Sometimes One’s Image of a Country gets ‘fixed in time’ and left behind by reality
Originally published by Sunday Guardian Live.
This writer is old enough that his view of Australia and Australians was only reinforced by the laconic, tough-as-nails Crocodile Dundee. Instead it was formed much earlier from a photo of Australian troops (at least what was left of them) in formation after stopping the Imperial Japanese Army on the Kokoda Track in New Guinea in 1942. And Australians fought like tigers in Korea and Vietnam and have been along with America in subsequent fights. The professionalism and grit of Australian troops today is unquestioned.
But there’s something different about Australia and the US-Australia relationship, that even the recent love fest in Washington between the two nations’ defense and foreign ministers can quite paper over. Respected foreign affairs analyst James Carafano wrote a thoughtful piece prior to the ministerial meeting. This writer offers a somewhat different assessment of some of the article’s key points. In general, it repeatedly overstates Australia’s strategic weight and competence while understating the Albanese government’s passivity and structural weaknesses.
Read more HERE.
- Grant Newsham, CSP Senior Fellow, joined The John Batchelor Show - April 24, 2026
- Wartime-level Northern Marianas typhoon hit tests US commitment - April 21, 2026
- Grant Newsham, CSP Senior Fellow, appeared on Brave New Normal podcast to discuss China’s unrestricted warfare against the US - April 15, 2026