There was a time—within living memory—when Australia knew exactly where it stood.
On matters of principle, we didn’t hedge. We didn’t mumble. We didn’t hide behind process.
We stood with the West.
We stood with the United States.
And we stood—consistently and unapologetically—with Israel, a fellow democracy in a region where democracy is in short supply.
At the United Nations, Australia had a reputation. While the chamber too often descended into ritualised condemnation of Israel—year after year, resolution after resolution—Australia was one of the few countries prepared to push back. Not blindly, but on principle. We recognised the difference between democracies defending themselves and regimes exporting terror.
That clarity is now gone.
The “De-Escalate” Doctrine
Listen to the Albanese Government—particularly Foreign Minister Penny Wong—and one word dominates every conflict:
“De-escalate.”
It’s repeated like a reflex. A script. A shield.
After the October 7 atrocities carried out by Hamas—an act of mass murder that shocked the world—the first instinct from Australia’s leadership wasn’t moral clarity. It wasn’t a firm declaration of support for a democratic ally under attack.
It was… de-escalation.
Even before Israel had responded.
Fast forward to the confrontation involving Iran—where the stakes are global, not regional—and the script hasn’t changed. The United States acts. Israel acts. And Australia?
“De-escalate.”
No leadership. No conviction. No sense of who is right and who is wrong.
Just a diplomatic shrug.
What Changed?
Australia didn’t suddenly lose its values.
It elected a government that no longer prioritises them in the same way.
For decades, the alliance with the United States wasn’t just strategic—it was instinctive. Australia didn’t wait to be asked. It didn’t equivocate. When moral clarity was required, we provided it.
That era looks increasingly distant.
So what changed?
The answer sits uncomfortably within the modern Australian Labor Party.
Earlier Labor governments—whatever their faults—were anchored by the party’s right faction. Leaders like Hawke and Keating understood power, alliances, and the realities of a dangerous world. They didn’t indulge in moral fog. They made calls.
Today’s Labor Party is different.
It is dominated by its left faction—more ideologically driven, more sceptical of Western power, and far less comfortable backing allies like the United States and Israel. In that worldview, drawing hard moral lines is seen as risky. Better to soften the language. Better to hedge. Better to say nothing of consequence.
Enter Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong.
Their now-familiar refrain—“de-escalate”—is not just a diplomatic talking point. It’s a reflection of their ambivalence. A government unsure of its footing internationally, constrained by its own ideological base, and increasingly unwilling to call out right from wrong when it matters most.
This isn’t balance.
It’s drift.
And in global politics, drift doesn’t read as neutrality—it reads as weakness.
Domestic Politics, Foreign Policy
There is an uncomfortable question sitting just beneath the surface:
Has domestic politics begun to dictate foreign policy?
Australia is a proudly multicultural country having accepted immigrants and refugees from around the world. That has long been one of its strengths.
However recent high levels of immigration from North Africa and the Middle East have imported large numbers with different political views. When voting blocs begin to shape international positioning—when leaders start calibrating moral language to avoid domestic backlash—something shifts.
Policy becomes cautious. Then diluted. Then unrecognisable.
We’ve seen versions of this play out in other Western democracies. In Canada. In the United Kingdom. Social tensions rise. Public discourse hardens. And foreign policy becomes a balancing act rather than a statement of principle.
Australia now appears to be heading down the same path.
The Cost of Saying Nothing
Let’s be clear: calling for “de-escalation” is not wrong in itself.
Of course we want less conflict. Of course we want fewer casualties.
But when that is all you say—when it replaces judgement rather than complements it—it becomes a problem.
Because silence, dressed up as neutrality, is still a position.
And in conflicts where one side is a democratic state responding to terrorism or aggression, and the other is not, refusing to draw distinctions isn’t diplomacy.
It’s abdication.
A Dangerous Drift
Foreign policy doesn’t exist in a vacuum.
It shapes how allies see us.
It shapes how adversaries judge us.
And increasingly, it shapes how we see ourselves.
If Australia becomes a country that won’t speak clearly in moments that demand clarity—won’t back allies when it counts—won’t defend the principles it once championed—then something fundamental has changed.
Not just in Canberra.
But in the national character.
Final Thought
For decades, Australia punched above its weight not through size or power, but through clarity and conviction.
I suspect that reputation is is already lost.
And once lost, it won’t be easily regained.



