where european geopolitics touched the world.
We are now a backwater.

The next 250 years will be the pacific centuries, where asian geopolitics will touch us.
Any european nation that see's itself as a do-er (rather than a taker) will be going there.

That list of european do-er's can be summed as; Britain and France.
As long as we maintain useful expeditionary capability, relative to that offered by the rest of the world (and the will to use it), then we will be of interest to those asian nations.

Pannonian
01-20-2018, 13:10
history can be a prison, my friend.

the last 250 years have been the atlantic centuries, where european geopolitics touched the world.
We are now a backwater.

The next 250 years will be the pacific centuries, where asian geopolitics will touch us.
Any european nation that see's itself as a do-er (rather than a taker) will be going there.

That list of european do-er's can be summed as; Britain and France.
As long as we maintain useful expeditionary capability, relative to that offered by the rest of the world (and the will to use it), then will be of interest to those asian nations.

We're continuing to downsize our military. Our economy is also going down, even relative to where we were a couple of years ago. How are we going to be a doer? If you really want us to be a doer, you should have been looking to maintain our economy at as high a level as possible.

Furunculus
01-20-2018, 13:30
We're continuing to downsize our military. Our economy is also going down, even relative to where we were a couple of years ago. How are we going to be a doer? If you really want us to be a doer, you should have been looking to maintain our economy at as high a level as possible.

Lack of knowledge can equally be a prison, my friend:

http://henryjacksonsociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/An-audit-of-geopolitical-capabilities-part-1.pdf

spmetla
01-20-2018, 20:22
We're continuing to downsize our military. Our economy is also going down, even relative to where we were a couple of years ago. How are we going to be a doer? If you really want us to be a doer, you should have been looking to maintain our economy at as high a level as possible.

The UK may not be what it was decades ago but it is still a leader in science-technology, a voice for more moderate foreign policy without the timidness of Germany. It's still a cultural leader (my PBS Masterpiece theater seems to be nothing but British programming), with the decades going by the Victorian era is seen more and more as a nostalgic period with the problems and racism being largely ignored. Hong Kong as no shortage of people that miss being a commonwealth member now that they've seen that the PRC doesn't intend to stick by one nation two systems forever.

For Australia, the UK would bring a fair number of things to the table. For one it's military, it has trouble getting enough people to join up despite it paying extremely well and having nearby regional threats (Indonesia was not a friendly neighbor not too long ago).
http://www.visabureau.com/australia/news/15-01-2007/australia-armed-forces-recruiting-overseas.aspx
Australia's skill shortages are not just confined to civilian life with the Australian defence forces looking overseas to help fill thousands of vacancies.
By themselves Canada, Australia, and New Zealand have massive coastlines, exclusive economic zones, and fisheriers but nearly no ships to assist. It's been decades since Canada or Australia could afford aircraft carriers (HMCS Bonaventure and HMAS Melbourne). The UK will soon have two operational again. A military union of some sort would certainly justify maintaining those navies and make it a more credible partner for securing allies in Pacific and Indian oceans. The internet revolution has made distance far less of an obstacle than it was before, especially as it's spawned its own industries in technology that the UK is still a leader in.
If the current IT, AI, and robotic revolutions keep making massive cheap labor more obsolete for manufacturing it does create the potential for Canada, Australia, and the UK to be resurgent manufacturing nations but global instead of regional markets to supply. A CANZUK would be the largest nation on Earth and have access to massive resources, something the UK and even EU nations don't have access to.

Australia may be a regional power of sorts economically but that's largely as a raw goods and agricultural exporter. It's not a global financial center, it's not the cutting edge of research, or manufacture. A CANZUK style led Trans-Pacific Partnership would bring in a big player economically if the UK were part of such an effort instead of the current situation where South Korea, Japan, Canada, and Australia all look to somebody to lead but individually are too weak or vulnerable to really stand against Chinese economic bullying of TPP members.
http://fortune.com/2017/12/06/us-china-asia-tpp-trade/
The U.S. Abandoned the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Now What?
In 2015, Donald Trump was unequivocal in describing his thoughts on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP.

“The Trans-Pacific Partnership is an attack on America’s business,” he tweeted at the time. “This is a bad deal.”

Trump went on to repeat the sentiment many times on the campaign trail. Soon after he landed in the White House, he issued a memo calling for the United States to permanently withdraw from the landmark trade agreement, signed by his predecessor less than a year before Trump took office, and which carries a number of mechanisms intended to make trade between its 12 signatories easier and more economically beneficial. (Trump argues that it destroys American jobs.)

The remaining countries have since agreed to revive the partnership without the U.S.

So where does that leave global trade? Are multilateral agreements dead?

“I don’t think so,” said former U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker at the 2017 Fortune Global Forum in Guangzhou, China. “I think there’s a yearning for multilateralism.”

The TPP helped “knit together 40% of world’s GDP,” she added. It helped shape trade in Asia, a place where much of the economic action in the 21st century is expected to take place. President Trump may prefer bilateral agreements because they give the U.S. more power in that negotiation, Pritzker said, but America’s move away from multilateralism “leaves a void that allows for the lowering of standards in the region.”

Andrew Robb, the former Australian minister for trade and investment, agreed.

“The most destabilizing influence in the region is the fact that the United States pulled out of TPP,” he told Fortune’s Nina Easton before a room of executives. “The United States said for years that this is a demonstration of its commitment to the region…the small countries in Asia feel that no one has got their back. They like the balance of two big powerful groups.”

The U.S. under Trump has an obsession with containing China, Robb added with a tinge of frustration. It’s the wrong approach.

“The world is going to change…and the U.S. better get used to it,” he said. “We need to find ways to share power in the years ahead and do so in a peaceful, stable matter.”

Zhang Xiaoqiang, CEO of the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, extolled regional cooperation on top of bilateral agreements. Speaking through a translator, he said that China and the U.S. should continue to work together on global trade—particularly as China becomes the world’s biggest trade partner. In the meantime, China won’t hesitate to forge regional agreements in Asia.

Pritzker put it in geopolitical terms. “The United States and China need each other,” she said. “We have a lot of issues we’re dealing with, like North Korea, where we have common interest.” So it’s important to engage on trade and economic issues—and the U.S. needs market access in Asia.

Robb and Pritzker agreed that many levels of American government are engaging in multilateral activity even as the federal level shuns it. TPP is “the most ambitious trade agreement that’s ever been put on the table in the world,” Robb said. With so many smaller Asian countries involved, “it just shows you how the rest of Asia is liberalizing trade” at a time when the U.S. is moving to isolationist policy. And small countries aren’t big enough to negotiate fairly with big ones like China or India.

“The U.S. left the stage in Asia, in a geopolitical sense,” Robb said. “at the moment, [small countries in Asia] feel that America’s turned away.”

In the meantime, look out for China’s One Belt One Road Initiative. A development strategy proposed by Chinese president Xi Jinping that focuses on connectivity and cooperation between Eurasian countries, it underscores China’s desire to be the center of gravity for global affairs through infrastructure that stretches from Asia to the Middle East to Africa.

“One Belt One Road will be a big mechanism for global trade,” Zhang said. It’s meant to enhance communication, trade, finance and help developing countries that need the support and resources of larger ones. “This is a free trade concept that we’re promoting,” he said. “And we’re connecting people—exchanging education, technology, science.”

“It’s the Marshall Plan all over again, but bigger, because it respects the sovereignty of countries,” Pritzker said.

Said Zhang: “This is the direction we’re heading. This is a global world.”

Any of the CANZUK nations independently are weak but there is a potential for strength. If combined into a single market with few restrictions between the member nations it'd be the 3rd largest economy only after the US and China. That combined with being a Pacific and Atlantic power would give it a bit more of a broad focus than the UK, Canada, or Australia independently. Canada certainly will not stand up to Russia and secure it's rights to resources in the Arctic circle but CANZUK might.

I personally feel that if the UK leaves the EU and doesn't strength it's ties economically with it's commonwealth partners in some way (not necessarily a union such as CANZUK) that it will slowly decline into a massive Singapore of Europe. The UK however always has had a global outlook which is why it'd be a good leader of sorts in such a Union but it wouldn't necessarily be a superior to the other nations either. Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and the UK all actually complement each others weaknesses in some aspect. The UK has the will to be a doer, a union or union-lite of some sort could be the means.
As said in my OP I don't envision a CANZUK as likely at all but I for one as an anglophile would be sad to see the UK depart from international politics and importance, especially if that leaves an increasingly isolationist US that only cares for itself, a timid and unsure EU, and revisionist China and Russia to secure the world for free trade and liberal ideals.

No one in Australia or Canada would probably want to answer to London but if they were equal partners in a union of some sort they wouldn't need to look to London for leadership but be partnered as equals. Due to the cultural, historical, and legal similarities the partners would certainly have more in common that the EU nations which really only share geography and a history of fighting each other.

Montmorency
01-20-2018, 21:13
Lack of knowledge can equally be a prison, my friend:

http://henryjacksonsociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/An-audit-of-geopolitical-capabilities-part-1.pdf

Seems solid, but it doesn't address the question of decline. This is an attempted ranking of global powers today according to their ability to actively maintain narrowly-defined strategic status quo.

All as opposed to a framework of mere capacity for territorial defense, the paper lays out - however, it doesn't characterize dynamic adaptation around constraints into actual exercise of power, such as power toward denial of competitors'/adversaries' strategic aims and priorities; a limitation when this is perhaps where China and Russia are presently most potent with respect to the US and the rest.



Canada certainly will not stand up to Russia and secure it's rights to resources in the Arctic circle but CANZUK might.

https://www.opencanada.org/features/canadian-arctic-security-russias-not-coming/

Russia wouldn't have much to squabble over with Canada. Alongside other elements of the mooted Anglo partnership, it seems like the US interest from the panoramic view exceeds any one country's parochial interest.

What interest or capacity does the UK have in projecting power in the Pacific independent of the US, is the big question.

You know what would really be the most powerful military and economy on Earth, bar none? A union of North America and the EU (including UK). I don't see why it's much less reasonable in the long term than CANZUK, since feelings of "cultural similarity"* eo ipso don't, I believe, motivate concrete foreign policy once the government no longer cares about the old-fashioned imperial posturing (the like which you see foremost in China and Russia).

*We can note with humor to the contrary, that some white nationalists include a "white bloc" among their fantasies

Furunculus
01-20-2018, 21:53
Seems solid, but it doesn't address the question of decline. This is an attempted ranking of global powers today according to their ability to actively maintain narrowly-defined strategic status quo.

All as opposed to a framework of mere capacity for territorial defense, the paper lays out - however, it doesn't characterize dynamic adaptation around constraints into actual exercise of power, such as power toward denial of competitors'/adversaries' strategic aims and priorities; a limitation when this is perhaps where China and Russia are presently most potent with respect to the US and the rest.

Our decline is principally caused by defence inflation - which outstrips oridnary inflation by some measure - and all hi-tech militaries are subject to the same pressure. Problems are usually relative, this one certainly is.

I don't think there is any expectation of the UK/CANZUK taking on china in area denial overmatch. that role would always fall to the US.


What interest or capacity does the UK have in projecting power in the Pacific independent of the US, is the big question.

You know what would really be the most powerful military and economy on Earth, bar none? A union of North America and the EU (including UK). I don't see why it's much less reasonable in the long term than CANZUK, since feelings of "cultural similarity"* eo ipso don't, I believe, motivate concrete foreign policy once the government no longer cares about the old-fashioned imperial posturing (the like which you see foremost in China and Russia).


The Defence Concepts and Doctrine Centre has got you covered:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/49954/20121129_dcdc_gst_regions_sasia.pdf
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/348164/20140821_DCDC_GST_5_Web_Secured.pdf

I disagree about the similarity in the degree of congruence between CANZUK and NA-EU.
France still sees NATO as a vehicle of US dominance.
And Germany has a crippling lack of trust in America and Americans:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/germany-russia-america-poll-trustworthy-trump-putin-white-house-muslim-ban-eu-a7562276.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany%E2%80%93United_States_relations#Anti-Americanism

Pannonian
01-20-2018, 22:35
Our decline is principally caused by defence inflation - which outstrips oridnary inflation by some measure - and all hi-tech militaries are subject to the same pressure. Problems are usually relative, this one certainly is.


