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Australian Prime Minister goes "all the way" in
Washington
By Mike Head
20 June 2002
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Amid mounting apprehension in European and international capitals
over the Bush administrations increasingly unbridled militarism,
Australian Prime Minister John Howard went out of his way to identify
himself with Bushs policies, both foreign and domestic,
on a visit to Washington last week.
Making his third trip to the United States in less than nine
months, Howard reiterated his firm and faithful commitment
to Bushs global war on terrorism which already
involves Australian Special Forces in Afghanistan. In an obsequious
display, he lauded Bush as a champion of freedom who
had provided magnificent and exemplary
leadership, not only for the US but also for mankind generally
around the world. In one speech and media interview after
another, he repeated ad nauseam that the US had no
better friend anywhere in the world than Australia.
The last time Howard journeyed to the US, at the end of January,
he was alone in the world in praising Bushs now notorious
axis of evil speech, in which the US president labelled
Iran, Iraq and North Korea as terrorist states. On this visit,
he became the first foreign leader to hail Bushs avowed
intention to take pre-emptive military action, including nuclear
strikes, wherever American interests are threatened.
Howard arrived in the US capital just after Bush unveiled a
fundamental shift in US foreign policy, jettisoning the Cold War
doctrines of nuclear deterrence and containment and
adopting a first strike policy of unilaterally attacking
so-called terrorist and rogue states. Many governments
in Europe and some in Asia, notably Chinas, quickly opposed
the US first-strike plan, warning it could heighten international
tensions.
But Howard immediately backed Bush. The point that is
made by the President is that when you are dealing with people
who are prepared to launch terror attacks, simply waiting for
an attack to occur even though you may have a capacity to defer
something by pre-emptive action is negligent to say the very least,
he said. [Its] downright indifferent to the interests
of your country. When Vice President Richard Cheney, speaking
at a White House dinner, made clear that the new doctrine could
mean unprovoked nuclear strikes on countries alleged to be harbouring
terrorists or weapons of mass destruction, Howard
insisted on thanking him for the clarity of his message.
The fawning continued throughout Howards five-day stay.
After a short meeting with Secretary of State Colin Powell, Howard
could hardly wait to tell reporters about the prospects of an
US-led attack on Iraq. While Bush had no plans on the table
yet, Howard indicated his support for a strike, declaring that
he expected to be consulted before the operation began.
Following lunch with CIA chief George Tenet, Howard immediately
adopted the Bush administrations support for Israeli military
assaults on the Palestinians and refusal to negotiate with Palestinian
Authority chairman Yasser Arafat. Echoing Bush almost word for
word, Howard branded Palestinian suicide bombings as evil
and insidious and insisted that you can understand
the anger and frustration and the retaliatory instincts of the
Israelis.
Fresh from a White House briefing, the Australian prime minister
publicly shifted ground on the proposed International Criminal
Court, which the Bush administration has opposed because US military
personnel could be indicted for war crimes in Afghanistan and
elsewhere. For the past four years, the Howard government has
campaigned for the court internationally, touting it as a key
human rights objective. After his briefing, Howard described
Washingtons argument as very powerful.
Howard made a particular point of backing the White House in
flouting international law and suppressing basic democratic rights.
He emphasised that he had no objection at all to the indefinite
detention of two Australian citizensDavid Hicks and Mamdouh
Habibby the US military at Camp X-ray in Cuba. Together
with hundreds of other alleged enemy combatants, Hicks
and Habib have been held incommunicado without any charge or hearing
and interrogated for months in clear violation of the Geneva Conventions.
Howard insisted they had been properly taken into custody.
He also explicitly aligned himself with Bushs right-wing
domestic policies, claiming there was a close affinity between
Australian and American national and social values. He extolled
the virtues of competitive capitalism, decency
and hard work and reliance on families as the best
social welfare system.
Howard made it somewhat obvious that he was angling for US
backing for Australian military operations in the Asia-Pacific.
He urged the United States to pursue its new doctrine in the region;
US troops, already stationed in Japan and South Korea, are now
back in the Philippines. Australia welcomes and encourages
a full and active engagement by the United States in the Asia
Pacific, he said. We stand ready to work in partnership
with America to advance the cause of freedom, particularly in
our shared Pacific region.
For his efforts, the Bush administration rewarded him with
fleeting access to the corridors of power, including meetings
with several cabinet members and congressional leaders. Howard
also addressed a joint session of Congress, where administration
officials filled the chamber with staffers, military officers,
school children and diplomats in order to camouflage the tiny
turnout of some 50 legislatorsless than 10 percent of the
total. Bush attended a dinner where Howard was elected to chair
the little known International Democratic Union, a grouping of
right-wing conservative parties launched in the 1980s by Ronald
Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.
At a final White House photo opportunity, the US president
expressed gratitude for Howards support, describing it as
comforting that Australia would be with the United
States at the end of this war. Bush even indicated
a personal liking for his visitor. The United States has
a got a great friend in Australia and Ive got a personal
friend in the prime minister, he declared.
Nevertheless, Howard left empty-handed. One of the main purposes
of his visit was to secure some commitment to a free trade agreement
between the two countries in the face of increasing US protectionism.
If we achieve it, we would be linked with the most powerful
economy the world has ever seen, and that is something worth trying
for, he told reporters. Australian officials went so far
as to describe his proposal as the most important Australian initiative
since the ANZUS military treaty was signed 51 years ago.
