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WSWS : News
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Rallies in Australia, New Zealand and Asia demand troops out
of Iraq
By our correspondents
21 March 2005
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Demonstrations were held in major cities in Australia, New
Zealand and elsewhere in Asia over the weekend to mark the second
anniversary of the invasion of Iraq and demand an end to the US-led
occupation of the country.
In Melbourne, 1,000 people rallied on Friday evening outside
the State Library and marched through the city centre. Some 3,000
took part in a rally and march in Sydneys Hyde Park yesterday.
Rallies of between 500 and 1,000 took place the same day in Brisbane,
Adelaide, Fremantle and other centres.
Banners and placards at the rallies focused on opposing the
recent announcement by the conservative Howard government that
a further 450 Australian troops will be deployed to Iraq to take
part in the occupation. The Australian troops will be departing
for the Middle East in May, to take up positions in the southern
province of Al Muthanna alongside Japanese and British forces.
Last week, Howard refused to rule out further Australian troop
deployments.
Other banners at the rallies condemned the atrocities committed
by the US military against the Iraqi people, such as the torture
at Abu Ghraib prison and the destruction of Fallujah. As people
marched, they chanted: End the occupation. Troops out now!
The Sydney rally was addressed briefly by released Guantánamo
Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib, who made an appeal for an ongoing
campaign to win the release from US custody of the other Australian
Guantánamo prisoner, David Hicks.
In New Zealand, demonstrations of 150 people took place in
Auckland and Wellington. Approximately 4,500 people marched in
Tokyo demanding the withdrawal of Japanese troops from Iraq. In
Malaysia, an antiwar demonstration of approximately 400 people
outside the US embassy in Kuala Lumpur was attacked by police,
who fired tear gas into the demonstrators.
The rallies in Australia were organised by a network made up
of the Australian Greens, pacifist groups and the Socialist Alliancethe
electoral coalition of middle class protest parties headed by
the Democratic Socialist Perspective and the International Socialists.
The speeches made by representatives of the Greens and Socialist
Alliance were marked by their refusal to make any concrete examination
of the driving forces behind US militarism and the experiences
of the antiwar movement over the past two years. Instead, speaker
after speaker promoted the same illusions in protest politics
that have dominated the global antiwar demonstrations since 2003.
None of the official speakers placed the invasion of Iraq in
the context of the intensifying competition between the major
powers over markets and resources, or the economic and social
crisis wracking US capitalism in particular.
The deployment of more Australian troops was largely put down
to Howards personal stupidity and inexplicable subservience
to the Bush White House. Greens senator Kerry Nettle repeated
several times in Sydney the inane explanation that Howard
just doesnt get it. Howards decisions were,
in fact, based on the conscious calculation that he needed to
dispatch Australian troops to Iraq in order to gain Washingtons
backing for a more aggressive pursuit of Australian strategic
and economic interests in the Asia Pacific region.
The address of radical journalist John Pilger, the keynote
speaker in Sydney, was characteristic of the general approach.
Pilgeras he has done repeatedly since 2003labelled
the invasion of Iraq a paramount war crime. He indicted
the Australian Labor Party (ALP) for its refusal to expose the
criminality and lies of the Howard government, and condemned the
Australian media for its complicity in promoting the propaganda
that has been used to justify both the war and the occupation.
He called for journalists, academics, lawyers and others to break
their silence and speak up against the destruction of civil
liberties taking place under the cover of the war on terror.
Australia, Pilger stated, was a corrupt democracy that
offers no more choice than between a McDonalds and a Hungry Jacks.
Pilgers political perspective, however, was summed up
in his concluding statements. Had it not been for you and
your movement, he declared, I believe Iran and North
Korea would have been attacked by now, and, in the case of North
Korea, nuclear weapons might have been used. Be proud of these
achievements. Be proud that the violent, seedy power of Bush and
Blair and Howard has been exposed by you and that behind their
bravado they are afraid of you and of the millions like you.