Hammond proposed last year to cut the British Army by 30k. Any updates on that? The last I can find is the chancellor maintaining this line in December 2017.

spmetla
01-20-2018, 22:40
A union of North America and the EU (including UK). I don't see why it's much less reasonable in the long term than CANZUK, since feelings of "cultural similarity"* eo ipso don't, I believe, motivate concrete foreign policy once the government no longer cares about the old-fashioned imperial posturing (the like which you see foremost in China and Russia).
The US doesn't trust the EU outside of NATO and the EU doesn't trust the US. NATO is the extent that the US will join any other alliance and unfortunately we have enough 'nativist' Americans that somehow don't see the value in NATO. Any bloc or union that the US would join, the US would fully expect to dominate. Short of the US annexing the the CANZUK nations and incorporating the provinces as States it would be unpalatable to most Americans.


*We can note with humor to the contrary, that some white nationalists include a "white bloc" among their fantasies
That's be a pretty stupid bloc. The Maori, Aborigines, and Native Americans would certainly be opposed. Not to mention it'ed be abhorrent and completely opposite to the values of most of those CANZUK citizens. If there were to be a CANZUK I could imagine a few other countries joining. Singapore perhaps? All other potential candidates have too much crime, corruption, and too low a GDP.

Furunculus
01-20-2018, 23:52
Hammond proposed last year to cut the British Army by 30k. Any updates on that? The last I can find is the chancellor maintaining this line in December 2017.

what are you leading at?

Pannonian
01-21-2018, 00:45
what are you leading at?

The British military isn't just weakening in relative terms. It is also significantly weakening in absolute terms. If the British economy contracts substantially post-Brexit as economics experts predict, then what kind of military do you think we can afford?

Montmorency
01-21-2018, 08:51
Our decline is principally caused by defence inflation - which outstrips oridnary inflation by some measure - and all hi-tech militaries are subject to the same pressure. Problems are usually relative, this one certainly is.

I don't think there is any expectation of the UK/CANZUK taking on china in area denial overmatch. that role would always fall to the US.



The Defence Concepts and Doctrine Centre has got you covered:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/49954/20121129_dcdc_gst_regions_sasia.pdf
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/348164/20140821_DCDC_GST_5_Web_Secured.pdf


But this is a broad overview of regional characteristics and trends, not an argument for specific British interests and what strategy and resources could or should be deployed in their maintenance (from which we could then extrapolate in assessing the viability of CANZUK). Other than a few pages in the 2040 South Asia paper:

The US Military Industrial Complex (MIC), and by association the UK MIC, will be much smaller compared to the Chinese MIC capability by 2040

Global GDP levels are likely to ‘equilibrate’. The increasing economic growth and prosperity of South Asia could lead to the stalling and subsequent decline of many western economies as global GDP per capita levels approach the same level. This may lead to long periods of recession and rising disaffection within the UK population. This could subsequently lead to increased incidents of internal unrest, a rise of nationalistic groups and a demand for protectionist economic and defence policies. The western way of life with cheap access to a wide variety of consumer choice and cheap energy will be increasingly challenged as lifestyles follow GDP levels and balance across the globe[...] The economic and industrial rise of China and India will increase the cost and reduce the availability of UK energy supplies.

‘Multipolarity’ is likely to drive the formation of a new diplomatic context. The growth of the Chinese and Indian economies in South Asia coupled with the ‘relative’ decline of the West is likely to lead to a new power framework where alliances are constantly reassessed and negotiated based upon ‘transactional principles’.33 In such cases, the UK cannot assume dominance and is likely to remain one option among many. It is however, likely to offer considerable insight and experience in foreign policy and influence, so is likely to remain an attractive potential ally.

Countries like the US, the UK and Russia, could have influence in strengthening the resilience of such systems [i.e. conflict management between India and China] to help prevent potential incidences of conflict.

International organisations may decline in significance. The founding of new international organisations which reflect a new ‘multipolar’ world would radically impact on the UK’s position in the world. The Five Powers Defence Agreement (FPDA) therefore is likely to be of increasing importance for the UK as the century progresses.

International law and conventions may become less relevant. On common issues, China and India may circumvent UN rules. Such a development would have a significant impact on the current diplomatic context and how many countries administer overseas territorities.

Turbulence, especially terrorist activity, in South Asia will continue to adversely affect the UK

Sudden sea level rise would impact on international migration and the use of Diego Garcia as a permanent operating base.

The demand for humanitarian support to climate change related crises in South Asia are likely to increase[...] The UK will be required to support humanitarian crises across South Asia.]

The UK will be part of a world that expects China to engage on collective issues such as global financial crises and climate change. The UK will be pursuing its interests in an international context that is no longer shaped to the same degree by the interests of the West.

The UK’s physical geography and close associations with the US and Europe enable significant economic, military and political ties with the established western powers. Its shared history with India and emerging trade linkages with both China and India could strengthen its position as a global financial hub

The UK as a ‘junior partner’. As the political and economic ties between India, China and the US strengthen, there is a risk that UK influence will decline due to its relatively small size. This is especially so with defence, where a lack of engagement with rising South Asian powers, especially India, and declining investment in UK military technologies could reduce the UK’s influence in the region. UK influence in South Asia is likely to decline. While the UK’s military influence in the region is likely to reduce, conflict or instability would impact on the UK’s prosperity and security, and would therefore require some response. A routine lack of presence in the South Asia region by UK defence assets is likely to increasingly reduce Her Majesty’s Government’s influence in the region. How much influence the UK can have is debatable. But, continued military engagement in the region, for example through the Five Powers Defence Agreement, may be a possible means through which the UK can retain influence. The establishment and maintenance of strong regional bilateral relationships is likely to offer the UK long-term benefits that would far outweigh the likely cost.

What does all that tell us about the possibility of the UK undertaking an active naval expeditionary strategy in the Pacific in association with Commonwealth members, in a larger framework of economic synchronization - and a new alliance or multilateral organization as the vehicle? If not that, then aren't we just discussing a continuation or intensification of pre-existing British engagement, i.e. more of the same?




