Is John Key remaking New Zealand’s foreign policy?

NZ Herald

Bryce Edwards

25 June 2014

Is New Zealand an independent global citizen, or a US ally in all but name? Answering that question has been the task of journalists and commentators as John Key visited New York and Washington last week. The visit was overshadowed to a degree by the domestic agenda – notably the Donghua Liu donations issue. But Key’s visit was fascinating for because it provided a contrast of an apparent New Zealand independence in New York, at the United Nations, and a seemingly new alignment with the United States in its position on the crisis in Iraq.

New Zealand and Iraq

Will New Zealand support US military action? John Key’s trip to the United States coincided with the growing Iraq crisis, which has seen the ISIS group taking control of the northern city of Mosul and move closer to Baghdad. In New York, Key played down the likelihood of action becoming necessary and also seemed to say that New Zealand would only become involved with a UN mandate: ‘As things play out New Zealand would always look to the [United Nations] Security Council for its view and its sanction of anything that may happen. So you can never say never in a world where the Security Council decides that Iraq needs support of some sort – engineers or whatever it might be’ – see Tracy Watkins’ No New Zealand forces to Iraq, says Key.

But as Key moved to Washington, this stance began to shift, in part being forced by comments made by US Secretary of State John Kerry.

NZ Herald

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