Pilgers claim that protests have stopped US attacks on
Iran and North Korea is aimed at preventing a serious examination
of the obvious limitations of the antiwar protest movement. He
failed to answer the most obvious questions: why was the opposition
in 2003 unable to prevent the Iraq invasion, and how is it that
Bush and Howard were both re-elected in the 2004 elections?
The demonstrations in 2003 were rendered politically impotent
due to illusions that the presence of millions of people in the
streets, or bodies such as the United Nations, or even the governments
of France and Germany, would compel the Bush White House to back
down from invading Iraq. In Australia, the illusion was promoted
by the Greens and Socialist Alliance that large demonstrations
would pressure the Howard government into retreating from the
war out of fear of a massive backlash at the next elections.
In the aftermath of the March 2003 invasion, the mass antiwar
movement in the US was subordinated to the Democratic Party, on
the basis that this was the only realistic means of
opposing the Bush administrations militarism. John Kerrys
right-wing, pro-war campaign became the vehicle for suppressing
any genuine opposition to the White House agenda, with the result
that Bush was re-elected.
In the Australian elections, the Greens and Socialist Alliance
argued that the Labor Party was a lesser evil to Howard
and that a Labor government could be pressured to withdraw Australian
troops from Iraq. The subordination of antiwar sentiment to Labor
was a major factor in Howards re-election. The ALP, which
fundamentally agreed with the foreign policy of the government,
refused to make the war an election issue. The conservatives were
able to take advantage of the lack of any alternative and galvanise
votes with a fear campaign that a Labor victory would lead to
higher interest rates.
The organisers of the weekend rallies are among those politically
responsible for channelling antiwar sentiment behind the Labor
Party. The Greens, Socialist Alliance and Pilger oppose the emergence
of an antiwar movement that takes as its starting point the need
for a conscious global struggle against the source of war, the
capitalist profit system, and that fights for the political independence
of the working class from the Labor Party.
In contrast to the organisers, a layer of those who attended
the rallies are beginning to draw conclusions about the need for
a new perspective. A number of people approached Socialist Equality
Party stalls for discussion about the international situation
and purchased literature. SEP members distributed World Socialist
Web Site statements in Melbourne, Sydney, Fremantle and Wellington,
New Zealand.
Meg, a volunteer worker, told the WSWS in Fremantle: America
preaches peace and freedom but how can you free a country by oppressing
it. They are there for their own gainsobviously for the
oil. We need to pull our troops out as its creating more
violence.
Veronica, a local Fremantle resident, said: Ive
been against the war all along. The mass media needs to get their
act together. They just go along with what the government says.
I dont agree with the troop extension. There shouldnt
be any troops there. They are all hypocrites.
Tania Baptist, a legal secretary, said: I dont
know whether protests will do anything. Voting doesnt seem
to mean anything these days or do anything either. I joined the
Greens last year because I thought they were the most visible
alternative but I now think that was a mistake. I have been reading
the WSWS and that has changed what I think.
I think Howard is a criminal and a murderer. I dont
agree with more Australian troops going to Iraq. Nothing is said
about the murder of the Iraqi people.
I was pretty devastated after the re-election of Howard.
I thought I cant believe how stupid people could be.
I thought people would have at least voted Labor. But it isnt
an alternative.
Adam, a safety inspector in Melbourne, said: People need
to be educated about the world we live in. Without knowledge there
isnt any effective action. I get upset when right-wing politicians
and commentators do not get challenged over what they say. All
along the US has been after oil. The war in the Balkans was because
they wanted the oil from the Caspian Sea. Thats part of
the big picture. Thats what I realise now, its part
of the big game.
See Also:
Thousands in cities across US demand an
end to the Iraq war
[21 March 2005]
Europe: tens of thousands protest on
second anniversary of Iraq war
[21 March 2005]
Canada: protests against US occupation
of Iraq in 40 cities
[21 March 2005]
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