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Zealand
US raises stakes over New Zealands foreign policy differences
By John Braddock
15 October 2003
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The US ambassador to New Zealand, Charles Swindells, last week
prepared a major speech intended to intensify the Bush administrations
interference and bullying over the countrys foreign policy
positions.
The speech was to have been delivered to a special function
at Victoria University in Wellington. It was abandoned after a
large group of antiwar protesters, refusing to give the ambassador
a quiet hearing, drowned him out with speeches and chanting. His
notes were subsequently made available to the press, having earlier
been presented to Prime Minister Helen Clark and Foreign Minister
Phil Goff.
The speech was notable in that for the first time with reference
to New Zealand, the Bush administration explicitly spelled out
its determination to require friendly countries to
forgo any independence in foreign policy and bow to Washingtons
demands, or face the consequences. The occasion was significantjust
two weeks before the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
leaders summit in Thailand, which is being attended by both
President Bush and Prime Minister Clark.
According to press reports Swindells had, on a recent trip
to Washington, been given a blunt message the administration was
frustrated that its positions on Iraq and free trade
were not being portrayed in sufficiently trenchant terms. The
ambassador was told he was required to launch a diplomatic offensive
to have New Zealand review both its 19-year-old anti-nuclear
policy and its commitment in Iraq. The speech was vetted at the
highest levels in Washington, including the State Department,
National Security Council and the White House.
The notes show that, after a few suitably diplomatic introductory
remarks claiming the prognosis for US-New Zealand
relations was very, very, very good, Swindellsa
top Republican fundraiser at the last presidential electionwas
to aim for the jugular. He noted that New Zealand exports $NZ3.4
billion in goods to the US each year, and receives almost as much
in returnmaking the US the countrys second biggest
trade partner.
He then warned that bilateral issues over Iraq
and the anti-nuclear legislation could not be isolated from trade.
Swindells wrote bluntly that the US government was not prepared
to entertain New Zealands interest in a free trade deal
at this time and it was not helpful to unduly
raise expectations about such an agreement.
The ambassador went on to deny any direct link between a trade
agreement and the 19-year ban on visits by nuclear-armed or propelled
warships. However, he immediately declared that the legislation
placed limits on our relationship and impeded closer
co-operation in some areas. With the admonition that friends
and allies are not the same thing, Swindells demanded an
end to this bilateral disagreement, saying that the
US would never just get over it. New Zealand should
not, he continued, be under any illusion that the issue was not
cost-free and that its continuance would inevitably colour
future policy decisions.
In the same context, Swindells turned his attention to New
Zealands failure to send troops to Iraq. I tell you
frankly he said, we were saddened by New Zealands
decision not to participate in the Iraq war. Claiming to
be commenting in sorrow, he underlined that New Zealands
distancing itself from its traditional alliesthe
US, Britain and Australiaover Iraq made it feel as if there
were someone missing when we finally moved against Saddam
Hussein.
Swindells acknowledged the Labour governments commitment
of troops to Afghanistan, and decision to send 60 army engineers
to join in the reconstruction of Iraq. However, he
warned that neither of these moves are now deemed sufficient to
qualify New Zealand as a full participant in the war on
terrorism. Without being specific, Swindells declared that
the bilateral relationship needed to go to another level.
For this to happen, difficult decisions will have to be
made and compromises must be reached. In other
words, New Zealand must be prepared to bow to all Washingtons
ultimatums, or the cost in terms of trade and economic relations
will be severe.
Clark and Goff responded to the release of the ambassadors
notes by saying that they contained nothing new, and rejected
the suggestion that there was any attempt to interfere in New
Zealands affairs. Clark said the nuclear-free policy was
part of the countrys identity as a sovereign nation and
would not be reviewed. However, newspaper editorials were less
sanguine. The Dominion Post labelled the policy an expensive
anachronism and said the US was justified in wanting it
back on the agenda. New Zealand Herald deputy
editor Fran OSullivan used her column to propose, given
the importance of the countries trading relationship, that
it made sense for the government to show its readiness
to listen to the messages being sent its way, even if they
are unpalatable.
The US ambassadors proposed speech follows earlier attempts
by the Bush administration to use the threat of trade access to
influence New Zealands foreign policy decisions. In April,
pressure had been applied to try to dissuade New Zealand from
its continuing attempts to have the US work through the United
Nations over Iraq. What was new in Swindells speech, however,
was the overt linking of trade, the anti-nuclear policy, and the
demand for more direct support of US policy as it becomes deeply
mired and isolated in Iraq.
On this, New Zealand is not only faced with pressure from Washington.
There is increasing evidence that the Australian authorities are
becoming impatient with what they see as New Zealands reluctance
to commit itself to new defence and security demands
being promoted in the wake of the Bali bombing 12 months ago.
Swindells speech comes hard on the heels of a warning by
the Australian high commissioner, delivered on behalf of Prime
Minister Howard, that relations between the countries are at a
turning point and that the two traditional allies
are in danger of drifting apart.
The new exercise of pressure from Washington and Canberra is
a sign of the developing tensions internationally over where each
countryno matter how smalllines up in the so-called
war on terror. In the past, the position of the New
Zealand Labour government has been that, as a small state, its
interests required the international rule of law administered
through the United Nations. It has not, however, been diverted
from acting as a junior imperialist partner in Afghanistan, Iraq
or the South West Pacific.
The Bush administrations use of gangster methodsultimatums,
consequences, intimidation and standover tacticsin
the daily pursuit of its international policy interests, is evidence
of rapidly deepening desperation and recklessness by the major
imperialist powers.
See Also:
New Zealand military to join
occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan
[21 June 2003]
US bullies New Zealand prime
minister into apologising over war comments
[28 April 2003]
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