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a pig of an empire......Anthony Albanese likes to think of himself as a Bob Hawke unifying type. But if he keeps dragging us along this war path, he will be remembered as our Tony Blair. We hear a lot about how AUKUS is going to be about getting the balance right, rebalancing the region as China expands. And yes, China has its interests, and is building a military in the region and that is also to be concerned about. But I wonder about balance. And we’ve just been reminded again the stories from Guam and from Okinawa. There are 343 US bases in East Asia alone. Now, I don’t know how eight nuclear submarines adds to the balance in the region.
By Marcus Strom
AUKUS is a policy of empire. And empire means violence. And I am amazed having worked in Canberra until recently at the blithe, consequence-free approach that our political leaders seem take to this. It’s “just the price of doing business on the world stage” is how it’s presented. This is not what the Labor Party should be fighting for. Alongside the obscene violence of joint war games happening in Australia at the moment, we’ve had the AUSMIN meeting between leading Australian ministers and US ministers. I read this in the press yesterday about what AUSMIN means. “Australia is now being asked to pull more of its weight in the alliance, play a bigger role in helping stabilise the regional balance of power and be integrated as a base of operations into US force projections into the region or into US war planning for a possible conflict with China in Asia.” That’s from the very radical editorial column of the Australian Financial Review. Also from the Australian Financial Review today, “The AUSMIN talks over the weekend continue the trend since the late 1990s of tying Australia more tightly into both American grand strategy and war planning in Asia. The permanent American military presence on Australian soil is now at a scale unprecedented since the Second World War.” They are preparing us for war. That is why I could no longer work for this government. Up until February I was press secretary to Ed Husic, and the AUKUS policy is one of the main reasons I resigned from that position. As I said to somebody coming in, “The secret to never being disillusioned with the Labor Party is never be illusioned with the Labor Party.” But the Labor Party, despite its many flaws, does have a tradition of opposing some unjust wars. This was pointed out by Paul Keating at a recent National Press Club speech he gave. Labor was against the Vietnam War, eventually; Labor did stand against the second Iraq War. Although Bob Hawke did support the first Iraq war. So there’s a chequered history. I’m going to talk about Tom Uren. Tom Uren many of you will know was a lone voice to start with against the Vietnam War in the Labor Party. Keating pointed out that the ALP opposed Vietnam. But that’s not always how it was. Tom Uren points out in an interview he gave in 1996, that he and Jim Cairns, who went on to become treasurer, moved a motion to Labor caucus in 1965 opposing US bombing of North Vietnam. They lost that vote. The left then of the Labor Party voted against it. But seven years later Gough Whitlam on a wave of anti-war sentiment took power and one of the first acts was to bring the remaining Australian troops home from Vietnam. So we can fight back and we can make change. While Tom Uren started as a lone voice, on AUKUS in the Labor Party, I can say we are not alone. Already people like Paul Keating, Bob Carr, Carmen Lawrence, Doug Cameron, Peter Garrett are speaking out against the insanity of this policy. War is a deadly business. It can’t be treated as a gambit against wedge politics from the opposition, but that is how it’s being treated. The war in Iraq killed hundreds of thousands of people, left millions displaced, sparked regional destabilisation, engendered the ISIS calamity. A war with China would make Iraq look like a tea party; it would threaten nuclear catastrophe. This is what we’re facing with AUKUS. It is also a threat to Australian sovereignty. AUSMIN and the military interoperability it is producing, means that there will be US soldiers enmeshed with Australian forces on a continual basis. And this Australian government, this Labor government, is now allowing the rotation of B-52s through the Tindal base in the Northern Territory. Now, those planes carry nuclear weapons. They neither confirm nor deny. Australia’s quite relaxed at that policy. But we know that makes Australia a nuclear target. It makes Australia not just a target and a victim, but an aggressor in the region; a host to war machines that could slaughter millions of people. We have to say, “No” to that. I’m reminded of something Henry Kissinger said, “Being an enemy of the United States is very dangerous. Being a friend is fatal.” Simon Crean was Labor leader when the Iraq war happened, and he bravely stood against the war drums. When Simon Crean died recently, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said, “History has vindicated Simon’s judgment, but at the time his stance was deeply counter to the prevailing political and