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WSWS : News
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Australian unions guarantee no ban on war materials
By Terry Cook
26 March 2003
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On March 2, a front-page article in the Sunday Herald Sun
reported that the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) would
consider a Victorian Trades Hall Council (VTHC) proposal for bans
on the movement of war materials if the US-led assault on Iraq
went ahead.
No doubt, the news would have come as a surprise to most workers,
since the trade unions have been almost invisible in the mass
antiwar movement. Some unions have belatedly issued low-key calls
for their members to attend antiwar rallies. No significant union
contingents have been seen at the rallies, although tens of thousands
of working people have participated.
If the newspaper article created the illusion that the unions
were about to take decisive action, this was short-lived. Defence
Minister Robert Hill denounced any move to ban war supplies as
appalling and demanded that Australian Labor Party
leader Simon Crean fix this problem today. The official
reprimand was enough to send union officials scurrying to issue
impassioned denials.
VTHC secretary Leigh Hubbard assured Hill the next day that
banning war supplies had never been discussed amongst Victorian
unions or amongst national unions. Any industrial action
in relation to the war would be limited and symbolic in
nature, Hubbard declared. The union movement has never,
and will never, put the safety of either civilians or combatants
at risk.
Hubbard was quickly joined by ACTU president Sharon Burrow.
Unions respected that troops had an obligation to obey orders
from the federal government, she declared. While the ACTU
supported the peace movement, at no time would we oppose
food and materials being sent to support troops.
To make sure there was no doubt, Australian Manufacturing Workers
Union (AMWU) Queensland state secretary David Harrison declared
on March 3 that his union was opposed to war on Iraq, but it did
not serve any purpose to try and deprive them (Australian
military forces) of the means to do their job.
Harrison did not care to elaborate on the job that
the Australian armed forces have been sent to perform. They have
been dispatched to bolster a criminal, one-sided assault on a
weak and impoverished nation in the interests of the US and Australian
ruling elite.
Contrary to Hubbards claims that the unions would never
endanger the safety of civilians or combatants, ensuring a continuous
flow of war materials does precisely that. It will directly aid
the Howard government to pursue its predatory war aims and help
keep Australian military personnel in the field to kill and be
killed.
The rejection by the unions of any action to block war supplies
underscores their transformation over the past 20 years into open
agencies of big business, without a trace of opposition to its
dictates.
In 1967, the Seamens Union of Australia supported rank-and-file
seafarers who refused to man ANL-line ships the Boonaroo and Japarit,
which were carrying supplies for Australian troops fighting with
US forces against the Vietnamese people. Now the unions are blocking
any repetition of even these limited protests.
In the case of the Maritime Union of Australia, its officials
are using the war as an argument for maintaining the countrys
merchant marine. The union recently made a submission to the Commonwealths
Sub Defence Committee, warning that the government may well
have to rely on foreign ships crewed by Islamic extremists to
support any US-led venture in Iraq.
The opposition of union bureaucrats to the blocking of war
supplies does not arise out of concern for the safety of military
personnel. They openly defend the right of the capitalist state
to wage a war of aggression free from any direct challenge by
the working class.
The union officials fear that action against the war could
converge with the general discontent among working people over
the destruction of jobs and social conditions. For these reasons,
they have striven to restrict the antiwar movement to limited
protest actions, while bolstering illusions that war could be
averted through the United Nations or pressure on various governments.
Moreover, the union leaderships accept the discredited pretext
used by Washington to launch its onslaughtIraqs alleged
weapons of mass destruction. On February 6, prior
to the largest antiwar demonstrations in Australias history,
the Labor Council of NSW issued a statement calling on Iraq to
fully cooperate with the United Nations resolutions and allow
the resumption of weapons inspections.
The US, with the assistance of Britain and Australia, has invaded
Iraq not to find its so-called weapons of mass destruction but
to secure control of the country and its oil reserves as part
of broader US plans for dominance in the Middle East. The reactionary
nature of this war has not suddenly changed with the commencement
of hostilities and the sending of Australian troops into battle.
Many times in the past, working peopleinfluenced by the
socialist ideal of international class unityhave opposed
and disrupted the war plans of their own imperialist
governments. Following the October 1917 Russian Revolution, English
dockworkers refused to load guns onto ships for the use of British
forces sent to attempt to crush the first workers revolutionary
government.
As it becomes increasingly clear that the moribund labour organisations
will do nothing to oppose militarism and war, working people will
seek independent methods of struggle.
Already workers have begun to disrupt the movement of war materials,
supplies and troops. In January, British rail workers in Motherwell
refused to man a freight train loaded with military supplies bound
for the Persian Gulf. In February, thousands of ordinary people
in Italy defied the government and blocked military trains used
to carry US forces and military equipment from a northern Italian
base.
A genuine struggle against imperialist war will only take place
in direct opposition to the unions, the Labor Party and all other
agencies of the political establishment.
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