I disagree about the similarity in the degree of congruence between CANZUK and NA-EU.
France still sees NATO as a vehicle of US dominance.
And Germany has a crippling lack of trust in America and Americans:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/germany-russia-america-poll-trustworthy-trump-putin-white-house-muslim-ban-eu-a7562276.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany%E2%80%93United_States_relations#Anti-Americanism

We've all seen how the Reagan/Thatcher shift has pulled left-wing and social democrat parties across Europe toward a market consensus of "grow and give (less and less over time)". As you highlight, Europeans are mistrustful of the US, and with generations of tension between American and local priorities it's an understandable mistrust. However, a concrete mistrust can be replaced over time just as it was inculcated over time.

http://peoplespolicyproject.org/2017/11/16/a-plan-to-win-the-socialism-sweden-nearly-achieved/

A string of hard-left governments in the United States are potentially what could reverse that tide and reinvigorate the European left. Then, if both the United States and the EU are controlled by left-wing governments, along with partners throughout the rest of the world, that permits a global inflection point and a (final by the West) redrafting of the international order in the face of profound upheaval and resistance. At that point a trans-Atlantic union of some sort isn't so far-fetched.

I put forward that scenario not because it's likely or foreseeable but because I also believe it's the only path for left-wing reforms to succeed. Yes yes, how typical of me to feel that America is the world's only hope, but if it isn't Russia, China, or India (too autocratic and insecure), and Europe will follow America's lead but not vice-versa - then who?

Furunculus
01-21-2018, 08:52
The British military isn't just weakening in relative terms. It is also significantly weakening in absolute terms. If the British economy contracts substantially post-Brexit as economics experts predict, then what kind of military do you think we can afford?

there is no reason in the world that long term growth for britain wouldn't continue to troll along at 1.5% to 2.5%, much as any other major european economy.

Seamus Fermanagh
01-21-2018, 16:06
If an Anglophonic Union was created, would the USA qualify? Despite 'windshield' and 'trunk,' etc.?

Pannonian
01-21-2018, 17:08
there is no reason in the world that long term growth for britain wouldn't continue to troll along at 1.5% to 2.5%, much as any other major european economy.

Apart from listening to experts like the BofE?

Furunculus
01-21-2018, 17:29
They say that, do they?

Pannonian
01-21-2018, 19:17
They say that, do they?

As of November 2017, they were saying that Brexit has adversely affected Britain's economy. Has there been a boom since, compared with pre-Brexit?

HopAlongBunny
01-21-2018, 21:09
The idea is not new.
It boils down to the "Commonwealth" without those annoying African countries.
As such, it comes up everytime someone extols the virtues of rallying around the flag of Empire and marching back to the future.
In the age of ever bigger trade-blocs it might even make sense:

Canada with one foot in NAFTA
Until recently the U.K. with one foot in EU
Aus/NZ with a firm footing in the TPP

A bloc safely anchored in each major trade agreement; looks nice.
Perhaps now is the time to pull the trigger on it. No longer is it a replacement to US dominance, but a way to maneuver with a bit more leverage within a system of regional blocs.

Furunculus
01-21-2018, 23:27
As of November 2017, they were saying that Brexit has adversely affected Britain's economy. Has there been a boom since, compared with pre-Brexit?

Two questions in relation to:

"there is no reason in the world that long term growth for britain wouldn't continue to troll along at 1.5% to 2.5%, much as any other major european economy."

1. Which part of that statement is any way demonstrably untrue?
2. Which part of any of your two replies in response to that statement has any real linkage, as in; referring to long term growth vis-a-vis other major european economies?

Furunculus
01-21-2018, 23:42
But this is a broad overview of regional characteristics and trends, not an argument for specific British interests and what strategy and resources could or should be deployed in their maintenance (from which we could then extrapolate in assessing the viability of CANZUK).

A string of hard-left governments in the United States are potentially what could reverse that tide and reinvigorate the European left. ....
I put forward that scenario not because it's likely or foreseeable but because I also believe it's the only path for left-wing reforms to succeed. Yes yes, how typical of me to feel that America is the world's only hope, but if it isn't Russia, China, or India (too autocratic and insecure), and Europe will follow America's lead but not vice-versa - then who?
It doesn't.
But it seemed a perfectly adequate answer to the question you posed:
"What interest or capacity does the UK have in projecting power in the Pacific independent of the US, is the big question."

It's an interesting hypothesis, but it does not adequately demonstrate that there is anything remotely similar in the congruence of interests, aims and expectations between NA and Europe vis-a-vis the same calculation made for CANZUK countries.

rory_20_uk
01-22-2018, 10:39
There would be nothing wrong with such a tie-up. All the countries have quite a few areas they agree on, and all are frankly rather weak individually. Together they would be less weak as a military power but between them speak with a bigger voice and a UN veto. They potentially would be able to persuade others to areas where they have a joint position rather than working individually.

Whether that then has agreements to try to standardise equipment (as Canada / UK do in NATO), to reduce tariffs in a trade deal it would be a good platform.

Whenever the UK tries to do anything except for doing what the US or the EU says they're trying to "rebuild the Empire". When in some respects that is the Commonwealth - except that as opposed to Governors appointed by the UK to extract wealth from the countries they've often their local thug who extracts wealth for himself (invariably himself) and his cronies. If some of the other members would like to join and are not some sort of Dictator or ridiculously corrupt then I'm sure they could. As yet, none fit these two really simple criteria.

~:smoking:

Montmorency
01-22-2018, 14:39
It doesn't.
But it seemed a perfectly adequate answer to the question you posed:
"What interest or capacity does the UK have in projecting power in the Pacific independent of the US, is the big question."

It's an interesting hypothesis, but it does not adequately demonstrate that there is anything remotely similar in the congruence of interests, aims and expectations between NA and Europe vis-a-vis the same calculation made for CANZUK countries.

As an answer to that question, it's definitely glib and superficial.

The thing is, nearly any type or configuration of political unionism has at least some benefits - yet we haven't got one government for the species, which in theory maximizes all benefits of government. The substance of the analogy was, one might really like to see it happen, but is there any geopolitical impetus to make it so, against opposite or orthogonal force (beyond science fiction)? If you're pedantic you might try to demonstrate in detail why CANZUK is relatively more plausible than the other thing, but a realistic comparison wasn't my ambit.

Strike For The South
01-22-2018, 17:01
This continued effort to remake the western world fascinates me.

The west rests upon an American fulcrum. Everything else is window dressing and vote pandering.

Husar
01-22-2018, 17:17
The west rests upon an American fulcrum.

That seems very apt because Fulcrum is the NATO name for the Russian MiG-29. :creep:

Strike For The South
01-22-2018, 17:36
That seems very apt because Fulcrum is the NATO name for the Russian MiG-29. :creep:

:).

rory_20_uk
01-22-2018, 17:43
This continued effort to remake the western world fascinates me.

The west rests upon an American fulcrum. Everything else is window dressing and vote pandering.

A year ago most would agree. Now, most are worried that this might not be the case if the USA decides they... don't want to be involved. No other country has their reach everywhere, but are increasingly viewing that they need to have some proper local capability rather than rely on Mother's skirts for everything.

~:smoking:

Strike For The South
01-22-2018, 17:44
A year ago most would agree. Now, most are worried that this might not be the case if the USA decides they... don't want to be involved. No other country has their reach everywhere, but are increasingly viewing that they need to have some proper local capability rather than rely on Mother's skirts for everything.

~:smoking:

Trumps isolationism and bluster is just that. Mattis, McMasters, and Kelly all have a vested interest in our foreign "interests"

rory_20_uk
01-22-2018, 18:04
Trust is a delicate thing. For 50 years the West has had absolute faith in the USA. Now... it has gone: we don't trust the POTUS and would he declare War and enable assets to help the UK if he wasn't invited to Harry's wedding? If he was in a Twitter War with France would he then not help in a real war? A year ago people would have said these are two completely different things but now who knows for sure? Might it be used as a negation tool or require others to publicly beg for assistance?

Up until now whatever else I've personally never thought that the USA might not be there. But of course prior to 1941 they were not. And in fact there are many times they have not assisted. So perhaps this has been a wake up that the West has become too complacent.

~:smoking:

rory_20_uk
01-22-2018, 18:05
Duplicate

Seamus Fermanagh
01-22-2018, 18:41
As of November 2017, they were saying that Brexit has adversely affected Britain's economy. Has there been a boom since, compared with pre-Brexit?

There was never going to be a boom in the first five years. A fully successful Brexit more or less mandated a period of stagnant growth or modest retraction as new trade arrangements and relationships simply do not develop overnight. It is too early to say whether Brexit will be an economic plus to Britain in the long run. Those who suggested it would not even cost anything in the short term were lying (to themselves if no one else). You simply don't wave a magic wand and change everything without cost or at least a few significant transition difficulties.

Pannonian
01-22-2018, 19:27
There was never going to be a boom in the first five years. A fully successful Brexit more or less mandated a period of stagnant growth or modest retraction as new trade arrangements and relationships simply do not develop overnight. It is too early to say whether Brexit will be an economic plus to Britain in the long run. Those who suggested it would not even cost anything in the short term were lying (to themselves if no one else). You simply don't wave a magic wand and change everything without cost or at least a few significant transition difficulties.

A significant factor in the Leave campaign was the promise of 350m/wk to be paid directly into the NHS rather into EU coffers. Does bare-faced lying mandate a radical shift with lasting damaging effects to the economy? Montmorency talked about the plausibility of the proposed Unions. The European Union is plausible, for it exists and has worked for decades. What is the evidence-based argument for the CANZUK Union working? What is the plausibility of this argument compared with the plausibility of the European Union?

Pannonian
01-22-2018, 19:31
Trust is a delicate thing. For 50 years the West has had absolute faith in the USA. Now... it has gone: we don't trust the POTUS and would he declare War and enable assets to help the UK if he wasn't invited to Harry's wedding? If he was in a Twitter War with France would he then not help in a real war? A year ago people would have said these are two completely different things but now who knows for sure? Might it be used as a negation tool or require others to publicly beg for assistance?

Up until now whatever else I've personally never thought that the USA might not be there. But of course prior to 1941 they were not. And in fact there are many times they have not assisted. So perhaps this has been a wake up that the West has become too complacent.

~:smoking:

All my life, and going back some generations as well, I've assumed that Russian foreign policy won't be looking out for British interests. Yet nowadays, sections of the British and European right are in cahoots with Russia on interference with their domestic affairs. And with both far left and far right favouring Russian involvement in their affairs, the centre is regarded with distaste as a vehicle for compromise (spit). British politics has never been so hopeless in my life time.

Furunculus
01-22-2018, 19:39
A significant factor in the Leave campaign was the promise of 350m/wk to be paid directly into the NHS rather into EU coffers. Does bare-faced lying mandate a radical shift with lasting damaging effects to the economy? Montmorency talked about the plausibility of the proposed Unions. The European Union is plausible, for it exists and has worked for decades. What is the evidence-based argument for the CANZUK Union working? What is the plausibility of this argument compared with the plausibility of the European Union?
Rather depends what a CANZUK 'union' involves.
I have never heard it considered as anything but a trade, diplomacy and defence union.
No ever closer union, no harmonisation of social and employment policy, no political union. Nothing beyond treaty based intergovernmentalism. No sign of supranationalism in sight.

Furunculus
01-22-2018, 19:41
All my life, and going back some generations as well, I've assumed that Russian foreign policy won't be looking out for British interests. Yet nowadays, sections of the British and European right are in cahoots with Russia on interference with their domestic affairs. And with both far left and far right favouring Russian involvement in their affairs, the centre is regarded with distaste as a vehicle for compromise (spit). British politics has never been so hopeless in my life time.

Which parts of the British right? I'm looking for a significant and substantial element of the right wing establishment, over some sustained period. Similar perhaps in scale and duration to the lefts infatuation with the soviet Union...

Seamus Fermanagh
01-22-2018, 23:18
A significant factor in the Leave campaign was the promise of 350m/wk to be paid directly into the NHS rather into EU coffers. Does bare-faced lying mandate a radical shift with lasting damaging effects to the economy? ...

More often then it should, at least in a democracy. My peerless leader is still having some difficulty in getting Mexico to pay for a wall on the Southern border of the USA.

Pannonian
01-22-2018, 23:30
More often then it should, at least in a democracy. My peerless leader is still having some difficulty in getting Mexico to pay for a wall on the Southern border of the USA.

Isn't that incompetence rather than lying? The 350m/wk claim was disowned the morning after the referendum.

spmetla
01-23-2018, 01:02
British politics has never been so hopeless in my life time.
It sorta reminds me of what I've read of late 60s/70s British politics. After the withdrawal from East of the Suez in 1971 there was no longer a national vision of any sort, no purpose or mission for the British which seems to be one of the reasons for joining the ECC in 1973. With the Brexit happening there's no longer the chance to be the other major economy and power within the EU to guide policy and give purpose there being a UK. Just being a minor power nation/island near the EU isn't an inspiring future and doesn't give politicians something to work toward.

The rise of Russia and China in your politics is almost just taken as normal for you being a declining power and it only being 'right' (in the view of average politicians) of the big Russian and Chinese to get theirs by trying to influence you. The Russians know very well how to stoke nationalist feelings in European countries and are doing a good job of creating or exploiting divides.
The Russians know that the UK is the only real political force that's ever cared to counter their influence in Europe since WW2. The French were always somewhat complicit with the Russians and the Germans have zero self confidence or assertiveness in restricting Russian meddling. The Russians would love to break up NATO and the EU. Brexit was part of that strategy which is why they've funded Farage quite well. They're apparently already trying to get Scotland to try for another indepdence vote in order to break up the UK and relegate British influence to zero in the world as the rump English state would not have the will or capacity to do that if Scotland leaves.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/11/01/russian-cyber-operatives-setting-shop-scotland-promote-independence/

"And my understanding is they've set up shop in Scotland which is talking about an independence vote from Great Britain. This is a sophisticated worldwide strategy. It hasn't stopped and it won't stop."

The Chinese on the other hand are very liberal with their money. They love to invest in major projects which shares costs and creates jobs in the UK and then if the UK government wants to protest over something unrelated the Chinese can threaten to pullout their investments in a sort of political hostage situation.

Now China threatens to pull £100bn investment in the UK if Theresa May cancels Hinkley Point nuclear project

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3719531/Now-China-threatens-pull-100bn-investment-UK-Theresa-cancels-Hinkley-Point-nuclear-project.html#ixzz54xbX9Nis

China has suggested it could pull its £100billion investment in the UK if Theresa May decides to cancel the Hinkley Point nuclear project.

As the fall-out continues from Downing Street's surprise decision last week to put plans for the £18bn deal under review until the autumn, the Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua wrote a strongly-worded article yesterday setting out its threats to the British economy.

It said the 'new British Government' is jeopardising the 'hard-won mutual trust with China' and said the 'golden era' of co-operation with Britain could be over.

The deal to build Britain's first nuclear plant for decades would be a third owned by the state-backed China General Nuclear Power Corp - the main obstacle as Downing Street is concerned about heavy Chinese involvement in the UK's national infrastructure.

It added that China 'cannot tolerate any unwanted accusation against its sincere and benign willingness for win-win co-operation'.

In further revelations over the troubled deal for Hinkley Point C, it emerged this morning that the head of the French energy giant EDF gave his fellow board members just two days to read 2,500 pages of contracts before they were asked to vote on whether to give the project the green light.



They see themselves in the ascendant and the UK as declining and expect to fully take advantage of it. Especially to right past wrongs incurred during the century of humiliation.


Rather depends what a CANZUK 'union' involves.
I have never heard it considered as anything but a trade, diplomacy and defence union.
No ever closer union, no harmonisation of social and employment policy, no political union. Nothing beyond treaty based intergovernmentalism. No sign of supranationalism in sight.
It would probably not work well as a supra-national organization anyhow, at least in the near-term due to it just being much more efficient to handle local problems with local governments. Too centralized or ambitious a 'union' and it would result in the same gripes as with the EU about paying them taxes to pay for unused airports in Spain.
A union in trade, defense, and concerted diplomacy would be doable though. Making it a goal of sort of an EU-lite or ECC-plus would probably be the best target.

Gilrandir
01-23-2018, 14:30
Yet nowadays, sections of the British and European right are in cahoots with Russia on interference with their domestic affairs. And with both far left and far right favouring Russian involvement in their affairs, the centre is regarded with distaste as a vehicle for compromise (spit).

Are you sure that these preferences on the part of the far rights and lefts are genuine and not paid for?

Pannonian
01-23-2018, 16:05
Are you sure that these preferences on the part of the far rights and lefts are genuine and not paid for?

I don't think they can tell the difference. See the far right and far left combining to take the UK out of the EU despite obviously weakening the UK and despite Russian agents being shown to have had a hand in it, whilst parading the Great British Patriotic Future. Even if Farage and co are shown to be directed by Russia, they will still rationalise it as the way to ensure Britain's future.

rory_20_uk
01-23-2018, 16:18
I don't think they can tell the difference. See the far right and far left combining to take the UK out of the EU despite obviously weakening the UK and despite Russian agents being shown to have had a hand in it, whilst parading the Great British Patriotic Future. Even if Farage and co are shown to be directed by Russia, they will still rationalise it as the way to ensure Britain's future.

"Obviously" weakening the UK? In that the EU is making punitive demands, then yes, the UK will be weaker at the very least for a time. But then I never realised that the EU is a buttress against Russia. If so it is doing a pretty crap job - NATO on the other hand (thanks 80% to the USA) is providing more of a deterrent.

The EU is so amazingly weak that there is not a single conflict anywhere on the periphery of the EU that the EU has managed to do anything about. Oh, aside from hand-wringing.

Britain and France are managing to cooperate in Africa with... the two countries talking without any part of the EU apparatus involved. Is that sort of thing even legal any more? Should't we go to the MEPs to debate, to hold some meetings and get EUCOM started? Add a few layers of oversight, months/years delay and with any luck the problem will have ended before we even get started.

~:smoking:

Greyblades
01-24-2018, 17:40
I have learned to never underestimate the modern briton's eagerness to sell his nation short.

HopAlongBunny
01-30-2018, 01:20
CANZUK highlights some of the discussions involving NAFTA.
It's not that Canada and Mexico don't want a deal with the U.S., its just that they have options.
While a renewed NAFTA would be ideal, there is no reason to accept a bad deal. The "burden of adjustment" would be felt by all, but nobody views it as fatal.

http://foreignpolicy.com/2018/01/29/nafta-talks-stalled-as-world-moves-on-without-u-s-lighthizer-freeland/

Trump would like a "win". It's questionable he has the deal making chops to get it on his terms.

rory_20_uk
01-30-2018, 10:17
Whatever the deal, he'll call it a "win". Few are qualified to unpick what the deal is and between lies and cries of "Fake News!!!" his base will believe it is a win.

He also now says he'd join the Paris agreement and TPP both if they are "fair" to the USA. Again, he could just say that some minor / non existent changes made it "fair" and it was all down to his negotiating skills.

~:smoking:

Strike For The South
01-30-2018, 19:12
NAFTA is going no where. Too much money in it for the big North American corps.

HopAlongBunny
03-01-2018, 10:47
NAFTA is going no where. Too much money in it for the big North American corps.

A view borne out by the data.
Trade surplus/deficit? Depends what you count:

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2018/feb/27/donald-trumps-dubious-attack-us-canada-trade/

It's so much political popcorn to feed his base

spmetla
03-01-2018, 19:46
Well when you spend 20 plus years telling people they were laid off due to NAFTA and not because of increased use of IT, robots and "Made in China" they tend to believe it. Same with TPP, the people that want us to be strong against China are the people that seem to think TPP hurts the US.
As for the Mexico part of NAFTA, if we are going to outsource jobs/labor it's in our interest that it's at the least to our neighbors. If their economies are good then ours will benefit too.

As for CANZUK specific:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/brexit-latest-updates-eu-customs-union-uk-leave-trade-policy-australia-high-commissioner-alexander-a8206126.html
Australia tells UK to open tariff-free trade to world after Brexit: ‘It’s worked for us for 26 years’

Australia’s high commissioner to the UK has spoken out about the benefits of Britain leaving the customs union after its exit from the EU next year – saying that by negotiating unilateral trade agreements instead, the country would be able to retain control of its trade policy.

Speaking to BBC radio, Alexander Downer said that Australia had experienced the “huge advantages of unilateral trade liberalisation” itself.

“The fact is that it does lead to some economic restructuring – some redirection of investment. But it also contributes to economic reform, and you need a constant rate of economic reform to achieve high rates of economic growth,” he said.

“It’s worked for us with 26 consecutive years of economic growth, partially because we’ve opened our market to the world,” he added.Continued membership of the customs union has represented a major subject of debate for politicians both in the UK and in Brussels. Staying in would be the only way Britain can guarantee continued tariff-free trade with the bloc, but both the Conservatives and Labour have ruled that option out.

Leaving it, by contrast, would guarantee the ability to agree new free trade agreements with other nations.

Mr Downer on Monday said that although each country’s circumstances are different, Australia would not want the UK and the EU to “introduce a whole load of tariff barriers between them”. This, he said, would not just be damaging to the European and British economies “but also damaging to the global economy”.
Instead, he said that Australia wants to “build back” its trade with the UK.

“We could build substantially more trade if we were able to negotiate a free trade agreement. If you remain in the customs union... you would have no control over an independent trade policy, in fact you’d have no control over trade policy at all,” he said.

He insisted that he did not want to express a view on which scenario was preferable – the UK staying in the customs union or leaving it – but he did emphasise that countries “like Australia, China, Japan, the US, and so on, would not be able to conduct trade negotiations with the UK” if Britain were to leave the union.

“We would only conduct trade negotiations with the EU, which we already do. You wouldn’t be relevant to that – you wouldn’t have a say in those trade negotiations,” he said.

He concluded that the UK had “been a great force for free trade within the EU”.

“We equally are happy to negotiate a free trade agreement with the EU and are beginning that process already, but if you stay in the customs union that cuts you out of that process,” Mr Downer said.

Pannonian
03-02-2018, 01:14
Well when you spend 20 plus years telling people they were laid off due to NAFTA and not because of increased use of IT, robots and "Made in China" they tend to believe it. Same with TPP, the people that want us to be strong against China are the people that seem to think TPP hurts the US.
As for the Mexico part of NAFTA, if we are going to outsource jobs/labor it's in our interest that it's at the least to our neighbors. If their economies are good then ours will benefit too.

Bwahaha. Are you having Brexit-style problems too? As in decades of made up BS about your unfavourite trading bloc of choice, so that they get the blame for everything under the blue sky (eg. rory, a medical professional, blaming the EU for WTO rules).

rory_20_uk
03-02-2018, 12:21
Bwahaha. Are you having Brexit-style problems too? As in decades of made up BS about your unfavourite trading bloc of choice, so that they get the blame for everything under the blue sky (eg. rory, a medical professional, blaming the EU for WTO rules).

Odd example since I never said that. But I understand your desire to discredit rather than bother to think. It is not the rules, it is the implementation. The latest "fallback" position is to in essence annex Northern Ireland. Doubtlessly due to WTO rules as well.

~:smoking:

spmetla
05-17-2018, 19:02
Interesting idea though I don't imagine it would actually happen short of more coordination between Australian and UK foreign policy. Haven't seen this on British news though so I guess it isn't a serious suggestion of his:

A leading member of Britain’s House of Commons select committee on foreign affairs has called for London to share its permanent seat on the UN Security Council with Australia.

In the most radical Brexit-era security proposal so far, Bob Seely, the Conservative member for the Isle of Wight, told The Australian he believed the British UN seat should “become an Anglosphere seat”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/foreign-affairs/british-push-to-share-un-security-council-seat-with-canberra/news-story/7c09cd537ee4ef5d601c163b65038b52

rory_20_uk
05-17-2018, 19:58
Interesting idea though I don't imagine it would actually happen short of more coordination between Australian and UK foreign policy. Haven't seen this on British news though so I guess it isn't a serious suggestion of his:

A leading member of Britain’s House of Commons select committee on foreign affairs has called for London to share its permanent seat on the UN Security Council with Australia.

In the most radical Brexit-era security proposal so far, Bob Seely, the Conservative member for the Isle of Wight, told The Australian he believed the British UN seat should “become an Anglosphere seat”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/foreign-affairs/british-push-to-share-un-security-council-seat-with-canberra/news-story/7c09cd537ee4ef5d601c163b65038b52

It does make no sense that the UK and France have two seats. France could give its seat to the EU and then perhaps the 5 eyes minus the USA (which already has one) could oversee the other. How that would work in a practical sense might be far more difficult - and the combined economic and military might would still not be that great.

I doubt anyone would want to give a seat to a country that would change the status quo even if it might be "fairer".

~:smoking:

Furunculus
05-17-2018, 23:11
It does make no sense that the UK and France have two seats.
~:smoking:

if not britain and france, then who?

rory_20_uk
05-18-2018, 10:31
if not britain and france, then who?