media climate.” We are again looking for such courage in a Labor leader. Instead, we have meekly inherited a Scott Morrison policy. When I speak at Labor Party meetings I say, “If we’d lost the last election, and Scott Morrison was pursuing this policy, you’d all be up in arms. You’d all be screaming about the injustice of it, the war mongering of it. Just because our guy’s doing it doesn’t mean you should shut up.” And that’s what Labor Against War is about. We can’t sit silently on this. We only formed only a few months ago. Already, we are working branch by branch, moving motions, winning many, losing some, making alliances with the Maritime Union, the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union, the Electrical Trades Union, the Construction Union. Unions New South Wales has a policy opposed to AUKUS. The South Coast Labor Council, which is facing having a nuclear submarine base in Port Kembla, has stood up and said, “No”. Branch by branch anti-war activists are passing resolutions. We’ve now going into National Conference. We are hoping we can force at least a bit of a debate onto that conference. To not even discuss this would be an absolute travesty of Labor Party democracy. We’re not expecting to win at the first hurdle, but neither did Tom Uren. This is a long campaign to win the Labor Party from being a war party to being a peace party. Assurances count for nothing. The danger we face in a multi-decade, multibillion-dollar program is we don’t know who will be prime minister in ten years, five years. We don’t know who’s going to be in the White House at the end of next year. And yet we are going to be lumbered with a nuclear alliance with two fading Anglo powers on the other side of the world. Our future is with our brothers and sisters in the Pacific and in Asia. AUKUS is a mad, bad and dangerous war policy. And to borrow from the French, we don’t just think this, we know this. As an aside, I was absolutely gobsmacked by the chutzpah of Macron speaking in the Pacific, complaining about the ‘new imperialism’ recently. Anthony Albanese likes to think of himself as a Bob Hawke unifying type. But if he keeps dragging us along this war path, he will be remembered as our Tony Blair. Believe it or not, the ALP is meant to be a democratic socialist party. Read it, it’s in the rules. It’s meant to fight for a better world. But we should no longer be satisfied for fighting for Chifley’s Light on the Hill. This is a labour of Sisyphus, a goal that we never reach. It is time to bring the light down into the shadows, to enlighten the world, to bring hope to today, not tomorrow. Capitalism is a war system. We have to oppose capitalism to stop war. Hope is rising. We will make a difference. Use that anger that you felt to really get active. We are rebuilding a peace movement, an anti-war movement. I look here today; we need to double, triple our numbers. At our last Labor Against War meeting in Sydney, we had somebody there in their 80s telling us about how they fought against the Vietnam War. And there were people in the room in their school uniforms. Now that is a sign for hope that we can raise our voices fight a really bad policy. And we have to win this because the alternative is cataclysmic.
These are extracts from a speech by Marcus Strom at a public meeting organised by IPAN at the ANU, Canberra, 1 August 2023
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Cartoon at top (c. 1914): Claude Arthur Marquet (1869–1920) was an Australian political cartoonist, noted for his unique illustrative style and radical political views. LifeMarquet was born in 1869 in Moonta, South Australia, the son of a French workman painter. The family later moved to the larger town of Wallaroo, South Australia, and the young Marquet attended Taplin's Grammar School there. After school, he initially worked as a miner, before obtaining work as a printer's compositor. In that role he became skilled in process engraving.[1] Marquet married Ann Donnell at St Mary's Church in Wallaroo in June 1891, by which time he was already an accomplished black-and-white artist. In 1897, he obtained his first work as an artist, employed as cartoonist for Quiz, a weekly magazine published in Adelaide. In the following years, Marquet sold work to a variety of magazines, including The Bulletin, Tocsin, Table Talk, The Australian Worker and Melbourne Punch. With his career taking off, Marquet moved to Melbourne in 1902 and then to Sydney in 1906.[1] On 17 April 1920, Marquet and a companion were presumed drowned when a sailing boat they were travelling on sank during a sudden squall in Botany Bay.[2] His body was never recovered. Following his death, an anthology of his work in The Worker was published, featuring tributes from contemporaries including Henry Lawson, Mary Gilmore and C. J. Dennis. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Marquet
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Penny Wong’s delusion on nuclear weapons in the South Pacific
By Ainsley Barton
Australia joined Pacific partners in signing the Rarotonga Treaty, establishing a Nuclear Weapons Free Zone in the South Pacific, on this day in 1985.
