Australian government backs a US war
against Iraq
By Mike Head
Even as discussions continue in
In recent weeks, Prime Minister John Howard, Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer and Defence Minister Robert Hill have all offered
support for a war against
Whatever its final form, any
During the 1990-91 Gulf war, up to 250,000 Iraqi soldiers
and an unknown number of civilians were killed, as high-tech
In many European capitals and among the United States’
allies in the Persian Gulf region - notably Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Jordan -
there are concerns that the overthrow of Saddam Hussein would have seriously
destabilising consequences in the Middle East and worldwide. There is also
considerable apprehension that the
In the face of these concerns, the Australian government has
gone out of its way to prove itself a loyal ally by offering Bush whatever
diplomatic support it can. Standing alongside US Secretary of State Colin
Powell on July 11 during a visit to
Downer’s remarks, an allusion to British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain’s reluctance to go to war against Adolf Hitler’s Nazi
regime, imply that anyone who questions
Thirdly, no evidence has been produced that
Several days after Downer’s
These statements follow Howard’s own trip to
Tactical differences
Within
One of the main triggers for concern was a recent Iraqi
decision to halve a one million-tonne wheat order signed with Australian
marketing authorities. Despite Australian participation in the US-led blockade
of Iraqi ports, wheat exports to
According to a July 29 editorial in the Australian Financial
Review: "Mr Downer may have jeopardised wheat sales to
The Sydney Morning Herald echoed these comments and raised
wider anxieties about the international fallout from the rush to back Bush,
notably in
Other commentators raised the danger of diverting scarce
military resources to distant
Hugh White of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, a
government-funded thinktank, declared: "We cannot assume that our next
military commitment will be a minor contribution to the next phase of the war
on terrorism on some distant battlefield. It is just as likely to be a major
challenge to our direct interests close to home, where we will have to play a
much bigger part in the response."
Strategic and
domestic calculations
While mindful of this regional volatility, the Howard
government has concluded that the only way of ensuring that
The Murdoch media, which only months ago was castigating the
Howard government for turning its back on Asian diplomacy, has spelt out these
considerations with typical bluntness. In a July 24 column, Paul Kelly,
editor-at-large of the Australian, accused of "wishful thinking"
those who questioned the need to back any US strike against Iraq.
"September 11 has created a new strategic challenge for America’s
allies" and, regardless of any short-term commercial costs, Australia had
no choice but to join an Iraq war. Anything less would imperil the 50-year US
alliance upon which Australian defence policy has rested since World War II.
“The alliance framework makes it hard for Australia to say ‘no’ without
damaging consequences,” Kelly concluded.
In a little reported speech in Dallas on July 12 during his
US visit, Downer revealed how closely the government hopes to engage the US as
its regional guarantor. He indicated that the Howard government regards the
1999 intervention in East Timor a model for future US-backed deployments in the
region. He expressed gratitude for the "important diplomatic and military
assistance" that the US provided in 1999, describing the Timor operation
as a "microcosm of the deep - and in our view, essential - US commitment
to the security of the Asia-Pacific region."
Without American support, the Howard government could not
have sent troops to East Timor. Only once it had obtained Washington’s approval
- and promises of logistical and militarry backing if needed - was it able to
insist on leading an international intervention force. Under the guise of
shielding the Timorese people from pro-Indonesian militias, Howard’s government
dispatched almost one third of the Australian army’s operational capacity to
protect Australian interests, above all in the oil and gas reserves under the
Definite domestic calculations are also driving the Howard
government’s stance. Just as in the US, where Bush’s war plans provide a timely
distraction from an accelerating political and economic crisis, fuelled by the
collapse on Wall Street and continuing revelations of corporate criminality, so
too the Howard government is keen to dispatch Australian troops to Iraq as a
diversion from its own political problems.
Last year, facing deep popular hostility to declining living
and working conditions, growing economic insecurity and worsening social
inequality, the government seized upon the arrival of refugee boats and the
September 11 events to mount a massive diversion. Aided by Labor’s complicity,
it focused its entire election campaign in October and November on "border
protection" and the "war on terrorism."
Having done so, however, the government has proved incapable
of pushing through the agenda demanded by Australian corporations - the further
slashing of social spending, a radical restructuring of workplace relations,
the privatisation of the telecommunications company Telstra and the removal of
controls on media ownership. Nearly nine months on, the government is under
growing pressure from the ruling elite to break out of its impasse.
Involvement in a new assault on
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