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Australia: Howards 2001 election lies return to haunt
him
By Mike Head
25 August 2004
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Australian Prime Minister John Howards lies during the
2001 election campaign have caught up with him in the lead-up
to this years scheduled election, for which he has so far
failed to set a date. Last week, two former senior public service
officials came forward with specific evidence that Howard deliberately
deceived the public just two days before the last poll on November
10, 2001.
They broke a three-year silence on the 2001 children
overboard affair, a week after 43 former leading military,
diplomatic and public officials issued a public statement calling
for truth in government and condemning Howard for
lying about why he sent Australian troops to Iraq.
Mike Scrafton, a former senior Defence Department official
who was working in 2001 as an adviser to Defence Minister Peter
Reith, wrote a letter to the Australian newspaper on August
16 in response to the statement of the 43. Scrafton revealed that
he had personally conveyed to Howard, in three telephone conversations
on November 7, 2001, information that demolished the governments
claim that Iraqi and other asylum seekers had thrown their children
overboard in a bid to secure entry into Australia. Howard, Reith
and Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock spent the entire election
campaign vilifying the 250 refugees after their hopelessly overcrowded
and unseaworthy boatsubsequently dubbed the SIEV 4was
intercepted by the HMAS Adelaide on October 7 that year.
Scrafton told Howard that (1) an unreleased military video
of the incident, previously cited by Reith as absolute proof that
the story was true, was inconclusive at best; (2) still photographs
released to the media by Reith purportedly showing children in
the ocean after being thrown into the water by their parents were
in fact taken the next day, after the SIEV 4 sank; (3) no-one
in Defence still believed the governments story to be true;
and (4) an Office of National Assessments (ONA) report supposedly
confirming the governments claims seemed to be based on
nothing but reports of the original unsubstantiated allegations
made by Ruddock.
Scrafton said he had not spoken out earlier because of a culture
of intimidation that had been created inside the public service,
leading him to fear being victimised by the government and its
senior bureaucrats. He took a public lie detector test to verify
his account and said others involved were prepared to testify
to the same effect. A day later, a retired high-ranking official,
former Defence Department media relations chief Jenny McKenry,
corroborated Scraftons account, saying he had related his
conversations with Howard to her the next morning, i.e., November
8, 2001.
Scrafton had been asked to view the video in the hope that
the government could use the footage to shore up its slander,
which had begun to unravel in the face of widespread disgust throughout
the navy. A former navy chief, Sir Richard Peek, had denounced
the governments Nazi-style ban on military personnel
speaking to the media about the incident. In defiance of the censorship,
HMAS Adelaide sailors had told members of the public that the
children overboard allegations were false.
On the morning of November 7, the Acting Chief of the Defence
Force, Air Marshal Angus Houston had officially informed Reith
that children had not been thrown overboard. Later that day, navy
chief Vice Admiral David Shackleton told reporters categorically
that the navy had never reported that children were tossed in
the sea. Ministerial minders then prevailed upon Shackleton to
issue a statement that he was not contradicting the defence minister.
Despite Scraftons unequivocal advice, the next day at
the National Press Club, Howardin his final major speech
of the 2001 election campaignquoted the spurious ONA report
as proof of the accusation. Howard had in fact ordered the ONA,
which is accountable to his department, to produce the document.
Howard deliberately continued the lie because it underpinned
his entire election campaign, based on demonising asylum seekers
and exploiting the war on terror to divert broad hostility
to his governments social and economic agenda. Earlier in
the week, with his internal party polling predicting defeat, the
prime minister had directly intimated that refugees could be terrorists.
His final election-eve newspaper advertisements proclaimed his
central slogan: We decide who comes to this country and
the circumstances in which they come.
Scraftons revelations confirm that Howard, backed by
a small cabal of senior advisers, bureaucrats, military commanders
and intelligence chiefs, and assisted by a compliant media, orchestrated
an anti-refugee scare campaign to ensure the governments
re-election. Such was the hostility to his government that despite
its inflammatory campaign, it barely won the election, ending
up with a narrow seven-seat majority in the House of Representatives.
