|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian prime minister an enthusiastic promoter of the
WMD fraud
By Nick Beams
5 June 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
While the spotlight has been focused on the Bush and Blair
regimes for their role in weaving the web of lies over Iraqs
weapons of mass destruction, attention should also
be directed to the Howard government in Australia. When it came
to promoting bogus threats and circulating outright lies no one
was more vociferous than the Australian prime minister.
The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman recently remarked
that misrepresentation and deception are standard operating
procedure for the Bush administration. The same could equally
be said of the Howard government. After a campaign of lies and
deception targeting refugees during its re-election campaign in
2001the Tampa crisis and the so-called children overboard
affairthe government eagerly joined the Bush administrations
war drive against Iraq, initiated in July-August 2002.
On July 16 last, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer proclaimed
that the world should be worried about Iraqs ability to
build a nuclear bomb, as well as its developing chemical and biological
weapons capacity. Defence Minister Robert Hill said he was not
surprised by claims that Iraq was less than three years
away from developing a bomb.
We believe that Saddam Hussein is continuing with his
program of weapons of mass destruction and that his program included
the desire for a nuclear capability.
Howards first major intervention came on September 16
last year when he claimed that Australian intelligence agencies
had identified attempts by the Iraqi regime to procure equipment,
material and technology used to make chemical and biological weapons.
There was no doubt, he told the parliament, that
Iraq had pursued weapons of mass destruction programs
since 1991 and that evidence from human and technical sources
points to Saddam Hussein having continued or increased his weapons
of mass destruction program.
This involved not only chemical and biological weapons but
nuclear weapons as well, with Australian intelligence agencies
estimating that if Iraq obtained fissile material from overseas,
its nuclear ambition could be achieved in monthsa considerable
shortening of the three-year time frame mentioned just two months
before.
By then, despite all the protestations to the contrary over
the following months, Howard had given an undertaking to Bush
that Australian forces would take part in the military onslaught
against Iraqwith or without a United Nations resolution.
As Hill told the Senate on the same day: Actions are sometimes
legitimate without an authority of the Security Council.
Howards next major intervention came on the eve of US
Secretary of State Colin Powells presentation to the UN
Security Council on February 5. In an address to the Australian
parliament he set out to explain why Iraqs possession
of chemical and biological weapons and its pursuit of a nuclear
capability poses a real and unacceptable threat to the stability
and security of our world.
There was no equivocation or qualification. The Australian
government, he told the parliament, knows that Iraq
has chemical and biological weapons and that Iraq wants to develop
nuclear weapons. We share the view of many that, unless checked,
Iraq could, even without outside help, develop nuclear weapons
in about five years.
There was, he insisted, compelling evidence to support
these beliefs within the published detailed dossiers of British
and American intelligence. Interestingly the time frame
for the supposed development of nuclear weapons was somewhat flexibleit
varied from a matter of months, to less than three years to about
five years.
Iraq, Howard insisted, continued to work on developing nuclear
weapons with uranium being sought from Africa that has no
civil nuclear application in Iraq. This claim was based
on a document that has now been exposed as a crude forgery.
According to Howard, material from the CIA showed that: All
key aspectsR&D, production, and weaponisationof
Iraqs offensive biological weapons program are active and
most elements are larger and more advanced than they were before
the Gulf War. Altogether the speech contained around 30
references to weapons of mass destruction.
Some five weeks later, however, the weapons of mass destruction
claims were starting to wear thin in the absence of any concrete
evidence.
Consequently, in his address to the National Press Club on
March 13 Howard decided that it was necessary to spice up the
rhetoric and broaden the grounds for the US-led onslaught that
was about to be launched.
Australian intelligence agencies, including the Office of National
Assessments (ONA), he reported, had concluded that Al Qaeda had
the intention to acquire chemical or biological weapons and an
interest in radiological and nuclear weapons. But he was forced
to acknowledge that his evidence would not pass muster if presented
in a court of law and he could not produce any link between Iraq
and Al Qaeda. Nevertheless, it was necessary to proceed because
final proof would only be provided in a Pearl
Harbour situation.
Howards assertions were exploded in an article published
on March 16 by former ONA senior analyst Andrew Wilkie, who had
resigned on March 11 over the governments plan to join the
invasion of Iraq.
According to Wilkie, the Iraqi military was weak
and its weapons of mass destruction program disjointed and
contained. Moreover, the governments argument that
Saddam Hussein had to be removed before he passed on weapons
of mass destruction to terrorists was flawed because
there is no hard evidence of active co-operation between Baghdad
and the extremist network linked to Al Qaeda.
The real reason behind the plan to invade Iraq was US strategic
interests and the Australian governments support for the
US at any cost, he wrote.
Wilkies comments are sure to take on added significance
in the coming weeks. This is because, as the weapons of
mass destruction lies further unravel, the perpetrators
may well look for an escape route, with the claim that they were
given flawed intelligence.
Judging by comments reported in the Sydney Morning Herald
on Monday, this seems to be Robert Hills approach. On
the basis of what we understood, the action was the right action
to take, he said. If it turns out that there were
flaws in what we understood, then I think we ought to say there
were flaws. But its too early to say that.
The attempt to put the blame on intelligence sources is undermined,
however, by Wilkies comments in the lead-up to the war.
The analyst was basing himself on intelligence information he
had seen and which was being forwarded to the government.
According to a report published in the Sydney Morning Herald
on May 27, Wilkie maintains that Australian intelligence officials
warned the Howard government that US reports exaggerated Iraqs
weapons of mass destruction program and its links to terrorist
organisations.
For years, ONA has looked sceptically on some of the
US information on Iraq and communicated this scepticism to [the]
government. It was the Australian government that decided to make
a big issue of the WMDs, not the analysts. They ignored advice
that it [the WMD threat] was overstated.
Doubts within the ONA over US intelligence were even more pronounced
when it came to links with Al Qaeda. On this issue, Wilkie described
some of the US claims as mystifying.
The collapse of the WMD fraud not only exposes the role of
Howard and his ministers. It raises the question of how they were
able to perpetrate the fraud so easily.
In the first place stands the mass media, which endlessly repeated
the lies, fabrications and distortions. The second key prop was
the opposition Labor Party, which endorsed the demands
for the disarming of Iraq and dropped any pretence
of opposition to the war virtually as soon as the first missiles
were launched.
Howard will be hoping for continued support from both these
quarters as the full extent of the deception becomes clear. He
will no doubt receive it. The mass media will go along with the
flawed intelligence line while the Labor Party leaders
will keep their mouths shut for as long as they can.
But in the not-so-distant future the truth will out: Not only
was the invasion of Iraq a war crimea pre-emptive strike
as defined by the Nuremberg Trialsbut it was conducted on
the basis of a Big Lie campaign comparable to anything undertaken
by the Nazi regime.
See Also:
US government lied about Iraqi
weapons to justify war
[31 May 2003]
Britain: Blair caught in lies
over Iraqi WMDs
[31 May 2003]
Pretext for war exposed
CIA-backed exile was source for Times scoops
on Iraqi arms program
[28 May 2003]
No Iraqi weapons of mass destruction?US
media scoundrel shrugs his shoulders
[17 May 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |