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Australian governments terror alert in Aceh
backfires
By Mike Head, Socialist Equality Party candidate for Werriwa
24 February 2005
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Since September 11, 2001, one of the standard operating procedures
of the Howard government has been to ramp up fears of terrorism
whenever it has been in political trouble.
In the lead-up to last years federal election, for example,
a string of terrorist charges were suddenly laid against Muslims,
amid lurid media headlines about terror cells operating
inside the country. Many months later, no evidence has yet been
produced of any such cells and several of the accused
men have been released on bail, because judges were not convinced
that they represented any threat to the community.
The latest effort, which involved the issuing of yet another
vague and unsubstantiated terror alert last Saturday,
has backfired rather quickly.
Claiming to have received dire intelligence reports, Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer warned that unidentified terrorists
might be planning to attack foreign aid workers in Indonesias
tsunami-devastated Aceh region.
New information [has been] received by the government
concerning possible terrorist planning for attacks against foreigners
involved in relief efforts, Downer claimed in a statement.
The government is working closely with Indonesian authorities
and other governments involved in the relief effort to address
this new threat information.
Simultaneously, Downers Department of Foreign Affairs
and Trade (DFAT) posted a travel advisory insisting that because
of recently received new information, only large,
recognised agencies with comprehensive security plans and Indonesian
military support should stay. All others, particularly individuals
seeking to participate in humanitarian relief efforts,
should get out. No details were provided, initially throwing a
number of aid agencies into disarray.
Prime Minister John Howard weighed in personally, damning those
allegedly responsible for the threat. It is immensely distressing
that at a time like this, people should be threatening violence
and terrorism, he said during a visit to New Zealand. It
is a reminder of who we are dealing with. It is beyond the pale
in every sense of the word, given the absolute horror that the
people of Aceh have been through. The threats of violence
by terrorists were a reminder of the depraved human beings
they are.
But within hours, both the Indonesian and US governments dismissed
Canberras claims. Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono,
who held a press conference in Aceh late on Saturday, said there
was no evidence of any threat to aid workers. The
head of the Indonesian militarys relief operations in Aceh,
General Bambang Darmono, said he had never heard anything
about it. Asked if he had received any information on the matter
from Australian intelligence or military forces, he replied none.
A spokesman for the United States embassy in Jakarta, Max Kwak,
said the US had been told the Australian information was not new.
We will not be changing our travel warnings or anything
like that, he told the Sydney Morning Herald.
The government was left floundering, with Downers spokesman,
Chris Kenny, saying: We put the warning out there in good
faith, and we stand by it. I cant talk specifically about
this piece of information, but you can rest assured we would share
information like this with the Indonesians.
Political calculations
The Howard government may well have specific reasons for trying
to discourage unaffiliated aid workers from travelling to Aceh.
After all, its own military and AusAID operations in Aceh are
being conducted in close collaboration with the Indonesian military,
which has been engaged for years in a vicious war to suppress
separatist sentiment in the oil-rich province.
However, the timing of the dramatic alert points
to more immediate political considerations. This weekend, another
election is loomingthis time in the resource-rich state
of Western Australia, where Howard is campaigning this week in
a last-ditch effort to unseat the incumbent Labor government.
The alert also served Howards purposes in New Zealand, where
he and Prime Minister Helen Clark declared their mutual commitment
to fighting the war on terrorism.
At the same time, just four months after winning last Octobers
federal election, the Howard government confronts major economic
and political problems. Not the least is the collapse of the other
major scare campaign that it mounted during the 2004 election
campaign: that the return of a federal Labor government would
see interest rates rise, causing acute financial difficulties
for families with huge mortgage debts.
Just 24 hours before the Aceh alert, Ian McFarlane
the governor of the Reserve Bank, which sets official interest
rates, confirmed that rates were likely to rise over the next
few months. Further, he warned that Australians would experience
years of lower economic growth rates. McFarlane specifically criticised
government policy for encouraging over-investment in the overheated
real estate market, which has been the basis for the debt-driven
bubble economy under Howard.
