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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Australian government escalates its military involvement in
Iraq
By Mike Head
4 July 2006
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In the face of a deepening crisis within the Bush administrations
Coalition of the Willing in IraqJapan is pulling
its troops out, following Italy, Poland, Ukraine, Spain, the Netherlands
and Hungarythe Australian government has decided to escalate
its military commitment.
Despite broad popular hostility throughout Australia to the
illegal occupation, Prime Minister John Howard told parliament
on June 22 that Australian soldiers would stay until the job
has been finished.
When Howard last escalated Australias involvement, by
sending 450 troops to the southern province of Al Muthanna in
early 2005, the pretext was the protection of a Japanese military
construction contingent. But Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi has confirmed that Tokyo is withdrawing.
Howard announced that after Japans contingent departed,
the Australian taskforce would take on a new higher risk
role in dealing with resistance to the US occupation. Most of
the 450 soldiers would be shifted to an American air base at Talil,
near the city of Nasiriyah, where they would undertake a range
of activities, including direct military action
to support the Iraqi authorities in crisis situations.
Howards announcement underscores his governments
determination to cling to the Bush administration, no matter what
the human cost. He said his government was keenly aware
of the risks associated with this new mission, referring
to the likelihood of Australian casualties.
Until now, Howard has tried to contain the domestic opposition
to the war by keeping most of the 1,300 Australian troops in Iraq
well away from the most dangerous areas and the major US military
offensives. Only one Australian soldier has died therePrivate
Jake Kovco, who apparently shot himself last month in yet to be
explained circumstancescompared to more than 2,500 Americans.
Just hours before Howard spoke to parliament, Australian troops
in Baghdad were involved in an attack that gave a glimpse of the
daily mayhem on Iraqi streets. Soldiers in a heavily-armoured
Australian reconnaissance convoy opened fire on bodyguards protecting
the Iraqi Trade Minister, Abdul Falah al-Sudany, killing one and
injuring four others. Such incidents have only fuelled local resistance
to the occupation, making retaliatory attacks and casualties ever
more likely.
Howards determination to finish the job in
Iraq indicates how much is at stake for Australian military, strategic
and economic interests. His government was one of just three to
directly participate in the March 2003 invasion. Its primary aim
was to secure US support for Australias neo-colonial operations
in the Asia-Pacific. At the same time, it wanted at least a small
slice of the carve-up of Iraqs resources and markets, notably
via Australian Wheat Board (AWB) exports.
Canberras mercenary calculations were highlighted last
week by the release of documents from the official inquiry into
the AWBs payments of bribes to Baghdad to secure wheat sales
to Iraq under the UN oil for food program.
The records show that within weeks of the invasion, Australian
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer assured Australias biggest
mining company, BHP Billiton, that he would help it win control
of Iraqs huge Halfayah oilfield. At the same time, Downer
warned the company that its push would be very sensitive
because the US-led coalition had denied there would be blood
for oil.
Records of a meeting between Downer and BHP executives in London
in May 2003 show that BHP was also lobbying influential figures
in the US and British governments, including US Vice-President
Dick Cheney, and had a key contact in Baghdadformer Shell
Oil of America boss Philip Carroll, who had been handpicked by
the White House to advise the US-installed Coalition Provisional
Authority.
Downer told the executives he would be happy to talk
to the US about the Halfayah bid, but suggested that any
decision would have to appear to come from the Iraqis themselves
because the Australian government had said sincerely that
it had not joined coalition forces on the basis of oil.
Even more significantly, since the invasion of Iraq in March
2003, Washington has provided full backing to the Howard governments
neo-colonial military interventions in the Asia-Pacific, starting
with its dispatch of troops to the Solomon Islands in July 2003.
Three years on, Howard is relying heavily on US support for
his current bid to oust the Fretilin government in East Timor
and reinforce Australian control over the oil and gas in the Timor
Sea. He was only able to dispatch troops into Dili, in what amounts
to an Australian occupation of the tiny half island, on the basis
of the full endorsement of the Bush administration, which sees
Howard as a loyal agent in warding off China and other US rivals
in the resource-rich region.
In his parliamentary reply to Howard, Labor leader Kim Beazley
claimed that Labor opposed the Iraq war, calling it a profound
mistake. The truth of the matter is that, at the time of
the invasion, Labor argued that Australian troops should be deployed,
but with an explicit UN mandate, as was the case in Afghanistan.
Later, Labor called for the troops to be withdrawn, not on
the basis that the Iraq war was a criminal and illegal enterprise,
but in order to shore up Canberras own interventions in
the Solomon Islands and East Timor. Now that Japan has pulled
out of Iraq, the party wants the Al-Muthanna taskforce to leave
as well. Beazley declared that the troops needed to be engaged
in a different missionin the arc of instability, in
the region around Australia ... that is where our focus ought
to be.
In other words, Labor differences with Howard are purely tactical.
It believes that the national interestthat is,
the interests of the Australian corporate establishmentwould
be better served by concentrating military activities in the region,
where substantial oil, gas and other strategic interests are at
stake.
Likewise, in the Senate, both the Greens Bob Brown and
the Democrats Andrew Bartlett called for the redeployment
of the troops from Iraq closer to Australia. While the Greens
posture as an antiwar party, on May 13, the day that two Australian
warships set sail for Dili, Brown issued a media statement declaring
that the events in East Timor proved that Australian troops needed
to be recalled to cover multiple crises in our neighbourhood.
See Also:
Australian Wheat Board inquiry
underscores real motivations behind Iraq war
[11 May 2006]
Lies surround first death
of an Australian soldier in Iraq
[29 April 2006]
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