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Australian government backs a US war against Iraq
By Mike Head
9 August 2002
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Even as discussions continue in Washington over the scale and
possible pretext for a military attack on Iraq, the Australian
government has already telegraphed its willingness to participate.
In recent weeks, Prime Minister John Howard, Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer and Defence Minister Robert Hill have all offered
support for a war against Iraq, whenever and wherever it is launched.
In his latest statement, Howard declared in a radio interview
last week that a US attack was more probable than not
and that America was likely to request Australian
involvement.
Whatever its final form, any US military operation will constitute
a war crime of historic proportions. The various plans being canvassed
in Washington would see up to 250,000 troops deployed for a one-sided
onslaught against a relatively small country, with appalling consequences
for the people of Iraq and the entire region. Estimates of the
likely civilian death toll range as high as 10,000 in Baghdad
alone.
During the 1990-91 Gulf war, up to 250,000 Iraqi soldiers and
an unknown number of civilians were killed, as high-tech US war
planes bombed the countrys major cities. Much of the countrys
economic capacity was destroyed. Since then, ongoing UN sanctions,
which continue to be policed by the Australian navy, have contributed
to the deaths of an estimated half a million children from malnutrition
and disease.
In many European capitals and among the United States
allies in the Persian Gulf regionnotably Saudi Arabia, Turkey
and Jordanthere 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 US is seeking control over Iraqs oil reservesthe
second largest in the worlda fear that is keenly felt in
Beijing and Tokyo, both dependent on Gulf oil.
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 Washington,
Downer declared that only a fool would seek to appease
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Trying to appease Iraq will
only allow Iraq to continue to build its weapons of mass destruction
and that will have very serious implications for the world as
a whole.
Downers remarks, an allusion to British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlains reluctance to go to war against Adolf
Hitlers Nazi regime, imply that anyone who questions Washingtons
war plans is guilty of prostration before a potential global dictator.
This turns reality on its head. In the first place, Hitler headed
a major capitalist power bent on expansion across Europe; Saddam
is a petty tyrant in a country and a region long oppressed by
the major powers. Secondly, it is the US, not Iraq that is proposing
an invasion.
Thirdly, no evidence has been produced that Iraq has assembled
chemical, biological or nuclear weapons, while the US is known
to have stockpiles of each. The US and its allies have demanded
that Iraq perform the impossible and prove a negative: that it
has no such weapons, or even the capacity to manufacture them.
Given the technologies involved, this is tantamount to requiring
the destruction of the countrys remaining industrial and
scientific facilities.
Several days after Downers Washington remarks, Hill went
even further. Without waiting for a US invitation, he suggested
that Australia could send an armoured brigade to take part in
a war against Iraq. When several military strategists pointed
out that Australias armycurrently heavily committed
in East Timorhad no such unit ready to be deployed at short
notice, Howard sprang to his ministers defence, insisting
that a brigade was available.
These statements follow Howards own trip to Washington
in June, when he aligned himself with Bushs aggressive militarism
in the face of European and Asian disquiet. He reiterated his
firm and faithful commitment to the global war
on terrorism, hailed the US President as a champion of freedom
and welcomed Bushs first strike doctrine.
Tactical differences
Within Australias business, military and diplomatic establishment,
the Howard governments stance has provoked revealing tactical
differences. No one in these circles has expressed the slightest
opposition to a US invasion of Iraq, or to an Australian military
involvement. Criticisms have been expressed, however, of the premature
timing of the governments statements and their potential
damage to diplomatic and trade relations with Middle Eastern and
Asian countries.
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 Iraq under the
UN food-for-oil sanctions regime were worth $829 million
last year.
According to a July 29 editorial in the Australian Financial
Review: Mr Downer may have jeopardised wheat sales to
Iraqour second-largest customerby appearing overly
enthusiastic about prosecuting a war with Iraq. To some extent,
the same thing might be said about Robert Hill, the Defence Minister,
for his rush to embrace Americas assertion of rights to
take pre-emptive action.
The Sydney Morning Herald echoed these comments and
raised wider anxieties about the international fallout from the
rush to back Bush, notably in Asia, the destination of 57 percent
of Australian exports. Downers remarks were premature
given that there are serious doubts whether Mr Bush could
muster the international support his father enjoyed for military
action against Iraq after it invaded Kuwait.
Other commentators raised the danger of diverting scarce military
resources to distant Iraq, when they might be needed closer to
home in the Asia-Pacific region, long regarded as Australias
own sphere of influence. An article in the Australian Financial
Review last week warned of the potential challenges
facing Australia across the great arc of unstable, dysfunctional,
failed and failing nations to the north. The past period
has seen Suhartos fall and ongoing turmoil across Indonesia,
fighting in East Timor, civil war in the Solomon Islands, a coup
in Fiji and military mutinies and the near breakdown of the political
system in Papua New Guinea.
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 Australia, a
relatively weak and small power, can protect its commercial and
strategic interests is to secure Washingtons patronage.
In the post-September 11 environment of increasing US unilateralism,
this means offering unreserved support to the Bush White House.
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 Americas 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 deepand in our view, essentialUS
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 Washingtons
approvaland promises of logistical and military backing
if neededwas it able to insist on leading an international
intervention force. Under the guise of shielding the Timorese
people from pro-Indonesian militias, Howards government
dispatched almost one third of the Australian armys operational
capacity to protect Australian interests, above all in the oil
and gas reserves under the Timor Sea.
Definite domestic calculations are also driving the Howard
governments stance. Just as in the US, where Bushs
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 Labors 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 corporationsthe
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 Iraq, as well as the ongoing
war on terrorism, will also provide the government
with a convenient pretext to continue with its agenda of bolstering
the powers of the security and intelligence apparatus against
political dissent. Howards new anti-terrorism
legislation, which amounts to an unprecedented attack on democratic
rights and civil liberties, recently passed through parliament,
with Labors support, and is ready for use.
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