|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
US military chief calls for staging post base
in Australia
By Mike Head
22 January 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The Pentagons highest-ranking military officer, Joint
Chiefs of Staff chairman General Richard Myers, called for even
closer military ties with Australia when he visited the country
for three days last week at the conclusion of a nine-day East
Asian tour. Officially, the purpose of his Australian stop was
to thank the Howard government for its unequivocal participation
in three US-led warsin Afghanistan, Iraq and the war
on terror.
Prime Minister John Howard placed such importance on the visit
that he interrupted his summer vacation to greet and be photographed
with the general. Howard has aligned his administration totally
with the US in the hope of securing ongoing American backing for
Australian interests and operations in the Asia-Pacific region.
Last month, Canberra confirmed that it would join the Bush administrations
controversial missile defence program despite concerns
expressed in China, Indonesia and throughout the region about
the programs aggressive intent.
At a January 16 media conference, Myers let it be known that
Washington expects a good deal more from its junior partner. While
describing the Australia-US strategic relationship as one of the
closest in the world, he revealed that he had proposed the establishment
of a US training and logistics base in northern Australia and
reiterated the need for the Australian military to maintain its
interoperability with American forces.
In later media interviews, Myers referred to the base proposal
as a pre-positioning staging post, which would house
equipment, including tanks, aircraft, fuel and ammunition, to
allow the rapid deployment of US troops into theatres of war.
He insisted that, flowing from a global reassessment of its use
of forces, the US had developed a places, not bases
doctrine, which required permanent training facilities in various
parts of the world.
Myers referred to the proposed base as a joint training facility
and was at pains to deny that US troops would be garrisoned there.
Yet, the US already has free run of training bases in Australia.
It has conducted large-scale exercises with Australian forces
for years, including the Tandem Thrust war games, staged every
two years since 1995. The last two Tandem Thrust exercises, in
Queensland in 2001 and in the US-controlled Marianas Islands in
2003, rehearsed invasions of other, unspecified, countries in
the region.
Myers did not say precisely why the US needed a dedicated training
base, or where it would be sited, leading to renewed speculation
of US troops being shifted to Australia from Korea or Japan. Questioned
by reporters, Myers declared that the proposal was still at the
scoping stage with his Australian counterpart, General
Peter Cosgrove. He added that the Pentagon had favoured the idea
for some time, but the closer links developed over the past two
years had given the plans new vitality.
Australia is already host to key US bases, including the satellite
surveillance station at Pine Gap in central Australia (officially
labelled a joint US-Australian facility) and the US naval communications
facility at North West Cape, both of which could be utilised as
part of the missile defence scheme. In late 2002, in the lead-up
to the Iraq invasion, the Howard government agreed to allow the
US military to use the Stirling naval base in Cockburn Sound on
the west coast of Australia to rotate crews on US warships operating
in the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. It also offered use of the
nearby Pearce air force Base in Perth, the Leeuwin Army Barracks
and ship-to-shore and air-to-ground bombing facilities at Lancelin
Defence Training Range.
Myers told the press conference that he had discussed with
Cosgrove the imperative for Australia to maintain
interoperability with the US. He emphasised the so-called revolution
in military affairs, involving the use of sophisticated
weaponry, communications and intelligence-gathering. His remarks
point to intense pressure on Canberra to purchase American military
hardware, including the new M1A2 Abrams tank, rather than the
German-built Leopard 2 tank that is under consideration to replace
the Australian armys aging Leopard 1 tanks.
Myers trip coincided with a week of negotiations in Canberra
between US and Australian officials and military commanders over
what equipment the Australian armed forces must acquire in order
to participate in the anti-missile weapons system. No details
have been released, but it is clear that the signing of a Memorandum
of Understanding, scheduled for May, will be conditional on Australia
making specific multi-billion dollar purchases from the US.
So far, Defence Minister Robert Hill has indicated that Australia
will buy three new $1 billion-plus destroyers during the next
decade. They would be equipped with the current SM-2 model of
anti-ballistic missile, but could have the systems in place to
upgrade to the SM-3, which is still being trialled by the US Navy.
Orion aircraft may also be armed with cruise missiles.
Howard used Myers visit to emphasise his governments
whole-hearted commitment to the missile defence scheme, frankly
arguing that it was essential in order to maintain the US alliance.
He said it was common sense for Australia to join
the program because its long-term security depended on its special
relationship with the United States.
Howard declared that the missile plan would not rupture
or upset relations with our friends in the region.
He brushed aside a warning from the Australian Strategic Policy
Institute, a government-financed think-tank, of a possible diplomatic
backlash from nuclear-armed China. Most nations understood Australias
decision, Howard claimed, and it was extraordinary
to criticise a countrys bid to give itself the capacity
to defend itself against a missile attack in the future.
However, Indonesian MP Djoko Susilo, a member of the Indonesian
parliaments commission for security, defence and foreign
affairs, said Australias purchase of warships with long-range
anti-missile capabilities would be seen as an aggressive gesture.
Why do they need to buy that kind of sophisticated ship
if they dont want to bother Indonesia? he asked. I
know that Australian defence policy is to protect Australian from
attack by northern countries. But which country is near northern
Australia? Its obviously Indonesia.
A January 19 editorial in Rupert Murdochs Australian
strongly backed the establishment of a US military training base.
It provided an unusually candid assessment of the advantages that
many in ruling circles hope to gain from American support for
Australian operations in the region. It referred to the experience
in East Timor, where Washington endorsed an Australian-led intervention
in 1999. Under the guise of protecting the Timorese people from
pro-Indonesian militia violence, the Howard government deployed
troops to secure corporate Australias grip over the oil
and gas fields in the Timor Sea.
The lesson of East Timor is that we may always be called
upon to commit troops to assist our neighbours, and thus will
always rely on the intelligence, logistical and diplomatic support
of the US, even if not on its direct involvement, the editorial
stated.
Beyond its increasing dependence on the US military alliance
to bolster Australian capitalisms strategic interests, the
Howard government is anxiously seeking a commercial payoff, both
in terms of Pentagon contracts for some Australian-based military
suppliers and through a Free Trade Agreement with the US. Fifty
Australian negotiators are in Washington this week for what the
government has described as a final round of talks, in the hope
of consummating a trade deal before the US election campaign.
See Also:
Australian government
joins Bushs missile defence system
[29 December 2003]
Australian cabinet
rubberstamps military commitment to Iraq war
[22 March 2003]
West Australian base
to be used for US navy sea-swap trial
[15 November 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |