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Zealand
US bullies New Zealand prime minister into apologising over
war comments
By John Braddock
28 April 2003
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New Zealand Labour Prime Minister, Helen Clark, has been bullied
into extending a demeaning formal apology to the Bush administration
for disparaging comments she made over the conduct of the war
in Iraq. The incident underlines the turn by the White House to
gangster-style methods in every corner of the world and its repudiation
of even the most basic norms of diplomatic protocol.
The threats against Clark follow similar conduct by the US
ambassadors to Australia and Canada, as well as the vitriol hurled
by the Bush administration at the French government for opposing
the invasion of Iraq. In March, the US ambassador to Canada rebuked
the Liberal government of Jean Chrétien for not joining
the invasion saying Americans were upset it had stood
aside from the coalition of the willing. He suggested
Ottawa had left Washington in the lurch at a time of great peril
and broke with diplomatic procedure to support the right-wing
premier of Alberta. In February, the US ambassador to Australia
made an unprecedented public intervention into the affairs of
the opposition Labour Party in order to silence a minority of
MPs who had denounced and ridiculed Bush in parliament.
Clarks offending statements came after she declared in
March that New Zealand would not contribute personnel, without
a UN mandate, to any post-war US-organised peace-keeping
force in Iraq. In what was essentially an off-the-cuff comment
at the end of her press conference, she went on to express some
frustration over the US conduct of the war. The war did not appear
to be going to plan, she declared, with the US command clearly
having expected less Iraqi resistance. Clark then asserted the
war might not have happened at all if Democrat candidate Al Gore
had been elected president.
On April 1, the US embassy in Wellington, responding in particular
to the comment about Gore, issued a statement describing Clarks
comments as regrettable. The statement, couched in
unusual diplomatic language and released without prior warning
to the New Zealand government, constituted a serious diplomatic
rebuke, since it would have required the approval of senior officials
of the State Department in Washington. Clark initially tried to
brush it off, describing her observations as nothing more than
a statement of the bleeding obvious.
Matters, however, did not rest there. Within days, Clarks
comments were taken up by the US National Security Council (NSC).
According to a report in the Dominion Post, the NSC specifically
demanded a please explain from the New Zealand government.
Clarks office confirmed that New Zealand embassy officials
in Washington had been required to meet with NSC officials over
her comments. At the same time, the US Ambassador to New Zealand,
Charles Swindells, held a meeting with Foreign Affairs officials
in Wellington.
US diplomatic representatives pursued the matter vigorously,
indicating through official channels that Clarks dismissal
of her comments as a minor matter was inadequate. In what was
regarded as a second rebuke, further talks with New Zealand officials
were demanded. Foreign Affairs officials strenuously denied they
had been formally summonedregarded far more
seriously than seeking clarificationbut formal
contact at the level of face-to-face discussions between
officials of the two countries went ahead at US insistence.
Clark reacted with anger to media claims that New Zealand had
been ticked off for her remarks, saying she would
not tolerate such interference. However, the issue hit the
spotlight in Washington just as diplomatic efforts to have New
Zealands case for a free trade deal considered were coming
before Congress. Nineteen influential Republicans, including Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist, had recently signed a letter encouraging
Bush to start negotiations on a trade deal for New Zealand. In
support, the letter cited New Zealands major contribution
to the campaign against terrorisma reference to the
governments commitment of SAS troops to Afghanistan and
a naval frigate to the Gulf of Oman.
According to the New Zealand Herald, Clarks
comments put the trade dealestimated to be worth $NZ1billioninto
the firing line. The papers well-connected deputy
editor, Fran OSullivan, wrote that New Zealands trade
negotiators in Washington were left in no doubt that they were
responsible for arranging a retraction.
An influential group of US and New Zealand businessmen was
recruited to apply the required pressure. These included billionaire
Julian Robertson, a Republican with New Zealand property interests,
Craig Heatley, millionaire founder of Sky TV in New Zealand and
a close friend of ambassador Swindells, who wrote a Sunday
Star Times column to attest the support of key local business
leaders for the war, and Stephen Tindall, owner of The Warehouse
retail chain and a key member of the governments Growth
and Innovation Advisory Board, who personally telephoned Clark
to express the angst of NZ business.
Clark rapidly got the message. At a press conference on April
7, she acknowledged that offence had been taken from
her comments, though no offence was intended. Her
apology, she said, had been conveyed to the US administration.
Clark, for the record added: I have met President
Bush several times. I find him as an individual an engaging and
likeable person and it is not my intention to offend him in any
way. She went on to make a belated protest that the US embassy
in Wellington had been out of line for issuing a public
rebuke without first seeking clarification. But the embassy promptly
rejected the complaint out of hand, insisting the affair had been
handled in an appropriate manner and refusing further
comment.
Clark later said the affair caused her great distress
because she was endeavouring to ensure this relationship
[with the US] stays strong despite this difference of opinion
over the war. Pressed in parliament to disclose the text
of her apology, Clark revealed she had simply instructed Foreign
Affairs officials to frame the message in any way they considered
appropriate. She refused to divulge details, leaving it to Foreign
Affairs Minister Phil Goff to confirm she had specifically
requested the apology be conveyed directly to Bush.
Clarks attempt to project a slightly critical attitude
to the invasion of Iraq was dictated by the perceived need within
New Zealand ruling circles to sustain a careful balancing act
between its old friends in the US and Australia on
the one hand, and Europe on the other. But this latest diplomatic
rebuke demonstrates that the US will brook no difference
of opinion on the war, much less any foreign policy independence
on the part of its trading partners. On a visit to the White House
12 months earlier, Clark won the plaudits of editorial writers
and business after Colin Powell described the Labour government
as very, very, very good friends with the Bush administration,
following its commitment of troops to Afghanistan.
On this occasion, however, she was admonished by the Herald
for her unnecessary insult to Bush. The newspaper
felt obliged to remind her there is no point in taunting
a nation that wields such dominating economic influence.
Her correct course, was to remain silent. The governments
stated position of wanting a UN mandate in Iraq, while showing
willingness to play a part in Iraqs reconstruction
was well understood internationally. There was no need, the Herald
continued, for New Zealand to join the conflict. Clark
would need to urgently set about rebuilding bridges.
With the fall of Baghdad, Labour is looking to do just this.
Last week, Foreign Affairs Minister Phil Goff welcomed the Iraqi
defeat, saying few would be sad to see Saddams regime
end. Clark predicted that a stable Middle East
would be good for a meat-producing nation like New Zealand
and the government announced it would be sending to Iraq a team
of 20 Defence Force personnel to assist with clearing landmines,
setting up medical programmes and rebuilding sanitation services.
See Also:
Antiwar demonstrations in New Zealand cities
[14 April 2003]
Antiwar protests follow Australian
Prime Minister Howard during New Zealand visit
[12 March 2003]
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