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Howard confirms Canberras commitment to a US-invasion
of Iraq
By Richard Phillips and Peter Symonds
17 March 2003
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In the midst of furious international manoeuvring in and around
the United Nations, Australian Prime Minister John Howard stepped
forward last Thursday to pledge his unwavering support for the
Bush administration and its planned war of aggression on Iraq.
In a keynote speech to the National Press Club, Howard did
everything but formally declare that his government would commit
Australian troops to a US-led invasionwith or without the
passage of a second resolution in the UN Security Council authorising
military force. He bluntly told his audience that a second resolution
was not required as a matter of international law
and was only needed politically in terms of the united voice
of the international community.
With war imminent, the US is becoming increasingly isolated
diplomatically. Despite a concerted campaign of bribes and bullying,
it appears unlikely that the Bush administration will obtain the
support of a majority in the UN Security Council. France and Russia
are threatening to veto any resolution giving the green light
for war. Without a UN vote of support, the Blair government is
facing an internal Labour Party revolt.
As a result, Australia, a second-rate power in the South Pacific,
has assumed increasing importance in US efforts to prove
it has firm allies. Significantly Bush phoned Howard just prior
to the National Press Club speech and the audience included US
ambassador Tom Schieffer, who later described the speech as a
very powerful statement, and British High Commissioner Alastair
Goodlad.
Howards speech was pitched at further ingratiating himself
to Washington by demonstrating he would not be swayed by widespread
opposition to the war within sections of the political establishment
and among broad layers of the public. In the leadup to the press
club luncheon, Howard fed media speculation that he would provide
damning new intelligence linking the Hussein regime in Iraq to
Al Qaeda and other terrorist outfits. No such evidence was produced.
His speech consisted of a crude restatement of discredited
lies and unsubstantiated assertions that Washington has repeated
ad nauseum as the pretext for an unprovoked act of aggression
against a small, and largely defenceless, country. Stripped to
its basics, his argument consisted of the following: Al Qaeda
wants so-called weapons of mass destruction. Iraq
has such weapons. Unless Iraq is disarmed, it could hand these
weapons over to terrorist groups.
The prime minister offered no evidence that Iraq actually possesses
nuclear, biological or chemical weapons. In fact, weeks of intense
activity by teams of UN inspectors have confirmed claims by Iraq
that both its weapons and its production facilities were destroyed
or dismantled in the aftermath of the 1990-91 Gulf War. Parrotting
Washingtons line, Howard contemptuously dismissed the work
of the UN inspectors, declaring that the whole matter boiled down
to a question of Iraqs attitude. In other words,
there is nothing Baghdad could say or do that would deter Howard
from supporting war.
Howards speech also failed to demonstrate any link between
the Hussein regime and Al Qaeda, which, as many commentators have
pointed out, are ideologically hostile to each other. Just two
days before the press club luncheon, intelligence analyst Andrew
Wilkie quit his job with Australias leading intelligence
agency, the Office of National Assessments (ONA), and declared
a war on Iraq was unjustified. As Howard was speaking, Wilkie
was telling an antiwar protest outside parliament house that he
had seen no evidence linking the regime in Iraq to Al Qaeda.
Howard used his speech to reiterate his complete backing for
the Bush administrations global war on terrorism
and its doctrine of preemptive strikes. A war on Iraq was necessary,
he argued, in order to send a message to other rogue states
such as North Korea. His comments amounted to an open-ended commitment,
not only to a war on Iraq, but to further military adventures
as Washington pursues its broader goals of global dominance.
Sections of the state apparatus and the political establishment
have expressed fears that Howards slavish support for Washington
will cut directly across Australias national interests
by disrupting economic and political ties in Asia and making the
country the target of Islamic extremists. Howard bluntly dismissed
such concerns and reaffirmed unapologetically his
backing for the US-Australia alliance. Australians should
never forget, he declared, that no nation is more
important to our long-term security than the United States.
The prime minister is gambling that by backing the Bush administrations
global ambitions, including control of Iraq and its huge oil reserves,
Canberra will secure US support for its own neo-colonial objectives
in the Asia-Pacific region. Howard is well aware that Australias
military intervention in East Timor in 1999, to grab the lions
share of Timor Gap oil and gas, could only have taken place with
US backing.
The most cynical aspect of Howards speech was his mimicking
of Bush and Blairs professions of concern for the Iraqi
people. He trotted out a list of Saddam Husseins brutal
crimesneglecting to mention that Australia, following the
US, lined up with the regime in the 1980sand then argued
that war was needed to end the suffering of Iraqis. While the
Hussein regime is a vicious dictatorship, a US-led invasion will
no more bring peace and democracy to Iraq than it did to Afghanistan.
The countrys top political journalists allowed Howard
to posture at the press club as a leading statesman. Not one of
them directly challenged his threadbare arguments or the lies
on which they were based. No one referred to the underlying interests
driving the Bush Administrations plans for domination in
the Middle East, or Howards motives in backing it. The questions
carefully sidestepped any mention of oil.
A couple of journalists politely pointed out that Howard had
offered no proof that Iraq had links to Al Qaeda. Howard responded
dismissively that it was not a matter of evidence but of judgement.
Were not talking about proving, beyond reasonable
doubt, to the satisfaction of a jury at the Central Criminal Court
in Darlinghurst, if you excuse my Sydney origins. This was
a line he smugly repeated several times. No one objected that
the Iraqi people were being condemned to death and destruction
on the basis of arguments that would fail to establish a prima
facie case against a petty criminal.
The medias reaction to Howards performance reflects
a certain closing of the ranks now that war is imminent. The following
day the Murdoch-owned media predictably celebrated Howards
speech as a masterpiece. Other newspapers, which have previously
expressed certain reservations, joined in the praise. The Australian
Financial Review declared that the prime minister deserves
respect, noting only that the American plan to ignore the
UN, while risky, was also understandable.
The so-called liberal Melbourne-based Age and
the Sydney Morning Herald simply regretted that Howard
had not spoken in a similar vein earlier.
The thrust of Howards speech was not directed at winning
over public opinion, which remains overwhelmingly opposed to a
war on Iraq, particularly without explicit UN support. Its purpose
was to prove the Australian governments unswerving loyalty
to Washington. In that respect, it was successful. The following
day US Secretary of State Colin Powell duly singled out Howards
address for special mention, emphasising it demonstrated that
the US was not internationally isolated.
See Also:
Australian intelligence analyst resigns,
declaring Iraq war "unjustified"
[13 March 2003]
US-Australia free trade deal: a dubious
payoff for joining Iraq war
[13 March 2003]
As Iraq war looms: Australian government
shuts down parliament for two weeks
[8 March 2003]
Australian legal experts declare
an invasion of Iraq a war crime
[27 February 2003]
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