Hundreds of innocent lives were lost as a direct result of
the governments efforts. Having maligned the refugees aboard
the SIEV 4 (Suspected Illegal Entrant Vehicle Number 4), Howard
and Ruddock nevertheless regarded the interception of the SIEV
4 as an initial failure of Operation Relex, the naval blockade
they had imposed around the north of Australia to detect and turn
back refugee boats. The HMAS Adelaide had fired warning shots
at the rickety boat, boarded it and towed it back toward Indonesian
waters, but the naval crew rescued its passengers when it finally
capsized.
The government was intent on halting the flow of refugees altogether,
a quest that finally succeeded after the sinking of another refugee
boat, the SIEV X, which went down in the waters between Indonesian
and Australia on October 19, 2001, drowning 353 people, including
150 children. Its passengers inexplicably perished in a zone under
constant Australian naval and aerial surveillance, monitored on
a daily basis by the governments top-level People Smuggling
Task Force. Howard falsely claimed that the boat sank in Indonesian
waters and then insisted that Australian authorities knew nothing
of its whereabouts, and therefore no rescue operation had been
possible.
Immediately after the drownings, Ruddock declared that the
deaths may have an upside ... In the sense that some people
may see the dangers inherent in it. After the tragedy, only
one more boat attempted the voyage from Indonesia, and it was
turned back on the eve of the election.
After the election, Howard and his ministers barred Scrafton
and all other ministerial staff from testifying to a Senate inquiry
into the children overboard and SIEV X affairs. As
evidence mounted that the government and its security agencies
had received detailed daily intelligence reports about the SIEV
Xs movements, the gag was extended to a key witness, Rear
Admiral Raydon Gates, who headed a military review of the case.
Despite having the power to subpoena witnesses, including Scrafton
and Gates, the Labor Party members of the Senate inquiry, who
held a majority with the Greens and Democrats, bowed to the governments
wishes and eventually shut down the committee in August 2002.
When the committee majority presented their report, it pinned
all the blame for the children overboard lies on Reith,
who had conveniently retired from politics, while claiming that
no findings could be made against Howard, because of the lack
of evidence resulting from the gag applied to ministerial staff.
As for the SIEV X, the senators completely exonerated the government,
asserting that despite apparent gaps in the reporting
of intelligence on the vessel, it was unlikely that any rescue
operation could have been mounted in any case. Labors capitulation
was deeply rooted in its own complicity in the anti-refugee slanders
throughout the 2001 electionLabor leader Kim Beazley joined
Howard in denouncing the SIEV 4 refugeesand its fear of
the destabilising consequences for the entire parliamentary set-up
of exposing Howards crimes.
A profound political crisis
Howard and his supporters have responded to Scraftons
letter with a typical mixture of dissembling, bullying and character
assassination. Having previously had to admit that the children
overboard claims were false, Howard fell back on his time-worn
defence that he acted simply on advice from the military and intelligence
agencies. At the same time, he attacked Scrafton for not placing
his information before an earlier internal inquiry conducted by
Howards own department. Howards former department
boss, Max Moore-Wilton, labelled Scrafton a weak personality,
without a fearless bone in his body. The vicious character
of Moore-Wiltons intervention only served to underscore
Scraftons reference to the climate of fear established in
the public service by Howard and his minions.
More fundamentally, Howards response reflects a profound
political crisis. Scraftons revelations have become part
of a wider collapse of the governments credibility, following
the disintegration of every fabrication it used to justify joining
Washingtons illegal and disastrous invasion of Iraq.
Scraftons letter prompted a further condemnation of Howard
by Laura Whittle; a sailor who became a national hero after diving
without a lifejacket from the deck of HMAS Adelaide to rescue
children in danger of drowning after the SIEV 4 sank. Whittle
told Tasmanias Advocate newspaper that she and her
fellow sailors had felt betrayed when the incident was falsely
depicted as children being thrown overboard. She said an asylum
seeker who held a small girl over the water was begging naval
staff to rescue her, not threatening to throw her overboard. The
man was wanting to get the child into our inflatable boat and
to safety, she said.
