THE Rudd Government knows it's got a real perception problem with China, thanks to the ill-timed bumbling of and carelessness of Joel Fitzgibbon.
The Defence Minister's undeclared trips to China come as China is doing everything it can to take a huge stake in Australia's natural resources; after Kevin Rudd's "secret meeting" with China's propaganda chief has made a bad impression; as the Prime Minister's longstanding Sinophilia makes people suspicious; and as Australia is championing Chinese efforts for a greater say within the IMF.
But ill-timed bumbling doesn't mean Labor is handing over Australian sovereignty to China nor that Rudd is the Manchurian candidate with a Chinese chip in his neck and Harold Holt in the backyard of The Lodge.
The disclosure of the Defence Minister's failure to declare two trips to China paid for by his family friend, businesswomen, Chinese investor and landlady Helen Liu, couldn't have come at a worse time.
Given Rudd's declared standards of ministerial probity, it's probably a hanging offence but Fitzgibbon will get a suspended sentence as long as he doesn't have any more damaging disclosures.
His colleagues think he has behaved poorly but he still has the support of Rudd and Julia Gillard, whom he helped to their respective jobs.
As a minister he's been in trouble for a while but his failure to declare the trips - before he was a minister - doesn't create a vast Chinese conspiracy.
As China undoubtedly becomes more aggressive economically and militarily in a world it is increasingly going to influence, there are legitimate concerns about putting Australia's security - national, resource or economic - at Beijing's beck and call.
The Prime Minister and Wayne Swan both know they face a diabolical dilemma in choosing to accept much-needed Chinese investment while trying to keep China from controlling resource production in Australia and, hence, prices for our exports through state-owned companies or investment funds.
The choice is made more difficult by yesterday's decision to excise the sensitive area of the old Woomera rocket range from China's bid for OZ Minerals.
The Government's got a perception problem, Fitzgibbon's made it worse but there still isn't a Manchurian candidate. Dealing with China is part of the new world.
[via The Australian]