Speaking for the corporate establishment, the bank chief demanded
that the government bring forward a range of unpopular measures
to further slash working conditions and enrich the wealthiest
layers of society: new tax incentives for business, proposals
to push people off welfare and into work, and plans to drive up
productivity rates.
Recent weeks have been dominated by fresh revelations exposing
the governments lies and coverup on the Iraq war and prisoner
abuse. Released Guantánamo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib has
given details of Australian officials being present while he was
beaten and tortured, while former top-level weapons inspector
in Iraq, Rod Barton has refuted the weapons of mass destruction
fabrications and blown the whistle on the involvement of Australian
officials in the interrogation of Iraqi detainees.
The shocking case of Cornelia Rau, and the governments
refusal to apologise for the 10-month detention of the Australian
woman, has re-ignited the opposition to the mandatory detention
of asylum seekers, while leaked documents have uncovered blatant
vote-buying by the government last year in the form of grants
for dubious regional projects. Last week, a fresh scandal erupted
over the expulsion of an Israeli diplomat.
By the weekend, media commentary began to appear for the first
time since the federal election pointing to growing unease within
the ruling coalition over Howards continued leadership.
Things could get worse for a leader who is increasingly
seen to be out of touch with his Coalition colleagues, Glenn
Milne noted in the Australian on Monday. The newspapers
chief political reporter, Steve Lewis, reported: People
want to know when hes planning to go.
Labor jumps to the rescue
It seems that (apart from Helen Clark) the only ones to give
the Aceh alert any credence were Labor leader Kim
Beazley and his shadow foreign affairs minister, Kevin Rudd. Interviewed
on the Channel Nine Sunday program, Beazley declared: Well,
if a government gets a threat like that youve got to take
it seriously.
Rudd went one better by solidarising himself with Howards
efforts to demonise the alleged terrorists. He issued a media
statement, which said: Its obscene that terrorists
could potentially threaten Australian aid workers delivering humanitarian
assistance in Aceh.
This rush to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the government
is no aberration. On every issue in recent weeks, Labor has striven
to minimise the political damage to the government. It agreed
to a cover-up inquiry by a former police commissioner into the
Rau affair; joined the government in vilifying Habib and denying
him the right to appear before a Senate committee to answer unsubstantiated
allegations against him; and dropped its questioning of the government
over Bartons devastating accusations. And after receiving
an intelligence briefing, Rudd told ABC radio that he would make
no comment on the Israeli expulsion.
The underlying reason is not hard to fathom. Any unravelling
of the governments credibility on the war on terrorism
would be just as damning for Labor. The party has aligned itself
unconditionally behind the so-called war, backing the invasions
of Afghanistan and Iraq (while advocating a UN resolution to legitimise
the latter), stepped-up Australian military and police mobilisations
in Indonesia and the Pacific, and the handing of police state-style
powers to the security and intelligence agencies.
Its only criticisms of the Howard government have been that
it has focussed too much on Iraq, while failing to pursue the
war aggressively enough in the Asia-Pacific region,
where Australian capitalism has major strategic and commercial
interests. Thus, in his statement on the Aceh issue, Rudd said:
Australia has not yet won the war on terrorism in South
East Asia and this most recent warning, reflected in DFATs
Travel Advisory, is a timely reminder that Australia must develop
a comprehensive counter-terrorism strategy for South East Asia.
See Also:
Australian government commits more troops
to Iraq
[23 February 2005]
Socialist Equality Party to contest Australian
by-election
[15 February 2005]
Australia: recycled Labor leader says
he will act for the wealthy
[10 February 2005]
The Australian 2004
election: the secret of Howard's "success" Part 2
[4 November 2004]
The Australian 2004
election: the secret of Howard's "success" Part 1
[3 November 2004]
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