|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : New
Zealand
New Zealand military to join occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan
By John Braddock
21 June 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Following a series of high-level rebukes and trade retaliation
by the Bush administration over critical statements made by the
New Zealand prime minister of the Iraq war, the Labour government
has decided to send troops and army engineers to Afghanistan and
Iraq.
Helen Clark announced last week that 60 defence force engineers
will be sent to help rebuild Iraq and a contingent
of 100 armed soldiers to operate alongside so-called provincial
reconstruction teams in Afghanistan. The troops will join
New Zealand soldiers already on mine-clearing duty in Iraq and
may be further boosted by the return of a navy frigate to the
Gulf of Oman as well as an Orion reconnaissance aircraft.
Washington immediately moderated weeks of diplomatic hostilities,
warmly welcoming the decision as a meaningful contribution.
State Department spokesman Phillip Reeker declared that New Zealand
had demonstrated a strong and abiding commitment as
a partner in the struggle against terrorism.
The deployment reverses previous undertakings by Clark that
her government would not send peacekeepers to Iraq
except as part of an official UN mission. The army engineers,
who will be based in southern Iraq, will operate under the direct
control of the Britishthe joint invading force and occupying
power. In her statement to parliament, Clark attempted to deny
there was any inconsistency, claiming New Zealand had always been
prepared to join in post-war operations so long as there was appropriate
multilateral cover.
According to Clark, the required cover was provided
by UN Security Council resolution 1483, which recognised the US
and Britain as occupying powers in Iraq and opened the door for
other nations to provide humanitarian and reconstruction
work. Clark argued that the UN resolutionfor which New Zealand
had lobbied and advocatedprovided a very
sound legal basis for the deployments.
In fact, the governments troop commitment flowed directly
out of the decision by France and Germany to support the UN resolution.
Prior to this, New Zealands position on the invasion of
Iraq had been dictated by a certain anxiety within ruling circles
to sustain a careful balancing act between its major trading partners
in the US and Australia on the one hand, and Europe on the other.
When the French government performed its volte-face, insisting
the priority was to look to the future, and Germanys
ambassador to the UN declared [w]e cant undo history,
the New Zealand government seized its chance to fall into line.
Clark swiftly received plaudits from the local media. The New
Zealand Herald, which had previously admonished Clark for
her unnecessary taunting of the US over the war, declared
the government had positioned New Zealand well. Observing
that while the UN had been correct to declare there was no real
and urgent threat from Saddam Hussein to justify the US-led invasion,
it was sensible that the UN should now endorse participation
in the countrys repair. It would have been churlish
in the extreme to refuse to help with reconstruction
simply because the US and Britain had acted in defiance of the
UN Security Council.
Most significantly, according to the Herald, a by-product
of the governments decision to do the right thing
in Iraq would be to repair our standing in Washington.
This was urgent and necessary because the US remained the
ultimate defender of our way of life, the dominant
economy and vital to global trade, aid, health and
environmental agreements.
Behind Clarks volte-face
In the second week of the US-led invasion, Clark had infuriated
Bush administration officials with an off-the-cuff observation
that if Democrat Al Gore had been elected president, the war might
not have happened. Pressured by White House threats that it would
blacklist New Zealand in forthcoming free trade talks, Clark was
forced to apologise to Bush for any offence she had
caused.
Clarks grudging apology was, however, insufficient to
settle the matter. In late May Robert Zoellick, a Bush administration
trade official, told the US House of Representatives Agriculture
Committee that a free trade deal between the US and New Zealand
was not on the agenda. Not only were many of New Zealands
agricultural exports to the US sensitive to American
farmers, there were some things done recently that would
make it harder to carry [a deal] through Congress.
The following day, the Herald carried a front-page report
quoting an un-named US government spokesman who confirmed that
Clarks comments about Gore had been the final straw
costing New Zealand any chance of securing a free trade deal.
The spokesmanbelieved to be Phillip Wall, the deputy chief
of mission at the US Embassy in Wellingtonclaimed that the
prime ministers remarks amounted to a personal attack
on Bush and were considered in Washington to be beyond the
call.
The affair caused intense consternation in New Zealand ruling
circles. An editorial in the Herald described the officials
remarks as constituting an extraordinarily strong
attack on Clark. The editorial denounced this sort of destabilisation
as coming close to interfering in the countrys affairs,
exactly what the US takes exception to. The US Embassy
in turn issued a formal statement, not repudiating the charge,
but linking the demise of the trade agreement to a range of factors
including political, security and other elements of the
bilateral relationship.
The statement was taken as an explicit move by the Bush White
House to go much further than previous US administrations in connecting
trade issues to foreign policy and security matters.
Alarmed at the turn of events, Jim Anderton, the third-ranked
cabinet minister and leader of the Progressive Party in the governing
coalition, declared that the US was taking an unfair, punitive
attitude to New Zealand, one that smacked of bullying.
He went on to attack the earlier statement by the un-named US
official as palpably an attempt to influence opinion in
this country against the prime minister.
Behind the scenes, however, the government was rapidly yielding
to US pressure. Anderton prepared the way by pointing to New Zealands
contribution to 33 UN peacekeeping operations since
1952. He claimed that per head of population, the country had
sent more of its military personnel on overseas missions than
most other countries, including the US. According to Anderton,
New Zealand had proved its willingness to pull its weight
in international affairs, and deserved a little more
respect and consideration.
When Clark announced the troop deployment two weeks later,
she vigorously denied it had anything to do with pacifying the
US. It was, she said 100 percent about New Zealand being
a good international citizen. While Defence Force planning
for further operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan had been under
way for some time, Clark emphasised that the governments
actions would be seen in a very positive light by others
who happen to think these are important issues.
What remains largely unsaid is that New Zealands ruling
elite has definite economic and strategic interests of its own.
Notwithstanding its criticisms of the war, the Labour government
celebrated the US victory, with Clark asserting that a stable
Middle East would be good for a meat-producing nation like
New Zealand. Before the war, Iraq had been a good
market for New Zealand. In its aftermath, Clark predicted
a lot of foreign money going in to rebuild capacity
which could provide substantial opportunities for New Zealand
business.
Clarks troop deployment has nothing to do with peacekeeping
or rebuilding Iraq. Despite the small numbers involved,
the New Zealand Labour government has telegraphed its support
for the neo-colonial occupation of Iraq at the very point where
Bush and Blair are facing growing criticism internationally as
well as mounting popular resistance inside Iraq. The significance
of the countrys involvement was highlighted by the Herald,
which expressed the hope that the more non-combatant
countries participated in restoring law and order
in Iraq, the more acceptable Western occupation may be.
See Also:
US bullies New Zealand prime
minister into apologising over war comments
[28 April 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |