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Australian Labor prime minister elect reassures our
great friend and ally the United States
By Peter Symonds
27 November 2007
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The last remaining member of the Bush administrations
coalition of the willing that invaded Iraq in March
2003Australian Prime Minister John Howardwas ignominiously
ejected from office last Saturday. The scale of his electoral
defeat was underscored by the fact that Howard became only the
second sitting prime minister in Australian political history
to lose his own seat.
Spains right-wing government, led by Prime Minister Jose
Maria Aznar, was swept from office in 2004 on a wave of opposition
to the presence of Spanish troops in Iraq. Tony Blair was forced
to step down as British prime minister in June, in large part
because of the overwhelming popular hostility to the war in Iraq.
Following the defeat of Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski last
month, Polish troops will be withdrawn.
Many other countries that joined Washingtons criminal
venture in the aftermath of the invasion have also departedJapan,
the Philippines, Italy, Hungary, New Zealand, Portugal, the Netherlands,
Lithuania, the Ukraine and Thailand, among others.
As the US media emphasised in the wake of Saturdays election,
President Bush has lost one of his staunchest allies.
During recent years, Mr Howard was unabashedly in the American
corner at times when other world leaders were keeping their studied
distance... Mr Howard could at times sound more hawkish than Mr
Bush on the need to stay the course when the war was going badly,
the New York Times commented.
During the election campaign, neither the Labor nor Liberal
parties wanted a public debate over the US-led occupations of
Iraq and Afghanistan, instead assiduously burying the issue. There
is no doubt, however, that hostility to these wars was a major
factor in the ousting of the Howard government. An opinion survey
by the US Studies Centre at Sydney University in July found that
64 percent of respondents were opposed to the war in Iraq and
50 percent opposed Australias involvement in Afghanistan.
The survey also noted a dramatic drop in confidence in the US
as a positive force in international affairsfrom 66 percent
in 2001 to 37 percent this year.
However, anyone thinking that the incoming Labor government
will alter course in any significant way is going to be rapidly
disappointed. In his victory speech on Saturday night, Labor prime
minister elect Kevin Rudd pledged to work with Australias
international allies, specifically extending our greetings
tonight to our great friend and ally the United States as
well as to friends and partners in Asia and Europe.
Following a phone call from Bush on Sunday, the Labor leader
went one step further. After announcing that he would visit Washington
as early as possible, Rudd added: I said to
President Bush and I emphasised to President Bush the centrality
of the US alliance in our approach to our future foreign policy.
Rudd made this position absolutely clear last December, when
he assumed the Labor leadership, declaring he was rock solid
on the US-Australia alliance. His limited promise to withdraw
550 Australian combat troops from Iraq was designed to placate
overwhelming popular opposition to the war, while offering guarantees
to the Bush administration that a Labor government would remain
firmly committed to the bogus war on terrorism. Rudd
has emphasised that any withdrawal will be staged
and in consultation with our allies.
Under the new Labor government, between 300 to 400 Australian
soldiers will stay in Baghdad on security and headquarters assignment
and a further 700 navy and air force personnel will remain in
the Middle East. Labor has never had any principled opposition
to the war in Iraq, and thus the Rudd government will not in any
way challenge the ongoing US-led occupation, which has cost the
lives of an estimated one million Iraqis. Moreover, Rudd may well
bolster the number of Australian troops involved in the US-led
war in Afghanistan as well as in Canberras own neo-colonial
operations in East Timor and the Solomons.
The US and international media have clearly understood Rudds
reassurances to the Bush administration. Time described
Labors two main foreign policy itemswithdrawal of
troops from Iraq and ratifying the Kyoto protocolas largely
symbolic, pointing out that only a third of the Australian
deployment in the Middle East would be pulled out over seven months.
On foreign policy, Rudd is expected to stick largely to
Howards way. Australia will remain a rock solid
friend of the US but reserve the right to act independently.
The Wall Street Journal was critical of Labors
support for the UN, but nevertheless concluded nothing much would
change in Australian foreign or domestic policy. For now,
that [Labors policy] likely means pulling somebut
not allAussie troops out of Iraq, a war that he has consistently
denounced. He will likely keep soldiers in Afghanistan, where
they are doing some of the toughest fighting, but for the wrong
reasonsa Rudd government would look to the UN for legitimacy,
not to its own moral compass.
In its editorial yesterday, the British-based Financial
Times noted approvingly: Australian businessmen and
investors have rightly greeted Mr Rudds victory with equanimity.
His fiscal policies look as conservative and sensible as his predecessor.
Turning to foreign policy, the newspaper pointed out that Rudd
had quickly softened the political fallout from Labors partial
withdrawal of troops and ratification of Kyoto. He was careful
to try to keep Mr Bush sweet by hailing Australias
great friend and ally the United States.
None of the commentary referred to what is most likely to be
the immediate foreign policy test confronting the new Labor governmentpreparations
for a US military attack on Iran. With less than a year to go
in office, Bush is far more interested in Labors attitude
to the regime in Tehran, than arrangements for the redeployment
of a few hundred Australian troops from Iraq. There are signs
that Rudd has already offered guarantees of Australian support
for a US military action against Iran.
In early September, Bush flew into Sydney for the Asia Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum declaring that Iran and Iraq
were the top items on his agenda. After meeting with Howard and
his cabinets National Security Committee, the US president
met with Labor leader Rudd on September 6. By all accounts, this
was a very amicable encounter, which was extended by Bush from
30 to 45 minutes. While the partial withdrawal of Australian troops
from Iraq was raised, Bush undoubtedly used the meeting to sound
Rudd out on Iran. And he was not disappointed.
Australian warships and personnel are currently in the Persian
Gulf, working with the US fleet. The head of the joint naval task
force in the northern region of the gulf is currently an AustralianCommodore
Allan du Toit. According to the British-based Sunday Times
in October, Australian special forces have been operating with
their US and British counterparts along the Iraqi border, and
possibly already inside Iran. In his talks with Rudd, Bush was
concerned that such cooperation would continue under a Labor government.
Since those talks, the Bush administrations studied neutrality
towards the Australian election stands in stark contrast to its
treatment of former Labor leader Mark Latham prior to the 2004
election. Like Rudd, Latham called for a limited withdrawal of
Australian troops from Iraq. In an unprecedented intervention
into domestic Australian political life, top US officials, including
Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, publicly declared that any
Australian withdrawal would threaten the US-Australia alliance,
forcing Latham into a humiliating back down.
A formal statement released on Sunday by the White House, after
Bush telephoned Rudd to extend his congratulations, contained
not a hint of tension or disagreement. The United States
and Australia have long been strong partners and allies and the
president looks forward to working with this new government to
continue our historic relationship, it declared. Bush had
clearly received the assurances he was after.
Labors unconditional support for US militarism places
it on a collision course with the millions who cast their votes
for the party on Saturday. Having tossed Howard out, they will
quickly become disillusioned with a government that not only maintains
Australian troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, but commits itself
to a new US military adventure against Iran.
See Also:
Australian voters throw Howard government
out of office
[26 November 2007]
The only genuine alternative for the
working class
Vote 1 Socialist Equality Party on November 24
[23 November 2007]
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