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Ex-general installed as Australian head of state
By Mike Head
4 July 2003
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Australian Prime Minister John Howards appointment of
a former military officer, Major-General Michael Jeffery, as the
countrys next Governor-General underscores the orientation
of Australian foreign and domestic policy.
Selecting the Queens official representativeeffectively
the head of stateis the prime ministers personal prerogative
under Australias constitutional arrangements. Howard has
used this authority to elevate from relative obscurity a career
military officer with specific credentials.
First, Jefferys entire professional life has been bound
up with the development of Australias military security
and intelligence apparatus, from the Special Air Services (SAS)
to the counter-terrorism agencies.
Second, Jeffery has an extraordinary record of participation
in colonial theatres of war, from Malaya to Papua New Guinea,
and has long advocated neo-colonial interventions in the Asia-Pacific
region.
Third, the new vice-regal representative has a track record,
as state governor of Western Australia during the 1990s, of espousing
the most conservative and reactionary social views.
Under conditions where the Howard government has effected a
strategic shift in foreign policy, including participating in
the illegal and aggressive war on Iraq and preparing neo-colonial
interventions in the Pacific, Jefferys appointment marks
a corresponding shift at the apex of the state apparatus.
Howard made the announcement on June 22, after accepting the
resignation of disgraced Archbishop Peter Hollingworth four weeks
earlier. Whereas Hollingworth, a clergyman identified to some
extent with anti-poverty and welfare causes, was appointed in
June 2001 partly to appease mounting hostility to Howards
social agenda, Jefferys appointment serves a very different
purpose.
The mass media, which uniformly welcomed Howards choice,
has made a concerted effort to cover up the implications of his
installation. Headlines and editorials have declared him to be
a man of the people, traditional and politically
super-safe.
But nothing could be further from the truth. As Howard himself
emphasised, Jeffery is the first Australian-born ex-military officer
to occupy the position of governor-general. In fact, Jeffery is
the first military appointee since 1953, when Sir Robert Menzies
called upon former British armed forces chief, Field Marshall
Sir William Slim, in the midst of the McCarthy-style anti-communist
witchhunt.
And Jeffery is not simply an ex-general. He remains the patron
and honorary colonel of the elite Special Air Services (SAS),
which he commanded from 1975 to 1981. He spearheaded the formation
by the SAS of domestic counter-terrorist strike forces
during the late 1970s following the Hilton Hotel bombing and,
as a brigadier, took charge of the Protective Services Coordinating
Centre (PSCC), the federal governments emergency intelligence
nerve centre, from 1981 to 1983.
Not since Gough Whitlam appointed Sir John Kerr in 1974 has
a governor-general been so intimately connected to the secret
security agencies. Kerr, who had a long association with the American,
British and Australian spy networks, brushed aside the norms of
parliamentary democracy in 1975 when he dismissed the elected
Labor government, invoking the so-called reserve powers
of the monarchy.
Like Kerr, Jeffery is highly conscious of the potentially dictatorial
powers held by the vice-regal representative. Asked by reporters
whether he would like to be Australias last governor-general,
making way for a president and a republican form of rule, he vehemently
rejected the suggestion. Jeffery insisted that the governor-generalship
had proven essential to preserving the nations stability.
He specifically referred to the 1975 constitutional coup and to
1932, when a state governor dismissed the NSW Labor government
of Jack Lang.
There is every reason to believe that Jeffery would not hesitate
to use the constitutionally-entrenched reserve powerswhich
include the power to block laws, dismiss a government, dissolve
parliament, assume executive power and take control of the armed
forces as commander-in-chiefin the event that political
disaffection and social unrest threaten the existing political
order.
Jeffery represents a faction of the military and intelligence
apparatus that has long railed against the downgrading of the
armed forces in the aftermath of the defeat of the US and its
allies, including Australia, in Vietnam. He is on record as calling
for the expansion of the armed forces from 26,000 to 32,000, with
a greater focus on suppressing supposed domestic terrorist threats.
At a recent war veterans reunion, Jeffery declared passionately
that the Vietnam War was a just cause in bolstering
the anti-communist governments of Malaysia and Indonesia.
