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Former top Australian officials denounce Howard for deception
over Iraq War
By Terry Cook
13 August 2004
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With an Australian federal election looming, the Howard government
has been thrown into further crisis following high-level criticism
of its foreign policy and strategic orientation. In an unprecedented
move, 43 former top public servants, diplomats and military leaders
signed a statement published on August 9 in the Sydney Morning
Herald and the Age calling for truth in government
and admonishing Prime Minister John Howard for lying about why
he sent Australian troops to support Washingtons unilateral
war on Iraq.
The statement bluntly asserts: Australia was committed
to join the invasion of Iraq on the basis of false assumptions
and the deception of the Australian people. It continues:
Saddams dictatorial administration has ended, but
removing him was not the reason given to the Australian people
for going to war. The Prime Minister said in March 2003 that our
policy was the disarmament of Iraq, not the removal of Saddam
Hussein. The document warns that the intervention in Iraq
has been destructive and the international system
has been subjected to enormous stress that still continues.
Shaken by the damning criticism, Howard lashed out at the signatories
during question time in parliament on Monday denouncing them as
habitual critics of the Australian government. He
is only too aware, however, that all are pro-establishment luminaries
with years of service in the state apparatus. Some are even Liberal
Party supporters. Their backgrounds only make their accusations
against Howard all the more plausible.
The signatories include figures such as one-time secretary
of the Prime Ministers Department and ambassador to Japan,
John Menadue, former secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs
and Trade and ambassador to the UN and Indonesia, Richard Woolcott,
former high commissioner to Malaysia and ambassador to the UN
Security Council and Thailand, Cavan Hogue, along with retired
Australian Defence Force chief Alan Beaumont and former head of
the navy Vice Admiral Sir Richard Peek.
The statement comes as the government faces mounting political
problems, with every justification for the war on Iraqfrom
claims that the Hussein regime had stockpiled weapons of mass
destruction, to Baghdads supposed connections with Al Qaedarevealed
as barefaced lies. Even Howards pathetic claim that the
purpose of the invasion was to bring freedom and democracy to
Iraq has fallen to pieces, under the impact of ongoing and widespread
national resistance to the occupation, along with evidence of
systematic torture of Iraqi citizens by US forces in Abu Ghraib.
Divisions in ruling circles
The statement of the 43 testifies to the deep-going rift that
has opened up within Australias ruling circles. The signatories
articulate the concerns of powerful sections of the ruling class
that have become increasingly anxious about Howards open-ended
support for Washingtons neo-colonial ambitions. They fear
that, under conditions where the US is regarded with deepening
resentment throughout the Asia-Pacific region, Howards position
could compromise Australias long-term economic and strategic
interests.
This is why the statement warns: It is of concern to
us that the international prestige of the United States and its
Presidency has fallen over the last two years. Because of our
governments unquestioning support for the Bush administration,
Australia had been adversely affected.
Nevertheless, the signatories back the so-called war
on terrorism, which has been used by the Bush administration
and its allies to justify military aggression abroad and the repression
of democratic rights at home. Their worry is that Washingtons
reckless intervention into Iraq will make it more difficult to
employ such a pretext in the future. The statement laments: It
is of regret that the action to combat terrorism after 11 September,
2001, launched in Afghanistan, and widely supported, was diverted
to the widely opposed invasion of Iraq.
While advocating that Australia follow a more independent line,
the signatories are well aware that Australian imperialism is
too weak to stand alone. With this in mind, they declare: We
do not wish to see Australias alliance with the US endangered
but to suggest that an ally is not free to choose if or
when it will go to war is to misread the ANZUS treaty.
The 43 former officials are concerned that the governments
blatant lies about Iraq will undermine the ability of future governments
to win public support for military aggression. Declaring that
a re-elected Howard government or an elected Latham government
must give priority to truth in government their document
insists, Australians must be able to believe they are being
told the truth by our leaders, especially in situations as grave
as committing our forces to war.
That the statement was published in the Sydney Morning Herald
and the Age, the two major Fairfax dailies, adds to growing
evidence that the Fairfax media empire is moving to throw its
support behind Labor and its new leader, Mark Latham, in the forthcoming
election. The statements release certainly served to put
Howard on the defensive. Moreover, the day before its publication,
Fairfaxs Sunday Sun Herald carried an editorial ridiculing
Howards claim that Latham was anti-American because he once
labeled Bush as dangerous, and dismissing the prime
ministers accusation that Labor in government would endanger
the US-Australian alliance.
The editorial declared: Latham has consistently stated
his and Labors support for the US-alliance. It went
on to praise the Labor leader for appointing the unabashed militarist
Kim Beazleywho earned the nickname Bomber Beazley
when he was Minister for Defence in the Hawke Labor governmentto
the critical portfolio of defence. The editorial argued that the
US alliance had weathered many storms and that the
suggestion that a rightwing Labor government would endanger it
is reckless hyperbole.
The editorial pointed out approvingly that the Australian Labor
Party (ALP) had no principled opposition, at any time, to the
Iraq war, inferring that it would have no compunction about using
similar methods, albeit with suitable cover, to further Australias
national interests in the future. The ALP said specifically
it was not anti-war; it was merely pro-UN authority for the war...
See Also:
Australia: cynical shadow boxing between
Howard and Latham over US trade deal
[11 August 2004]
Australian Labor leader backs
down on Iraq troop withdrawal
[25 June 2004]
Australian PM shares a farcical
White House media conference with Bush
[5 June 2004]
Australian government faces
new charges of manipulating intelligence
[28 April 2004]
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