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New Zealand: Labour government dispatches SAS troops to Afghanistan
By John Braddock
27 March 2004
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Following recent talks with the Bush administration, the New
Zealand government announced earlier this month that 50 Special
Air Services (SAS) troops will be sent to Afghanistan at the beginning
of April for long range reconnaissance and direct action
missions. The deployment is initially for a period of six
months.
The return of New Zealands elite front-line troops to
Afghanistanfollowing a previous year-long deployment during
the US-led invasionis a direct response to US pressure for
support for its current military operations on the Afghan-Pakistan
border. The New Zealand SAS will join 11,000 US troops in a coordinated
hunt with 70,000 Pakistani soldiers for top Al Qaeda and Taliban
leaders and to suppress the ongoing armed opposition to the US-backed
regime in Kabul.
Labour Prime Minister Clark justified the decision by saying
she wanted Afghanistan to get the chance to rebuild
so that it did not become a failed state where people like
bin Laden and friends can operate freely. She believed the
eye went off the ball in Afghanistan through 2003 and there
was much to do to make up lost ground. Clark reversed
her previous policy of keeping SAS troop deployments secret for
security reasons. While not going into detail, she
said that they would be working with soldiers from other countries
and contributing their skills in reconnaissance, surveillance
and tracking.
The Bush administrations spring offensive
has nothing to do with the welfare of the Afghan people. The overriding
aim is to capture Osama bin Laden or his close associates to provide
Bush with a much-needed media coup in the lead up to the US presidential
elections. At the same time, the US military is seeking to crush
the dogged resistance to the continued presence of US-led forces
in Afghanistan.
More than two dozen US and International Security Assistance
Forces (ISAF) troops have been killed this yearproportionately
a worse death toll than in Iraq. Some areas are returning to Taliban
control, particularly at night, and US and ISAF forces have come
under fire more often in the past three months than in all of
the previous 15. In a sign of growing desperation, two US attacks
killed 15 children in the week before Christmas.
Labours decision further underscores its alignment to
the Bush administration, after a brief period during the Iraq
war when it sided with the European powers in seeking UN approval
for the Iraq invasion. The White House rapidly brought Clark to
heel after she remarked last March that the US might not have
invaded Iraq had Gore been elected US president. New Zealand was
pointedly excluded from a free trade deal negotiated with Australia,
a far more willing and vociferous supporter of Washington.
Clark soon fell into line. A contingent of 60 army engineers
was sent to operate alongside British forces in southern Iraq,
in addition to the 100 already in Afghanistan. Late last year,
Clark visited the Iraq-based unit and the provincial reconstruction
team in Afghanistans Bamian province. She met Afghan
President Harmid Karzai, giving his puppet administration her
seal of approval. According to Clark, Karzai expressed his deep
appreciation for New Zealands assistance.
In the face of widespread domestic opposition, the Labour government
has insisted that New Zealands military involvement in Iraq
and Afghanistan was purely of a peacekeeping character.
In December, however, the Sunday Star Times published material
by researcher Nicky Hager showing that New Zealand troops were
intimately integrated into the occupation activities of the British
forces in southern Iraq.
Documents obtained by Hager proved New Zealand army engineers
were repairing British military equipment, building road-blocks
and fortifications and doing general logistics work for the British.
The Rules of Engagement gave New Zealanders the right to use deadly
force, not only to defend themselves but also British military
property and designated people. New Zealand military
publications cited examples of the engineers building fortifications,
guarding British posts, and repairing British military craft,
including combat support boats.
In response to New Zealands military efforts, relations
with the US began to thaw. In December, US Deputy Secretary of
Defence Paul Wolfowitz announced that governments which had been
critical of the Iraq war, including France and Germany, would
be excluded from $US18.6 billion worth of reconstruction contracts
funded by the US Congress. Notably New Zealand was not on the
blacklist, as it was now favourably regarded in Washington as
a force-contributing nation.
At the same time, New Zealand has exploited the war on
terror to advance its own interests as a minor imperialist
power in the Asia-Pacific region. Along with Canberra, Wellington
has justified its increasingly aggressive intervention into the
affairs of the tiny island nations of the Pacific by arguing they
are in danger of becoming failed states and terrorist
havens. Under the pretext of reestablishing law and order,
Australia and New Zealand dispatched a joint task force to the
Solomon Islands late last year to take over key aspects of the
nations administration.
In February this year, New Zealand Foreign Minister Phil Goff
joined his Australian counterpart Alexander Downer and US Attorney
General John Ashcroft at an anti-terrorism summit
in Bali to berate Asian and Pacific nations for not pulling their
weight in the war on terror. Goff complained that
many countries in the region had not signed or legislated for
the 12 UN conventions on terrorism and demanded that lagging
nations tighten their legal frameworks against
terrorism. The meeting concluded with a decision to establish
a joint anti-terror centre based in Indonesia.
Labours increasingly forthright involvement in the Bush
administrations war on terrorism has received
fulsome praise in media circles. The New Zealand Herald
applauded the return of the SAS to frontline service,
saying it would bring New Zealand back where it belongs,
side by side with the United States and Australia in a just and
necessary military campaign. While the government had been
correct to absent itself from the Iraq folly,
it was doing the right thing now, and if that should help restore
New Zealands stocks in Washington, well and good.
The capture of bin Laden, according to the Herald, is necessary
for Western security.
There is mounting pressure in New Zealand ruling circles to
further accommodate to the US. The main big business mouthpiece,
the National Business Review, in addition to criticising
the government for being an on-again, off-again partner
in the war on terrorism, has called for the countrys 20-year
old anti-nuclear legislation to be ditched. The legislation, which
bans nuclear armed or powered warships entering the countrys
ports, has been responsible for a rift in defence ties with the
US and Australia since being enacted by the Labour government
in the mid-1980s.
In January, six Republican senators with what the Review
called top shelf credentials on policy and budget
matters visited New Zealand for talks about trade and other matters,
including New Zealands anti-nuclear stance. The group, led
by Oklahoma senator Don Nickles, chair of the Senate budget Committee,
met with both Foreign Minister Goff and the leader of the opposition,
Don Brash.
The return of troops to Afghanistan is accompanied by other
measures aimed at boosting New Zealands role in operations
alongside the US. The government announced it will extend the
commitment of Defence Force personnel to provide command
and leadership training to the Afghan National Army to June
2005. It will also re-deploy the frigate Te Mana to the Maritime
Interdiction Operation in the Gulf of Oman for four months from
April 2004. The frigate will operate as far west as the Horn of
Africa, to monitor shipping for supposed Taliban and
Al Qaeda personnel. An Air Force Orion aircraft is likely to be
dispatched as well, operating in the same region as the RNZN frigate.
See Also:
US raises stakes
over New Zealands foreign policy differences
[15 October 2003]
New Zealand military
to join occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan
[21 June 2003]
US bullies New Zealand
prime minister into apologising over war comments
[28 April 2003]
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