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SEP candidate Alex Safari speaks at election forum in Maroubra
Labors Peter Garrett presents his pro-war credentials
By our reporters
5 November 2007
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Labors environment spokesman Peter Garrett is currently
keeping a low profile in the federal election campaign after a
series of gaffes in recent days that have been seized
on by media outlets and the Howard government. The latest of these,
involving a joke by the former rock-star that Labor would depart
from its me-too policies once the November 24 poll
is over, has thrown the ALP into damage control. Rudd and Garrett
have issued public declarations that their bi-partisan support
for Howard government policy is indeed genuine and will remain
if Labor takes office.
But for anyone with lingering illusions on this score, Peter
Garretts recent performance at a candidates forum
in his Sydney electorate of Kingsford Smith should serve as a
reality check. Responding to warnings from Socialist Equality
Party (SEP) candidate Alex Safari that the US was preparing an
unprovoked war of aggression against Iran, the Labor frontbencher
and former Nuclear Disarmament Party (NDP) leader refused to condemn
the war preparations, and indicated his support for the current
media campaign demonising Tehran.
The election forum was at Maroubras Bowen Library on
October 23, and was convened by local community group EAST. Politicians
in attendance were Garrett, Safari, Greens candidate Sue Mahoney
and Democrats senate candidate Lyn Schumack.
Each speaker was allowed 10 minutes to make an opening presentation,
but Garrett failed to mention Australias involvement in
the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq. Since 2004, public
support for the Howard government has unravelled, driven largely
by antiwar sentiment. Yet Garretts remarks formed a stark
contrast to the popular revulsion over the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
He said nothing about the mountain of lies over WMD, the incarceration
of enemy combatant David Hicks or the assault on democratic
rights ushered in by the war on terror.
As the subsequent discussion made clear, Garretts omissions
were far from accidental.
In his own opening remarks, SEP candidate Alex Safari warned
that the election of a Rudd Labor government would see no reversal
in the attacks waged on working people by the Howard government.
He stressed that the most important issue confronting workers
and young people was the global eruption of militarism and war.
Safari condemned the silence of all other candidates regarding
the Iraq war. The illegal invasion of Iraq, which was based
on lies, has resulted in the deaths of more than 1 million Iraqis,
more than 3,000 American and other foreign troops, and has created
4 million refugees. Iraqi society has effectively been destroyed.
They are now preparing for a new and bloody intervention
in Iran which will destabilise the entire Middle East and raise
the threat of a wider global war. According to Seymour Hersh,
the award-winning American journalist, Australia has already signed
up for an air war against Iran. All the major parties, including
the Greens, are maintaining silence on this issue. As far as they
are concerned, it cannot be discussed.
Whichever party wins the election, Safari concluded,
none of the pressing problems confronting ordinary working
people will be resolved... The SEP is standing candidates in order
to build a socialist movement in opposition to the entire political
establishmentLabor, Liberal and the Greens.
Later in the discussion, Alex Safari strenuously opposed Garretts
claim that global warming could be averted via agreements between
the major capitalist powers or through carbon-trading schemes
such as those piloted in NSW and the European Union. I dont
agree with Peter Garrett when he says that the environmental crisis
is man-made, said Safari. It has been produced by
the capitalist systema system that puts the needs of profit
before the needs of human beings.
Safari, an agricultural scientist, explained how the carbon-trading
schemes advocated by Labor and the Greens were a massive cash
bonanza for private industry, Millions of dollars has been
handed to the pockets of the big corporations, to the largest
polluters, giving them a licence to continue emissions. None of
these schemes challenges the anarchy of the capitalist market.
In fact, they are merely creating a new marketin emissions
tradingand new avenues to wealth creation for a tiny elite.
Garrett under fire
During question-time Garrett came under fire from local residents
over environmental issues, including Labors support for
Gunns pulp mill in Tasmania, inaction over development at
the local Malabar Headland and the disposal of toxic waste from
the nearby Orica chemical plant. Audience members also expressed
concern over global poverty and income inequality and the financial
hardship faced by pensioners.
In response, the shadow environment minister offered glib assurances
that Labor was listening. But when it came to the life-and-death
question of war, on which the economic and strategic interests
of Australian capitalism depended, Garrett made absolutely clear
that he was on message. He studiously avoided any
condemnation of the US-led invasion of Iraq, falsified Labors
record of support for the Iraq occupation and launched a vicious
attack on Safari after the SEP candidate opposed the current propaganda
campaign portraying Iran as a threat to world peace.
