Rather then to continue to contiminate other threads, I thought I would start a new one.
Reading the threads on "NZ election" and "NZ becoming a regional power" I have been stuck by just how different NZ has become to Australia (or vice-versa). Having visited NZ and shared houses with Kiwi's, I hadn't really noticed that great a difference.
The US alliance in Australia is taken as a non negiotable starting point. Infact it is widely felt that Mark Latham's anti-US sprays caused him consider damage. Generally both sides on Aus politics fight each other on whose idea the alliance was and who is best to maintain it. Labor that Curtin first turned Australia towards the US in WWII and the Libs because ANZUS was signed during Menzies reign.
In NZ (from what I understand from reading the thread) no major party is advocating a return to full US alliance.
In Australia there is public debate over of the F-35, F-22 or the SH as replacements for the F-111. The angst is over do we have enough and good enough quality air force. It is just assumed that we must somehow have air dominance over our own territory. Despite the fact that regionally we face no substantial air threat. (They might get have the resources to get planes to Aus (if the RAAF fell alseep) but getting planes to eastern seaboard of Aus would be as far again.)
NZ appear to have quiet happy to have no air combat force.
The actual percentage level of defence spending is different. Both sides have committed to above inflation increases in Aus. NZ appears to want to minimize military spending and spend the minimum needed to meet the goals they have set.
Do the Kiwi poster agree with what I have said from your perspectives?
Given that Aus and NZ for most of our history from my perspectives have had a very shared strategic veiw, why the divergence? Australia appears to have decided that we must be able to project power rather then to be as small as we can get away with alliance member. NZ has decided to follow the idea that we're far away and harmless, so lets have a force that can assist regional states not to fall apart.
What has driven these differences? Is it just NZ remoteness? Or the diffence in populations (Australia being bigger should in some ways be more secure but we appear much more concerned with military defence) Both nations are getting a greater appreciation of their native peoples, but Maori culture has never struck me as overly pacificist. (The haka and welcoming people by sticking a spear near their face as obvious examples.) Immigration has diverged the ethnic makeup of the two nations but Australia has hardly gone out recruiting from known military assertive countries?
As an Australian I think our policies make sense (for us anyway) and that given the bipartisan support the pollies think the public largely agress with them.
Reading the threads on "NZ election" and "NZ becoming a regional power" I have been stuck by just how different NZ has become to Australia (or vice-versa). Having visited NZ and shared houses with Kiwi's, I hadn't really noticed that great a difference.
The US alliance in Australia is taken as a non negiotable starting point. Infact it is widely felt that Mark Latham's anti-US sprays caused him consider damage. Generally both sides on Aus politics fight each other on whose idea the alliance was and who is best to maintain it. Labor that Curtin first turned Australia towards the US in WWII and the Libs because ANZUS was signed during Menzies reign.
In NZ (from what I understand from reading the thread) no major party is advocating a return to full US alliance.
In Australia there is public debate over of the F-35, F-22 or the SH as replacements for the F-111. The angst is over do we have enough and good enough quality air force. It is just assumed that we must somehow have air dominance over our own territory. Despite the fact that regionally we face no substantial air threat. (They might get have the resources to get planes to Aus (if the RAAF fell alseep) but getting planes to eastern seaboard of Aus would be as far again.)
NZ appear to have quiet happy to have no air combat force.
The actual percentage level of defence spending is different. Both sides have committed to above inflation increases in Aus. NZ appears to want to minimize military spending and spend the minimum needed to meet the goals they have set.
Do the Kiwi poster agree with what I have said from your perspectives?
Given that Aus and NZ for most of our history from my perspectives have had a very shared strategic veiw, why the divergence? Australia appears to have decided that we must be able to project power rather then to be as small as we can get away with alliance member. NZ has decided to follow the idea that we're far away and harmless, so lets have a force that can assist regional states not to fall apart.
What has driven these differences? Is it just NZ remoteness? Or the diffence in populations (Australia being bigger should in some ways be more secure but we appear much more concerned with military defence) Both nations are getting a greater appreciation of their native peoples, but Maori culture has never struck me as overly pacificist. (The haka and welcoming people by sticking a spear near their face as obvious examples.) Immigration has diverged the ethnic makeup of the two nations but Australia has hardly gone out recruiting from known military assertive countries?
As an Australian I think our policies make sense (for us anyway) and that given the bipartisan support the pollies think the public largely agress with them.