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Australian parliament embraces Blairs lies and hypocrisy
By James Cogan
29 March 2006
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The address by Tony Blair to the joint-sitting of the Australian
parliament on Monday underscored the fact that the British prime
minister functions as one of the most cynical defenders of the
occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq. The reaction to his speech,
however, demonstrated once again that no section of the Australian
political and media establishment is prepared to challenge the
lies used to legitimise these criminal acts.
In the course of his 20-minute speech, Blair made no mention
of the original casus belli for the invasion of Iraqthe
false claim that the regime of Saddam Hussein possessed stockpiles
of weapons of mass destruction. Blair played a crucial
role in both manufacturing and propagating this campaign. One
need only recall the British dossier of September 2002, in which
the British prime minister alleged that Iraq could deploy
nuclear weapons within 45 minutes.
At the time, Blair knew this statement to be nonsense. As the
Downing Street memos demonstrated, Blair was advised by his foreign
secretary in July 2002 that Iraqs WMD capacity was less
than that of Libya, North Korea and Irannone of which
had nuclear weaponsand he was informed by Richard Dearlove,
head of MI6, that the Bush administration was intent on war and
that the intelligence and facts were being fixed around
this decision.
Listening to Blair on Monday, however, someone who had just
awoken from a coma could be forgiven for believing WMDs had never
been an issue in 2002 and early 2003. The US-led wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq were presented to the Australian parliament as part of
a struggle by a global alliance, headed by the United
States, fighting for the universal values of democracy,
the rule of law, and justice against the
immediate threat of Islamic extremism.
Numerous strategic documents dating back to the 1970s testify
to the long-held US and British ambitions to establish direct
control over the oil resources of Central Asia and the Middle
East. But Blair attempted to portray the occupations of Afghanistan
and Iraq as motivated by the noblest of aimsaiding long-suffering
people to free themselves from a legacy of oppression, stagnation
and servitude. He made no mention of the US-vetted constitutions
in both countries, which elevate Islamic law at the expense of
secular rights and, in the case of Iraq, obliges all future governments
to open up the state-owned oil industry to the free market and
foreign ownership.
Instead, Blair referred to the US-led occupations as enjoying
the full support of democratically elected governments.
The reality is that the regimes in Kabul and Baghdad are puppet
states made up of individuals who are prepared to serve as local
collaborators for Washington. They remain in power solely due
to the presence of foreign troops, who are carrying out the brutal
repression of the popular resistance to their presence. To describe
such regimes as democratic is the same as labeling
the various governments installed by the Nazis in occupied Europe
as legitimate representatives of the population.
The occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq have produced nothing
resembling democracy. Tens of thousands of people have been killed
and the countries left in ruins. In Iraq, sectarian divisions,
directly encouraged by the Bush administration, threaten to trigger
a civil war.
Moreover, in the three years since the Iraq invasion, the hysteria
over terrorism consciously whipped up by the Blair government
has been used to push through unprecedented inroads into the democratic
rights and civil liberties of the British population and erect
the legislative framework for a police-state.
As for the rule of law, the elaborate fabrication
of a case that Iraq had WMDs was carried out precisely because
an unprovoked invasion to overturn the government of a sovereign
state was a direct violation of international law. Blair was advised
in July 2002 by his attorney general that the desire for
regime change was not a legal base for military action.
Against the will of the British people, Blair nevertheless deployed
forces in an illegal war of aggression. To put it bluntly, the
British prime minister, his cabinet and his key advisors are war
criminals.
A new white mans burden
There was nothing new in the content of Blairs speech
to the Australian parliament or in the sanctimonious tone with
which it was delivered. In the nineteenth century, defenders of
the British Empire justified imposing colonial rule and the capitalist
market on much of the world as the white mans burden
to bring civilisation to backward peoples. At the
beginning of the twenty-first century, Blair has repackaged this
ideology to portray the so-called western democracies as fighting
a global struggle for progress. The essential difference is that,
whereas Britain was the predominant world power in the past, the
British ruling elite today is desperately seeking to protect its
global financial and corporate interests by serving as a junior
partner to the US.