Speaking from the floor, SEP campaign manager Tania Kent demanded
to know why Garrett was silent on US war preparations against
Iran. Kent referred to a report in Britains Sunday
Times which revealed Australian and British SAS troops
were already operating in Iran. Furthermore, in the October issue
of Australia-Israel Review, Rudd had declared Labors
support for any future measures which may be necessary
against Iran. Where do you, Mr Garrett, former NDP leader,
stand on this issue? You have not raised it at all. And your party
is supporting these plans for what is going to be a human tragedy
for millions of people in that country and in that region. And
I also direct my question to the Greens, who have been silent
on this issue as well.
Garrett claimed he was not familiar with Rudds
comments, despite them having appeared, just days earlier, on
the front page of Murdochs Australian. Rudd has been
even more bellicose than Howard, castigating Iran as an
existential threat to the world, calling for Ahmadinejad
to be placed on trial for incitement to genocide and
referring with approval to the stance of former Bush Administration
neo-con John Bolton for such proceedings.
While Garrett claimed Labor policy was bound by the whole
corpus of international law which governments and alternative
governments are bound by, the ALPs positions in relation
to Iraq, Afghanistan and its support for the Howard governments
military interventions in the South Pacific, make a mockery of
this claim.
Safari opposed Garretts whitewash of Labors record:
Peter Garrett made a comment that Labor has opposed the
Iraq war. Thats not correct. The Labor Party did not oppose
on principle this war. The Labor Party did not say that the attack
on Iraq was based on lies and criminal aggression, or that its
aim was to gain access to oil and attain strategic advantage.
Labor didnt say this is the act of an aggressor power
against a defenceless country and people. And three days
after the start of the war, in March 2003, Simon Crean said okay,
everyone is in, we have to support our troops. And the United
Nations is an organisation representing the interests of the big
powers. It supported the installation of a puppet government,
in Iraq.
Garrett made no attempt to factually refute Safaris presentation.
And now they are preparing for war against Iran,
Safari told the forum. Another catastrophe! George Bush,
two or three days ago said, Either were going to stop
Iran being nuclear, or were going to have a third world
war. And I want to tell everyone here that Iran, whose regime
I do not supporthas obeyed all the rules and regulations
concerning nuclear non-proliferation agreements. Pakistan, India,
America, Israel: none of those countries has complied. Yet thousands
of hours have been spent investigating Iranian nuclear facilities,
with no evidence begin found... Iran is a country years away from
nuclear weapons technology.
Safari said the Bush administrations claims about Iranian
nuclear weapons capacity were reminiscent of those made five years
ago concerning Iraqs weapons of mass destruction.
So now George Bush is turning to another liethat Iraqi
Shiite forces are killing American soldiers with the support of
Iran.
While audience members listened intently, Garretts hostility
toward Safari was immediately evident: In regards to his
comments on Iran, Garrett told the forum, I cannot
disagree more strongly. I think they were factually, historically
and politically incorrect. I need to put that on the record.
This was the sum total of Peter Garretts response to
an impending war crime of unprecedented dimensions against an
oppressed country of 65 million people. He reserved his hostility
to the socialist opponent of war.
Herein lies the kernel of Garretts increasingly rightward
evolution. From his earliest days as an anti-nuclear campaigner
and activist, he has been an open opponent of the Marxist insistence
that war is the product of the central contradictions of capitalismbetween
world economy and its division into rival nation-states, and between
socialised production and private ownership for profit. Instead,
he has advocated protests aimed at influencing the existing political
establishment. Im not a radical and Im not an
anarchist, Garrett told a 1984 press conference of the NDP.
I believe Im more of a patriot and more jingoistic
than these people who see me as a radical.
His 2004 decision to join the ALP was the logical outcome of
this program.
Garretts evolution into a silent accomplice for war crimes
against the people of Iraq and Afghanistan contains vital lessons
for all workers and young people. The only genuine antiwar constituency
is the international working class. Only a perspective based on
the independent political mobilisation of the working class against
the profit system itself is capable of achieving genuine and lasting
peace.
As for the Greens and Democrats, their candidates at the Maroubra
forum uttered not a word of opposition to Garrets pro-war
stance. Instead they made clear their own support for the Australian
state.
The Greens Sue Mahoney said her party advocated immediate
Australian troop withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan, but then
went on to spell out the thoroughly nationalist character of the
Greens. We support an independent foreign policy, not led
by the US and not committed to following blindly wherever the
US goes, Mahoney declared. Such an independent foreign
policybased on the defence of Australian capitalism,
underpins the Greens call for Australian troops to be deployed
throughout the South Pacific. The Democrats Lyn Schumack echoed
this position. [Australian troops] should be focussed closer
to home, she told the forum, pointing to the need for intervention
in West Papua.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Meet the candidates: Questions
& Answers on the Socialist Equality Party's program
[31 October 2007]
Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
2007 federal election statement
A socialist program to fight war, social inequality and the
assault on democratic rights
[16 October 2007]
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