An Australian pilot was forced to take evasive action after a Chinese military jet detonated flares close to a Navy helicopter that was operating in international waters near South Korea.
The Defence Department has described the actions of the J-10 Chinese Air Force plane as “unsafe and unprofessional” following the incident which took place in the Yellow Sea over the weekend.
On Saturday a MH-60R Seahawk which had launched from HMAS Hobart was intercepted by the People’s Liberation Army-Air Force (PLA-AF) as it was taking part in a UN mission to enforce sanctions against North Korea.
I gave an exact example of serious retaliation.
Australia can find other markets for its exports as we did previously.
China needs a reality check. They need Australia and they need to respect the safety of Australian citizens.
Ok, well… I’m glad you’re not in charge of anything I guess.
You’re glad someone who cares about the safety of Australian citizens isn’t in power?
Way to out yourself I guess.
China is our largest trading partner. Last year we exported $220b of stuff to China. This year it will be closer to $250b.
Second place is Japan, at a paltry $80b this year. That’s a third.
So your greedy and spineless solution is to allow these bullying tactics to continue until Australians are killed, and then continue to allow trade afterwards.
It’s not greedy to avoid catastrophic economic collapse.
It’s not spineless to choose an appropriate response instead of having a hissy fit.
You don’t protect Australians by acting like a tough guy.
So full blown war over seeking alternative trading partners is a better outcome? Because that’s what will happen if Chinese aggression isn’t met with severe consequences.
Bullshit. Hyperbole.
You talk about “seeking alternative trading partners” like we’re seeking alternative laundry powder at woolies.
Who else will buy our iron ore who isn’t already? The answer is no one.
Yea selling some iron ore is worth sleep walking into WWIII.