In his address to Congress, Howard briefly raised concerns
about the US Farm Bill, which allocates $US180 billion ($A370
billion) in agribusiness subsidies over 10 years, evidently in
the hope of obtaining concessions from Bush. Before the speech,
Howard held out his hand for a deal by dismissing talk of taking
action against the US under World Trade Organisation rules. But
Bush gave him short shrift, merely raising the prospect of negotiations
with Canberra some time in the future, if Congress were to grant
him fast-track powers to forge international deals.
A major dilemma
Within days of Howards return to Australia, Defence Minister
Robert Hill officially endorsed the US first-strike
doctrine, making Canberra the only government in the world to
do so publicly. Hill announced an extension of Australian involvement
in Afghanistan until November at least and further indicated that
Australian troops would join an assault on Iraq.
As some media outlets noted, Howards sycophancy revived
memories of Liberal Prime Minister Harold Holts all
the way with LBJ speech in 1966. Holts pledge committed
Australia to full participation in the decade-long Vietnam War
in which more than three million people were killed. That conflict
ended in ignominious defeat for the US and its allies. Howards
policy embraces an even more reckless and potentially catastrophic
war drive under Bush.
Howard was the first Australian prime minister invited to address
the US Congress since another doting politician, Labors
Bob Hawke, in 1988. Like Hawke, who was the first in the world
to commit military forces to the Gulf War launched by Bushs
father in 1990, Howard regards unqualified support for Washington
as essential, regardless of economic and diplomatic collateral
damage.
Since World War II, Australian military and foreign policy
has been predicated upon the American alliance. As
Howard reminded his audiences, Australian troops were dispatched
to Korea in the 1950s, Vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s, the Persian
Gulf in the 1990s and now Afghanistan.
Over the past three decades, however, the relatively weak Australian
capitalist class has faced an historic dilemma. While it has remained
militarily reliant on the US, its main export markets have shifted
to Asia. During the 1980s and early 1990s, the Hawke and Keating
Labor governments developed an orientation to key Asian regimes,
particularly Indonesia, China and Japan, and pursued the establishment
of an Asia Pacific Economic Community (APEC) free trade zone.
After winning office in 1996, Howards Liberal-National
Party government began to re-direct military and diplomatic policy
toward Washington. Whereas Keating signed a 1995 military pact
with Suharto in Indonesia without consulting the US, the demise
of Suhartos dictatorship saw Howard fall back on the ANZUS
Treaty as the linchpin of Australian foreign policy. Japans
economic slump throughout the 1990s and the stock market fed boom
in the US during the second half of the decade added impetus to
the shift.
These pressures have intensified under Bushs increasingly
unilateralist policy, both militarily and economically. Washingtons
seizure upon the September 11 events to launch an indefinite global
war on terror has been accompanied by America
first protectionism on many fronts, including steel and
agriculture. With hopes dashed of obtaining free trade
access to regional and world markets via APEC and the World Trade
Organisation, many in Australian ruling circles fear being left
out in the cold as Bush pursues special deals with favoured regimes,
such as Singapore, Mexico and Chile.
The Murdoch owned media has frequently poured scorn on Howard
in the past for allegedly turning his back on Asia. It evinced
a different tone on this Washington visit. Theres
no doubting John Howards considerable political achievements,
which were recognised by the international fraternity of conservative
politicians in the American capital this week, an Australian
editorial claimed.
One of Murdochs spokesmen, Australian foreign
editor Greg Sheridan, weighed in with a comment piece subtitled,
More power to John Howard for a job well done in Washington.
Only recently, Sheridan accused Howard of ignoring Asian governments
and undermining Australian interests. In last weeks praise
for Howard, Sheridan pointed to Washingtons abandonment
of multilateral international relations. From the Farm Bill and
other protectionist measures, it was clear that the US is
now going to discriminate in trading matters between friends,
non-friends and foes.
Other media outlets revealed continuing anxieties about tying
Australian interests so closely to Washington. In the Australian
Financial Review, for example, Tony Walker panned Howards
visit as a love fest and a puppy dogs
trip and warned that a sort of global pax Americana
does not necessarily correspond with ones own interests.
An accompanying cartoon depicted Howard sitting on sheriff
Bushs knee, directly invoking memories of Howards
debacle at the height of the 1999 East Timor crisis, when he was
forced to retract comments suggesting that Australia would operate
as the United States deputy sheriff in the Asia-Pacific.
Financial Review reports also voiced nervousness about
the concessions Washington was likely to demand under a free trade
pact, including the scrapping of foreign investment controls,
pharmaceutical price restraints and quarantine restrictions on
US farm produce.
A Sydney Morning Herald editorial raised concerns about
international opposition to a US war against Iraq, pointing to
the growth of anti-American sentiment in the Middle East, another
lucrative Australian export market. With the new US doctrine
on the table, Australia must urgently assess where the national
interest and Americas strategic agenda diverge, it
declared.
See Also:
Howard government complicit
in detention of Australian citizen by US military
[26 April 2002]
Father of Australian POW denounces
illegal detention at Guantanamo Bay
[17 April 2002]
Australian, British and US
lawyers challenge detention of Guantanamo Bay prisoners
[11 March 2002]
Australian detainee at Guantanamo
Bay abandoned by Howard government
[8 February 2002]
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