He insisted that the conflict could have been won if only the
military had been free to fight without political restrictions.
This brackets him with various American generals who agitated
at the time for further US military escalation in Vietnam. Some
of them went so far as to advocate the use of nuclear weapons.
Well before the Howard government unveiled its plans to send
troops to the Solomon Islands, Jeffery was a proponent of military
interventions to shore up Australian interests in the region.
The real issues for us are Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and
the southwest Pacific. In PNG and the Solomons, I fear we are
breeding future terrorists, he told the Australian
before his appointment.
Jefferys early military CV reads like a list of colonial-style
postings. He served in Malaya from 1962 to 1964, immediately following
the 1958-60 anti-communist Emergency. During the 1963-65 confrontation
between the Sukarno government in Indonesia and newly formed Malaysiawhich
was backed by Britain and Australiahe was seconded to the
British SAS in Borneo. From 1966 to 1969, in the wake of the US
and Australian-supported military coup in Indonesia, he headed
a Pacific Islands Regiment battalion in the neighbouring Australian
colony of PNG. In 1970, he did a tour of duty as a company commander
in Vietnam, before returning to PNG, where he commanded Australian
forces in the final phase of colonial rule, from 1970 to 1975.
Jeffery returned to Australia in the year of the Canberra
Coup and played a key role in the build-up of the SAS and
intelligence apparatus under the Fraser government from 1975 to
1983. In 1987, Jeffery opposed the Hawke Labor governments
Defence White Paper, criticising it for reducing the armys
capacity to operate on home soil. Apparently for that reason,
he was never promoted higher than Deputy Chief of the General
Staff. In 1993, Richard Court, the right-wing Liberal premier
of Western Australia, plucked Jeffery out of the military to become
that states governor.
Champion of social reaction
As state governor, Jefferys outspoken views acquired
a certain notoriety in WA. When Courts government defied
a public outcry to introduce unprecedented military-style boot
camps for juvenile offenders, Jeffery voiced his public support
for the project. In another speech, he incensed single parents,
claiming that their families were statistically linked to every
major crime, including mugging, violence against strangers, car
theft and burglary.
Jeffery also denounced homosexuals and urged the cutting off
of welfare to Aborigines, declaring that they should assimilate
into European society. His call sparked outrage, particularly
among those for whom assimilation meant forced removal from their
families. He advocated the reintroduction of religious education
in all schools and compulsory pre-marital counselling, insisting
that de facto couples should not be recognised unless they undertook
such courses.
After retiring as state governor in 2000, Jeffery made clear
his intention to continue his political and military activism.
Funded by the federal and state governments and BHP, one of Australias
largest companies, he established a right-wing thinktank and security
consultancythe Centre for International Strategic Analysis,
later renamed Future Directions International. His public pronouncements
included a speech last December calling for the reversal of no-fault
divorce laws, in place since 1976, and proposing an Australian
arc of influence from India to China.
The entire political and media establishment has closed ranks
behind Jefferys appointment in an attempt to overcome the
political crisis caused by Hollingworths forced resignation.
Confronted by allegations that Hollingworth covered-up cases of
child sex abuse in the Anglican Church, Howard initially clung
to the Archbishops defence, anxious to avoid the precedent
of a head of state being removed as a result of mass public pressure.
By early May, however, with organisations throughout the country
repudiating his official patronage and shunning his public appearances,
Hollingworths position had become untenable.
The accommodating response of the parliamentary opposition
partiesLabor, the Australian Democrats and Greensto
Jefferys appointment is particularly noteworthy. They played
the key role in fanning accusations against Hollingworth, demanding
his dismissal for unacceptable conduct, as a means
of attacking Howard while having no real disagreements with his
agenda. But they have had no objections to Jeffery, whose political,
military and intelligence record has been unreservedly embraced.
He is a man who has served his country in peace and war
with distinction, crowed Labor leader Simon Crean. Likewise,
Andrew Bartlett, leader of the Democrats and Bob Brown, his Greens
counterpart, issued statements congratulating the new governor-general.
Their only complaint was that Howard should have consulted more
widely before making the appointment.
See Also:
Australia: Labor reignites
governor-general scandal
[16 May 2003]
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