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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Desperately searching for allies: Washington fetes Australian
prime minister
By Richard Phillips
19 February 2003
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Confronted with mass anti-war protests on a global scale and
diplomatic resistance from France, Germany and Russia, the US
government has been summoning some of its most reliable allies
to Washington in a desperate effort to present an image of a growing
international alliance for war.
Those visiting over the past two weeks include Italian Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Polish Prime Minister Leszek Miller
and Bahrains King Hamad. They have all been given the red
carpet treatment, told what will be required of them in the coming
military onslaught in the Persian Gulf and then paraded before
the US media.
Last week it was Australian Prime Minister John Howards
turn. Howard, who began planning for participation in the war
last June and recently forward-deployed 2,000 troops to the Middle
East, cynically told the media his trip was a peace mission.
Howard faces increasing public hostility to his commitment
to the Bush administrations war against Iraq. For this reason
he continues to argue in parliament and the local media that his
government has made no final decision on whether to participate.
This blatant lie, which Howard has maintained for months, was
blown apart on the second day of his Washington visit.
A journalist at a White House press conference asked Bush if
he considered Australia to be part of his coalition of the
willing. Yes, I do, Bush replied, in front of
a visibly blushing and somewhat shaken Howard. Belatedly sensing
his faux pas, Bush then declared: You know, what
that means is up to John to decide.
But the clearest indication that the Australian prime minister
has given an unconditional commitment to the impending US-led
war was demonstrated by the extraordinary treatment he was accorded
by the White House.
Howard was given unrestricted access to senior administration
officials, who flattered him wildly before the US media. He lunched
with Vice President Dick Cheney, met Secretary of State Colin
Powell and Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld and held a fireside
chat meeting and private dinner with the president.
President Bush told a joint press conference in the Oval Office
that Howard was a close personal friend of mine, a person
whose judgement I count on, a person with whom I speak frequently.
I believe hes a man of clear vision. He sees the threats
that the free world faces as we go into the 21st century... Im
proud to work with him on behalf of a peaceful world and freer
society. Hes a man grounded in good values and I respect
him a lot.
At Bushs private dinner, according to one gushing Australian
media report, the president took Howard out on the balcony
to take in the view of the Washington Memorial, floodlit against
the snow. The informality of the evening was reflected in the
presence of Barney, the presidents black Scottish terrier.
This sycophantic reportage and the royal reception extended
to Howard by both the Bush administration and the Washington press
gallery is a remarkable turn around. In September 2001, a few
days before he arrived in Washington to mark 50 years of the US-Australia
alliance, Howard was bluntly criticised in the New York Times,
Wall Street Journal and other leading US newspapers over
his governments brutal treatment of asylum seekers and refugees.
To add insult to injury, a Los Angeles Times editorial
not only denounced the Australian leader, but also repeatedly
referred to him as John Hunt.
And when Howard committed 1,500 Australian troops to the US-led
intervention in Afghanistan in October 2001, the event was given
little public recognition by Bush and virtually ignored by the
US media, much to Howards chagrin. In fact, one of the few
mentions of the Australian troop deployment was in the Seattle
Times, which went on to describe Howard as dull as dishwater.
But, as one unnamed senior US government official told the
Australian Financial Review last week, Howards current
elevation to celebrity status is bound up with two related factors.
For the US domestic political and media audiences it
was important to show there were respected countries that support
us, and Australia is one of those, he said. The other
is that its important that we are seen sitting down and
consulting with other countries and not just charging ahead. Domestically,
it cuts against the unilateralist charge.
Kurt Campbell, former Pentagon official and head of security
programs at the Center for Strategic and International Studies,
told the newspaper: The fact that Howard is here today is
huge. Any country that steps up to the plate now in support of
the administration will get a lot of credit and will be remembered
for a long time.
Puffed up by his treatment in Washington, Howard attempted
to posture as an international heavyweight, repeating the latest
US policy spin to anybody who would listen. At a joint press conference
with Rumsfeld he declared: Australia does not believe that
all of the heavy lifting on something like this should be done
by the United States and the United Kingdom alone.
[H]ope is to be found in the whole world saying the same
thing and saying it very loudly to Iraq and most particularly,
the Arab states saying, Mate, the game is up,
Howard said. This transparent attempt to present himself as an
ordinary fair-minded bloke from down under
was entirely out of character and obviously scripted by Howards
media advisors.
In New York, Howard met with UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
and Chief UN Weapons Inspector Hans Blix. According to press reports,
the Australian leader told Annan that his organisation could be
permanently damaged if the UN Security Council did
not force Iraq to disarm. Howard said Iraq should either disarm
or face the consequences and called on the UN Security Council
to enforce its resolutions on Iraq in a very direct, authentic
way.
Before the Blix report was handed down, Howard insisted its
delivery would be a very important event. But after
the weapons inspectors report failed to provide the US with
the military trigger it wanted, Howard simply dismissed it. I
dont think in the end it adds to anything much, he
intoned, aping the Bush administrations responses.
Washingtons elevation of Howard into a statesman-like
figure is laughable. One of Australias most intellectually
limited, uncultured and unashamedly provincial prime ministers
in recent years, Howard has developed his political career by
appealing to the most backward-looking and insular elements in
Australia. His newfound praise in Washington last week provides
a measure of the increasingly isolated position of the US government
on the world arena.
On return to Australia last Sunday morningafter meetings
with Tony Blair in London and Indonesian President Megawati in
JakartaHoward told the local media that he would not be
swayed by the mass anti-war demonstrations and arrogantly described
the protesters as the mob.
He went on to make clear the real motivation underlying his
decision to back a war. After repeating the obligatory lies about
weapons of mass destruction and defending world
peace, he stressed the importance of the US-Australian alliance.
Given our position in the world, he said, this is
a very important consideration.
While Howard refrained from providing any details, Murdochs
Australian obliged by publishing an article the next day
entitled Spoils of war a US free trade agreement,
which listed those Australian industries that would most benefit
from a free trade deal.
For the first time in half a century, the newspaper
declared, Australia stands to gain a potential economic
benefit after participating alongside the US in a war. It
predicted the sugar, beef, dairy, filmmaking, drug testing and
research, and service industries would gain the most.
Far from fighting terrorism and making the
world a safe place, the Howard governments slavish
support for a criminal US-led war is bound up with the mercenary
interests of corporate Australia, its economic relations with
the US and its broader financial and strategic interests in the
Asia-Pacific region.
See Also:
US ambassador lambasts Australian Labor
Party leader
[13 February 2003]
Australian government commits to US-led
war in face of growing opposition
[10 February 2003]
Australian prime minister
assists US push for war
[30 January 2003]
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