Thus the greatest danger, Blair told the Australian parliament,
was not that the agenda of the Bush administration was to intervene
anywhere in the world where its interests were threatened, but
the prospect of the United States deciding to pull up the
drawbridge and disengage. Blair denounced anti-Americanism
in Europe and elsewhere as madness when set
against the long-term interests of the world we believe in.
Behind this statement lay Blairs recognition that without
US backing, Britain and other American allies such as Australia
would carry little weight on the international arena. The role
of the US, he declared, was vital to achieving beneficial agreements
on climate change and a decent trade round to open
up world markets.
In the context of rising international tensions over access
to energy and markets, Blairs struggle for values
amounts to a blanket justification for future wars. It provides
the ruling elite in countries such as Britain and Australia with
the necessary propaganda to justify aligning with US aggression
and concealing their real predatory motives.
Universal support
In the Australian parliament, Blairs rhetoric found a
receptive audience. The main reason is that the government of
Prime Minister John Howard is no less guilty of war crimes than
the US and British administrations. On the basis of the same lies
about WMDs, Australian troops were dispatched to the 2003 invasion
of Iraq in order to guarantee US backing for Australian interests.
Australian forces remain in both Afghanistan and Iraq. Unsurprisingly,
therefore, Howard welcomed Blair to the joint sitting of parliament
as a man of courage, of moral purpose, of high intelligence
and of a capacity to articulate with great clarity the challenges
of the contemporary world.
Blair was embraced in equally sycophantic terms by the Labor
opposition and the Greens. Labor leader Kim Beazley told Blair
that we stand shoulder to shoulder with you and with Britain
in the war against fundamentalist terror and hailed him
as a man who put values at the centre of your public life.
Greens leader senator Bob Brown told the media prior to the
parliamentary session that there was a very big difference
between Bush and the British leader because Tony Blair doesnt
have a prison camp with Australians held illegally against global
laws, referring to Guantánamo Bay. Brown went as
far as to describe Blair as a very good example to our weak-kneed
prime minister [Howard] as he had secured the release of
British citizens from Guantánamo and was pulling
400 troops out of Iraq.
Blairs litany of lies and falsifications in the parliament
was not challenged at any point by any Labor or Green parliamentarian.
Instead, it was greeted with a standing ovation. In 2003, the
two opposition parties raised certain limited tactical differences
with the Iraq invasion. Labor declared that Australian military
forces should only be deployed with explicit UN support, while
the Greens argued Australian troops should not be sent because
they might be needed for operations closer to home, in the Asia-Pacific
region. Three years on, they openly welcome Blairs call
for wars for progress and democracy as
the means by which they can finally abandon their token opposition.
The reaction to Blair in the so-called liberal press was no
less contemptible. The Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne
Age both published his speech without editorial comment
and confined their coverage to uncritical reports.
By contrast, the pro-war Murdoch-owned Australian hailed
Blair as a powerhouse of world politics. Paul Kelly, the editor-at-large,
gushed that the British leader had offered eloquence, vision
and guts and described him as a champion of democracy,
diversity, tolerance and open markets. The papers
foreign editor Greg Sheridan labelled him the most articulate
neo-conservative in the world who believes that the
promotion of democracy internationally is the key to long-term
security.
The refusal of any Australian politician or journalist to take
a public stand against Blairs demagogy constitutes a sharp
warning that the entire official establishment is preparing to
line up with the next act of great power aggressionwhether
against Iran, Syria or some other target. In order for the widespread
antiwar war sentiments of millions of Australian workers and youth
to find genuine expression, an independent and socialist political
movement must be developed.
See Also:
Britain: Blair sets out ideological justification
for new wars of aggression
[24 March 2006]
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