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Australian government extends unconditional support to US
war drive
By Linda Tenenbaum
20 September 2001
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The Howard Liberal government has extended unconditional and
open-ended support for the Bush Administrations war
against terrorism, including, if requested, the commitment
of Australian troops under US command. Its position echoes that
of the Hawke Labor government in 1990, which was the first in
the world to unreservedly pledge military backing for the US-led
war against Iraq.
More than two dozen Australian air force personnel have already
been deployed to participate in combat air patrols being flown
over continental US and the government has agreed to a US request
that the frigate HMAS Anzac delay its return from the Persian
Gulf until at least September 23. The Anzac, with a crew
of 164, is part of a US naval task group policing the decade-long
sanctions against Iraq that have been responsible for the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.
On Monday, Foreign Affairs Minister Downer declared in parliament
that the Australian Defence Force was ready to go
as soon as the US called on it. One military analyst commented:
Theyre planning like crazy without really knowing
what they are planning for.
From almost the moment the hijacked aircraft plunged into the
World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, Prime Minister Howard has
been at pains to project Australia as the United States
most loyal ally. The prime minister was in Washington during the
terror attacks, having arrived three days earlier on a state visit
to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the ANZUS Treaty signed between
the two countries and New Zealand in the aftermath of World War
II. On September 9, he was feted at a social function by top Administration
officials, including Vice President Cheney and Secretary of State
Colin Powell. The next day he met with President Bush and issued
a joint statement reaffirming the Australia-America alliance.
Within five hours of the atrocity, and before any evidence
had been assembled as to who the perpetrators were, or where they
came from, Howard declared that Australia would unequivocally
support the US in any action that might be taken.
Being the first Western leader to do so, he was accorded a standing
ovation in the US Congress the next day.
Five days later, and on the heels of the unprecedented decision
by NATO to implement the mutual assistance provisions of its charter,
the Australian parliament invoked the ANZUS Treaty for the first
time, committing Australia to militarily defend the United States.
The resolution stated that the terrorist actions constitute
an attack upon the United States of America within the meaning
of articles IV and V of the ANZUS Treaty. Under articles
IV and V, an armed attack in the Pacific area, or an armed attack
on any of the parties by an outside force, obliges each party
to act to meet the common danger.
The resolution continued: The decision is based on our
belief that the attacks have been initiated and coordinated from
outside the United States. Formally, it is up to the offended
party to invoke the treaty. Moreover the Department of Foreign
Affairs had reportedly advised that it was unnecessary for the
parliament to pass such a resolution. Nevertheless Howard had
it drawn up after consultation with the United States,
insisting that both countries had come to the same position at
roughly the same time.
According to military strategists, the most likely outcome,
at least initially, will be the deployment of crack SAS forces
for covert ground operations, the use of navy frigates as part
of a multinational naval force, air-to-air refuelling facilities
and intensified intelligence gathering through the US spy base
at Pine Gap in central Australia.
The prime ministers zeal in backing the US war drive
has been matched by Opposition Labor leader Kim Beazley, who eagerly
backed the governments resolution. In a letter to Vice-President
Cheney last Friday, stressing Labors bipartisan support
for an appropriate international retaliatory response,
Beazley wrote ...the Commonwealth of Australia speaks with
one voice at any one time in these matters, whatever the political
shape of our national leadership. He went on to assure the
US government that should Labor win office in the next few
months, Australia will remain committed to an international intelligence,
police and military effort against those who committed those atrocities
and those who supported and harbored them.
In the days immediately following the terror strikes, newspaper
editorials attacked any attempt to probe the political reasons
behind them, or any expression of caution or concern with the
governments agenda. An editorial in Melbournes Age
warned: Among the clamoring voices competing to explain
the horror of what has happened there are already some who, while
not purporting to justify the murder of the innocent, have nonetheless
portrayed the terrorist attacks as the result of a moral debt
incurred by the superpower because of its global strategies. This
is the kind of argument that may acquire a superficial plausibility
in seminar rooms where human life is spoken of as a bloodless
abstraction, but in the world of real men, women and children
it will always be untenable.
Murdochs Australian on September 14 thundered:
War has been declared on terrorismand those who do
not answer the call to duty will be exposed as part of the problem.
Other voices within ruling circles, however, have been less
enthusiastic.
The Ages chief political correspondent, Louise
Dodson, in an opinion piece entitled The PM should not slavishly
follow George Ws lead commented:
Howard should wait and see what the US has in mind first,
rather than backing Bush to the hilt no matter what. Howards
challenge is to demonstrate he is a leader rather than a follower,
and that Australias interests are not automatically Americas
interestsno matter how genuinely we feel for Americans.
A comment in Saturdays Australian Financial Review
warned that the governments unprecedented move to
invoke the key Article IV...is a dangerous move. ANZUS is being
invoked blindly, before Australia knows the nature and identity
of the terrorist enemy or the scale and likely long-term consequences
of any US response.
It went on to question the prime ministers unqualified
support for US policy: Perhaps the key question Australia
could urge the US to consider is why so many young Middle Eastern
men believe they have so little to lose that they are prepared
to throw away their own lives, and to destroy the lives of other
innocent people, to die as martyrs in the cause of hatred of the
US.
Another article in the Sydney Morning Herald entitled
Howards blank cheque for Washington may come with
a hefty surcharge pointed out that no other US ally had
been as unconditional as Howard in pledging military involvement...
It predicted that if the more hawkish voices prevail in
the US debate on the appropriate response, there may be significant
Australian casualties and long-term security costs.
Both international and domestic factors lie behind Howards
response. In the first place, the prime minister is desperate
to retain US patronage for Australias economic and strategic
interests within the increasingly volatile Asia-Pacific region.
Last year, a Defence Department White Paper acknowledged the significance
of the ANZUS Treaty for Australian imperialism, describing it
as a key strategic asset that will support our bilateral,
regional and global interests over the next decade and beyond.
Redrafted following visits by US Defence Secretary William Cohen
and US Pacific Commander-in-Chief Dennis Blair, the White Paper
also pointed to Australias military dependence on the US:
The kind of ADF [Australian Defence Forces] that we need
is not achievable without the technology access provided by the
US alliance.
Howard hopes that his unwavering support for Bushs war
drive will serve as a downpayment on future assistance from the
US. His governments intervention into East Timor in 1999,
for example, to protect its gas and oil interests, could not have
taken place without US backing. As Australian journalist
Glenn Milne put it on Wednesday: ... stand by for a significant
commitment from Australia to the current struggle, should Bush
ask. Howard will want our contribution to be noticedand
for good national interest reasons. On the other hand, Howards
opponents are giving expression to longstanding concerns among
layers of the ruling class that any tendency to align Australia
too closely with the United States could harm its long-term relationships
with China, Japan and the Asian region.
Domestically, for the first time in more than a year and just
weeks away from a federal poll, Howard smells the possibility
of electoral success. Having played the race card over the Tampa
asylum seekers he is now playing the war card for all its
worth.
See Also:
Escalating attacks on Muslims and Arabs
in Australia
[20 September 2001]
European declarations of solidarity mask
tensions with the US
[19 September 2001]
Mounting concerns in Britain over US
war drive
[17 September 2001]
Why the Bush administration wants war
[14 September 2001]
The political roots of the terror attack
on New York and Washington
[12 September 2001]
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