Yes, I can not think of a better single country that adds balance. I am mindful that there is no representation in Africa nor South America but which country in either has enough power?

Japan is a possibility - although its current constitution might be a challenge.

The EU and the "Anglosphere" at least spreads them out somewhat more equally.

~:smoking:

Pannonian
05-22-2018, 16:10
ANZ have said that relations with the rEU will be more important than relations with the UK, as the rEU is a vastly bigger trade partner.

Furunculus
05-22-2018, 21:17
ANZ have said that relations with the rEU will be more important than relations with the UK, as the rEU is a vastly bigger trade partner.

in a zero sum game that might mean something.

Pannonian
05-22-2018, 21:54
in a zero sum game that might mean something.

Wasn't the economic side of Brexit based on the premise of a zero sum game? I recall certain ministers, such as the guy in charge of negotiating trade deals, saying that membership of the EU held us back. And the premise of this very thread is that non-membership of the EU may facilitate an Anglosphere grouping. Now two of those three non-UK countries explicitly state that their relationship with the EU 27 is more important than their relationship with the UK, citing the very arguments made by Remainers.

Actually, just about every non-UK country has repeated the arguments made by Remainers. Only the UK has maintained that the arguments made by Leavers is reality. Who's right, the UK/Leave? Or the rest of the world/Remain?

rory_20_uk
05-23-2018, 11:30
Not all groupings are based on trade. The 5 eyes is based on intelligence for example, and only involves the UK and no other country in the EU. Because the two do not compete.

Barring sanctions, there are few cases where one is forbidden to trade with third parties - not even China prevents trade with Taiwan.

Given that the situation is not the Axis / Allies in WW2, countries can have relationships with both and doubtlessly different relationships with both.

If any grouping were to be created it would be extremely unlikely to be a trade block - who said it would be? If there was a sharing of the UN Veto this has nothing to do with it, since again France and the UK have one and the rest of the EU does not since the two are not linked.

And holding back can be semantics. Is a trade deal with Canada almost destroyed after 11 years due to a province of Belgium a good method? Will this be the same in the next trade negotiation? Will countries use the EU blue print, or will countries just not bother with the UK?

~:smoking:

Pannonian
05-23-2018, 11:57
Not all groupings are based on trade. The 5 eyes is based on intelligence for example, and only involves the UK and no other country in the EU. Because the two do not compete.

Barring sanctions, there are few cases where one is forbidden to trade with third parties - not even China prevents trade with Taiwan.

Given that the situation is not the Axis / Allies in WW2, countries can have relationships with both and doubtlessly different relationships with both.

If any grouping were to be created it would be extremely unlikely to be a trade block - who said it would be? If there was a sharing of the UN Veto this has nothing to do with it, since again France and the UK have one and the rest of the EU does not since the two are not linked.

And holding back can be semantics. Is a trade deal with Canada almost destroyed after 11 years due to a province of Belgium a good method? Will this be the same in the next trade negotiation? Will countries use the EU blue print, or will countries just not bother with the UK?

~:smoking:

Well, the US has said that any UK-US trade deal will begin with the acceptance of US food and agriculture standards. This was an argument given by Remain, which Leave denied would be the case. Now that negotiations are underway, the US has confirmed what Remain said would be the case, which was denied by Leave. Like I said, there is one reality, supported by Leave and the UK government. Then there is another reality, supported by Remain and the rest of the world. Which is more likely to be true?

Husar
05-23-2018, 13:51
Is a trade deal with Canada almost destroyed after 11 years due to a province of Belgium a good method?

No, but after the German government agreed against a lot of resistance from its people, it was the best we could get. More countries doing what their people wanted or the creation of sufficient transparency to maybe make me and others back the deal as well are obviously preferable. But when we can't get that because businesses don't want their customers to know what they negotiate with elected governments, then I applaud any Belgian region for resisting the hell out of that deal. It's great to have fellow Europeans standing up for your rights.

rory_20_uk
05-24-2018, 14:12
ANZ have said that relations with the rEU will be more important than relations with the UK, as the rEU is a vastly bigger trade partner.

And of course the UK screwed over who were then their key trade partners in our rush to join Europe (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-44210833). Any other allies we tried to alienate at the same time since of course how could relying solely on Europe ever go bad?

~:smoking:

Pannonian
05-24-2018, 14:27
And of course the UK screwed over who were then their key trade partners in our rush to join Europe (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-44210833). Any other allies we tried to alienate at the same time since of course how could relying solely on Europe ever go bad?

~:smoking:

There were probably many other things the UK has done in the past. And like your cited example, it all happened before I was even born. You want me to be sorry for these too?

rory_20_uk
05-24-2018, 14:34
Double post

~:smoking:

rory_20_uk
05-24-2018, 14:35
Your birth was a historical singularity - events before that point have no meaning or value...

~:smoking:

Seamus Fermanagh
05-24-2018, 15:12
There were probably many other things the UK has done in the past. And like your cited example, it all happened before I was even born. You want me to be sorry for these too?

Absolutely. I cannot be absolved for sharing the same skin tone as slave-holding fellow citizens of my republic and must forever bear the shame of having stolen the land of my birth from those Native Americans who were here first. Why should you get off scot free (and isn't that a cultural slur) for wrongs done to other parties by people your parents and grand-parents voted into office? ~;p

Pannonian
05-24-2018, 17:10
Your birth was a historical singularity - events before that point have no meaning or value...

~:smoking:

You're arguing that events before that time hold more value than things people say now. NB. ANZ aren't arguing that they can't trust the UK because they'd been betrayed befiore. They're saying that the EU 27 is more important than the UK because the former is a far bigger trade partner than the latter. You're the one bringing historical singularities into this, as opposed to what ANZ are actually saying now.


Absolutely. I cannot be absolved for sharing the same skin tone as slave-holding fellow citizens of my republic and must forever bear the shame of having stolen the land of my birth from those Native Americans who were here first. Why should you get off scot free (and isn't that a cultural slur) for wrongs done to other parties by people your parents and grand-parents voted into office? ~;p

Rory's argument is more akin to saying that the UK should lead NATO because the US is an offshoot of the UK. The argument I/ANZ was putting forward is akin to the US should lead NATO because the US is by far the biggest and most important partner in it. One of them talks about the now. The other talks about history and thus justifying invalidating the now.