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Zealand
New Zealand government extends Afghanistan military operations
By John Braddock
18 April 2006
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New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark announced on April 10
that the countrys military intervention in Afghanistan is
to be extended until September 2007. The latest deployment of
a 120-strong Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Bamiyan and
other military postings were originally due to expire in September.
Clark said it was in everyones interests
that Afghanistan had a stable government and the PRT
provided a valuable contribution to this objective. Clarks
comments underlined her governments agreement with and subservience
to the Bush administrations war on terror. I
think the whole world community has an interest in Afghanistan
not deteriorating as it did prior to September 11 as a haven for
terrorist activities, she said.
In fact, the US-led subjugation of Afghanistan has no more
to do with combating terrorism than does the invasion of Iraq.
Afghanistan is part of a wider strategy for dominance of the resource-rich
regions of Central Asia and the Middle East. Afghanistan is adjacent
to both regions as well as to the increasingly important Indian
subcontinent.
New Zealands role in assisting the US to secure the Afghan
front in its global operations has been noted in Washington. The
current foreign policy of the Clark Labour government represents
a shift from its previous anti-nuclear posturing which, in the
mid-1980s, led to the breakdown of the ANZUS defence alliance
with Australia and the US.
Over the past six years, Labour has unerringly movedat
times accompanied by a smokescreen of protests and appeals for
UN resolutionsto accommodate Washingtons demands.
In Afghanistan, the Clark government has backed the US to the
hilt, committing troops from the beginning of the Bush administrations
intervention. New Zealands prompt support for the invasion
earned the plaudits of then US Secretary of State Colin Powell,
who declared the Labour government to be a very, very, very
good friend of the White House.
New Zealand has been involved in military operations in Afghanistan
since December 2001 and the so-called reconstruction team
was deployed in September 2003. Last year the PRT was responsible
for providing logistical support for the bogus Afghanistan elections,
transporting ballot boxes, locating and destroying illegal
munitions and working closely with UN agencies. One of the
key tasks was to disarm the militias opposing the US-backed Karzai
regime.
New Zealand has so far spent $NZ130 million on operations in
Afghanistan. Last weeks decision involves further defence
spending of $27.08 million for the PRT and $3.91 million to cover
Afghan army training and other associated deployment costs. Current
NZ forces are serving under the American-led command, but this
will transfer to NATO in the near future.
Defence Minister Phil Goff boasted last week that New Zealand
was the third country to establish a reconstruction
team and hundreds of defence personnel had served there. Goff
said the decision to extend operations would also apply to two
defence force personnel helping train the Afghan National Army;
three with the International Security Assistance Force Headquarters;
one with the Command Afghanistan in Kabul; and one with the Coalition
Joint Taskforce in Bagram.
In mid-March Clark and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
had what Clark described as an extremely cordial meeting
in Santiago while attending the inauguration of Chilean president
Michele Bachelet. Clark said the two had a very pleasant
conversation in which Rice expressed the Bush administrations
appreciation for what we had done in Afghanistan.
Clark responded by assuring Rice that the continuing presence
of New Zealand troops in Afghanistan could be taken for granted.
On recent visits to New Zealand, two top-level US officials
have also publicly conveyed the Bush administrations gratitude
over Afghanistan. Their comments followed a speech by Foreign
Minister Winston Peters in which he complained the US was not
giving New Zealand the respect or credit it deserved
for its security role in the Pacific. While Peters
is leader of the minority right-wing populist party New Zealand
First and a minister outside cabinet, both Clark and Goff endorsed
the comments.
US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific
Affairs Christopher Hill responded during his visit on March 18-19.
Hill praised New Zealands role in Afghanistan and the Pacific,
saying the two countries could work even more closely
in the future. Hill singled out the activities of the PRT in Afghanistan,
which was operating, he said, in a very, very tough situation.
Hill told reporters that what the troops were doing was
extremely important and the US administration was very,
very pleased the Kiwis have been with us.
Several weeks earlier, the top-ranking commander of the US
forces in the Middle East, General John Abizaid, delivered a similar
message. Following a meeting with Clark on February 23, Abizaid
said that while he was unable to comment on Pacific affairs, New
Zealands contribution in Afghanistan had been very
helpful to the coalition.
A spokesman for Clark said that she and Abizaid had discussed
military operations New Zealand was involved in [in] Afghanistan
and Iraq. This was a significant admission. For public consumption
Clark has persistently claimed that New Zealands involvement
in Iraq and Afghanistan was for peacekeeping, not
military purposes. In Iraq, the government committed 60 army engineers,
warships to patrol the Gulf region, and aircraft to assist with
supplies. The engineers, who were based in southern Iraq, operated
under the direct control of the Britishthe joint invading
force and occupying power.
Not mentioned in press releases, but no doubt at the centre
of discussions between Clark and the US envoys, were the activities
of New Zealands secretive Special Air Services unit, which
has completed two tours of duty in Afghanistan. The Bush administration
in 2004 presented rare special citations to the unit and its commanding
officer for their role supporting US troops in combat missions.
Clark has indicated she is not averse to sending the
unit back to Afghanistan should there be further need for its
specialist role.
As with Australia, one of the chief purposes of New Zealands
support for the war on terror was to get the support
of the US in particular for the predatory activities of NZ imperialism
in the Pacific. Clark and Peters now appear to have won explicit
approval from both the US and Britain for the countrys expanding
role as a regional policeman. At the end of British Prime Minister
Tony Blairs trip to Auckland last month, he and Clark issued
a joint statement declaring that New Zealand would increasingly
become the ears and eyes for Britain in the Pacific
as Britains presence waned and Chinas increased.
See Also:
New Zealand government
extends military deployments in Afghanistan
[17 February 2005]
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