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Australian government unreservedly backs Bushs open-ended
war
By Mike Head
5 February 2002
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Visiting New York last week, Australian Prime Minister John
Howard aligned his government unreservedly with US President George
W. Bushs State of the Union address. While European powers
expressed consternation at Bushs unilateral declaration
of hostilities against any government that threatens US interests,
Howard was anxious to demonstrate that Australia remained a staunch
ally.
The prime minister declared that he understood exactly
why Bush had named Iran, Iraq and North Korea as an axis
of evil and promised to consider any request for further
involvement in the US military campaign. Australia would not give
the US a blank cheque but Bushs speech had been
a sober reminder that terrorism doesnt have any boundaries.
Speaking to guests of the American Jewish Committee, Howard
restated his governments unequivocal backing for the bombing
of Afghanistan. He went on to praise Bush for making a very
logical and forceful point... I think he was right to make the
point that the campaign against terrorism doesnt end with
a successful operation in Afghanistan... I think it signals a
determination to go the distance in fighting terrorism.
Howard gave the clearest indication that his government would,
if asked, join a second front against terrorism, including
a campaign against any of the countries named by Bush. Australias
response would be determined on a case-by-case basis, but
against the background of our broad support and very strong support
for the American response to terrorism.
Howard also used an address to the United Nations Security
Council on the future of East Timor to suggest that the UN should
contribute in action as well as words to the international
front against terrorism. He sought to link the two issues,
urging an extension of the UN mandate in East Timor, where Australian
troops are leading an ongoing intervention.
Howards Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, had been
more cautious, expressing concerns immediately after Bushs
address that an extension of the US military offensive might cut
across some of Australias economic and strategic interests.
The term axis of evil was Bushs expression,
he pointed out. Were an ally of the US, but we choose
our own language. Downer noted that he had visited both
Iran, where we have a strong trading relationship,
and North Korea, with whom Australia had restored diplomatic relations
in order to engage with its government.
Downer voiced no such reservations, however, about Iraq, against
which the Howard government has already committed the bulk of
its contribution to the US war. While Australian SAS troops were,
with their British counterparts, the first to join US operations
on the ground in Afghanistan, three Australian warships are involved
in enforcing UN sanctions against Iraq and an Australian naval
officer is currently commanding the blockade fleet.
Howard lost no time in making clear that he harboured none
of Downers reservations. Speaking at the World Economic
Forum, he declared: I will join others who are saying that
the campaign against terrorism is by no means over. And we must
recognise that the possibility of activity elsewhere in the campaign
against terrorism is very real.
The Howard Doctrine
As in 1990, when the Hawke Labor government was the first in
the world to volunteer military support for the US-led war against
Iraq, the Howard government has rapidly drawn the conclusion that
the long-term benefits of backing the US administration outweigh
any short-term commercial or diplomatic costs.
Since taking office in 1996, the Liberal-National Party Coalition
government has undertaken a shift away from the Keating Labor
governments policy of engagement with Asianotably
Japan, China and Indonesia. The present governments orientation
to the US was underscored during the East Timor crisis in 1999.
Howard required US diplomatic, logistical and intelligence backing
before he could send troops to secure Australias interests
in the former Indonesian territory. Washington, in turn, was happy
to allow Canberra to police the unstable enclave. At the height
of the crisis, Howard enthusiastically outlined a new Howard
Doctrine in which his government would act as a regional
deputy for the US. When governments and the media
throughout the Asia-Pacific region denounced the analogy, Howard
was forced to drop it.
But the prime minister has an organic affinity with the extreme
rightwing cabal in the White House, supporting both its foreign
and domestic agenda. Moreover, he calculates that Bushs
indefinite war has advantages for his government both at home
and abroad. In the first place, sending troops to assist the US
in establishing its hegemony in Central Asia is only a short step
away from deploying forces in East Timor, the Solomon Islands,
Fiji, Bougainville or anywhere else in the Asia-Pacific region
where the Australian ruling elite has significant financial and
strategic interests.
Secondly, just as Bush, backed by a compliant media, has utilised
the war on terrorism to make unprecedented inroads
into democratic rights, and to divert attention away from worsening
unemployment, social inequality and corporate swindling, so Howard
uses Australias participation in the war, along with vicious
anti-refugee chauvinism, to buttress his own government against
mounting opposition. Aided by bipartisan support from the Labor
party for his policies on terrorism and asylum seekers,
Howard clung onto power at last Novembers election in the
face of widespread hostility to his governments program
of slashing wages, conditions and living standards for ordinary
working people while enriching a small corporate elite. Like Bush,
his government is using terrorism as a pretext to dismantle civil
liberties and boost the power of the security apparatus. Vast
new powers are being handed to ASIO, the domestic intelligence
agency, and lengthy jail terms introduced for leaking damaging
official information.
Howards commitment could soon lead to Australian military
forays closer to home. The US operation has already been extended
to the Philippines, and deployments in Indonesia have been mooted.
In its cover story this week, the Bulletin magazine reported
that authorities in Canberra were just starting to grapple
with a number of potential scenarios, including the
implications of extending Operation Enduring Freedom into the
Philippines and possibly Indonesia.
Any escalation of military involvement will sharpen underlying
social and political tensions within Australia. According to a
recent report in the Financial Review, the cost of sending
1,550 military personnel, plus equipment and naval ships, to join
the war in Afghanistan, has consumed the governments projected
2001-2002 budget surplus of about $500 million. Defence Minister
Robert Hill has reportedly asked for an extra $450 million to
cover the blowout in this years military budget and for
nearly $1 billion in extra funding next financial year. These
sums will inevitably be cut from spending on health, education
and other essential social services.
The Murdoch-owned media has been unequivocal in urging support
for Bushs plans. Global security that is lasting and
sustained economic growth in the worlds largest economy
are in Australias interests, the Australian
insisted in an editorial on Bushs speech. Its foreign editor
Greg Sheridan weighed in with a column entitled: No way
to avoid Iraqi involvement. After canvassing the prospects
of military action against Iraq, Iran and North Korea, he concluded:
Rest assured, whatever option the Bush administration ultimately
chooses, Australia will be there too.
Other media outlets have been less enthusiastic, reflecting
concerns within the business and military establishment about
the potential impact on Australias lucrative trade relations
with China, Japan and South Korea, as well as its influence in
South-East Asia, particularly Indonesia and Malaysia. For example,
the Australian Financial Review yesterday carried a cartoon
recalling Stanley Kubricks brilliantand extraordinarily
prescientmovie, Dr Strangelove. George Bush is Slim
Pickens, the war-crazy cowboy, riding a nuclear warhead labelled
Foreign Policy into oblivion. How I learned
to stop worrying and love the bomb, is the caption. Beneath
the cartoon, columnist Geoffrey Barker warns that: European
and Australian economic and security interests are not always
or necessarily identical to US interests as outlined by Bush last
week.
See Also:
Australia: US terror
attacks used to introduce sweeping police powers
[4 October 2001]
Australian government
extends unconditional support to US war drive
[20 September 2001]
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