This week, there were further signs of deep-seated recriminations
within the state apparatus against Howard, when anonymous former
intelligence analysts revealed that their agencies had repeatedly
warned him and his senior ministers before the Iraq war that it
would inflame tensions in the Middle East and heighten, not lessen,
the danger of terrorism, contrary to Howards claims.
To exploit the growing sentiment of public revulsion, the Labor
Party released a dossier, Truth Overboard - 27 Lies Told By
John Howard And Counting, listing Howards major lies
since taking office in 1996. But, as they did in 2001-02, the
Labor leaders are continuing to seek to contain the political
crisis by reconvening the same Senate inquiry that whitewashed
the children overboard affair in 2002, so that it
can take evidence from Scrafton and McKenry. Far from calling
for Howards resignation for deceiving the population, they
are trying to push the scandal back into the safe waters of a
parliamentary committee.
Former leader Beazley, who was defence minister in the Hawke
Labor government, and whom Latham recently recalled as Labors
defence spokesman, is playing a central role. While he retains
close links with the military brass and is acting as a conduit
for their grievances, he has dismissed suggestions that Howard
should be forced to quit.
With all the Iraq lies exposed, elements within the establishment
appear to be increasingly worried by the damage that Howard has
done to the credibility of the military and intelligence apparatus,
as well as the political system as a whole. These fears overlap
with anxieties that Howards unconditional backing for Washingtons
militarism could harm Australias economic and strategic
interests in the Asia-Pacific region. There is also concern that
Howards falsifications will make it more difficult to secure
public support for future military interventions, as well as domestic
policies to satisfy the requirements of the corporate elite.
Rupert Murdochs outlets, which remain vehement supporters
of the Iraq war and Howards alignment with the Bush administration,
have expressed concerns that Howards lies have become so
exposed that they have undermined support for the occupation of
Iraq and the governments overall refugee policy. In its
August 17 editorial, the Australian bitterly complained
that Howards unnecessary political bastardry
on his children overboard claims had allowed the moral
middle class and the chattering class to question
his governments legitimacy.
For the Australian to try to distance itself from Howards
bastardry is remarkable. Together with the rest of
Murdochs empire, it has done everything possible to sensationalise
and promote Howards fabrications, from children overboard
to weapons of mass destruction.
These acrimonious rifts in ruling circles are essentially tactical.
Above all, there is alarm at the extent of opposition and resentment
among masses of ordinary people. A Murdoch media opinion poll
this week provided one glimpse of the shift against the government.
It showed that a clear majority of peoplesome 61 percentnow
want refugees to be allowed to enter the country. Three years
ago, at the height of Howards hysterical campaign, the same
poll claimed there was 56 percent support for turning back all
refugee boats.
Then came the news that, according to a recent survey, nearly
half of young people aged 12 to 15 consider that Australia is
an undemocratic and unfair country. Under these conditions, Howard
is clearly floundering. He confronts mounting disaffection not
just on refugee and foreign policy, but on his governments
ongoing assault on public health, education, jobs and working
conditions. Various media polls have estimated that if Howard
called an election now his government would suffer a landslide
defeat, by 6 to 11 percentage points.
All year, Howard has repeatedly encouraged speculation that
he would call an early election, only to pull back on every occasion
after receiving polling warnings that he would be swept from office.
In a sign of desperation, he last week floated the possibility
of delaying the election until next yearhe could call it
as late as May. This would mean taking the risk that George Bush
is defeated in the US presidential election, which would be a
major blow to Howards own chances.
See Also:
People smuggler trial raises
new questions about Canberra's role in refugee deaths
[26 May 2004]
The tragedy of SIEV
X Did the Australian government deliberately allow 353 refugees
to drown?
[13 August 2002]
Howards dirty
tricks campaign committee: How the Australian election was subverted
[19 February 2002]
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