Nearly 40 years later it’s still a regional cornerstone as we work towards a world without nuclear weapons.
It beggars belief that a senior member of our executive government could make such a boast. More so than Howard and Morrison, and Julia Gillard (who acquiesced to the Obama Administration’s decision to station US marines in Darwin), Foreign Minister Wong, Defence Minister Richard Marles and Prime Minister Albanese have almost completely ceded our sovereignty to another nation. A nation armed to the teeth with nuclear weapons deployed across the Pacific and North Asia.
Just as its made a mockery of accountability by allowing nuclear capable military assets to be based on our shores without parliamentary—let alone public—consultation, this government is now making a mockery of our neighbours in the Pacific.
The dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki aside, the people of the Pacific have suffered like no others in America’s voracious pursuit to amass a nuclear arsenal capable of destroying the entire planet.
According to figures published by PACE University, the U.S., Britain and France have detonated 318 nuclear devices in the Pacific. The misery visited upon the people of the Marshall Islands is without comparison, the overwhelming majority of U.S. weapons tests occurred in these islands across the atolls of Bikini and Enewetak. The combined yield of those atomic weapons is some 14,000 times greater than that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
Though his words might have been better chosen, accusing Wong of “running around the Pacific islands with a lei around [her] neck handing out money”, Paul Keating’s criticism of the foreign minister earlier this year has been further validated rather than diminished by her latest comments.
The foreign minister appears to be every bit as tone deaf as, now opposition leader, Peter Dutton was in 2015, when he joked in range of an open microphone that, Pacific Islands under threat of climate change had “water lapping” at their doors.
By opening our doors to U.S. nuclear weapons, we have no right to claim solidarity with the Pacific on banning them. The hypocrisy is breathtaking.
Is China a military threat in the Pacific? That’s doubtful. Despite its rapid military build-up, China is a generation behind U.S. military capability. U.S. military spending it three times that of China and, as with the Middle East and Europe, the U.S. is Asia’s overwhelmingly dominant military power.
Is China a geopolitical threat in the Pacific? Absolutely. But the Chinese don’t kick doors down, they knock on doors bearing gifts. There’s often a thin line dividing economic incentives and economic coercion, however, it’s hard to argue that China slapping on trade bans or calling off aid is anywhere near as intimidatory as having the U.S. Seventh Fleet parked off your coast.
One thing about Chinese diplomacy most of the west, particularly its mainstream media, is blissfully unaware of, is the approach China has to smaller nations. Unlike western nations they don’t ride roughshod over the locals by first proclaiming their moral superiority. For all the ham-fisted moves of China’s Foreign Ministry, contempt is rarely a starting point for its diplomacy.
Contempt for those outside of the Euro/Anglosphere world, based on its self-invented “rules-based order” only works for the U.S. because it’s backed by economic and military might.
Despite the motivations for, what Keating calls Australia “running around the Pacific islands”, by tying ourselves to the U.S., it’s a policy founded in contempt. De facto contempt as we acquiesce to the wishes of Washington, just as we are a de facto nuclear-armed nation.
Minister Wong might have been genuine in stating her desired goal to work towards a “world without nuclear weapons”. As long as her government relentlessly pursues the goal of ensuring U.S. military expansion into Australia continues unchallenged, it’s an affront to Australians and an insult to our Pacific neighbours to feign concern for the proliferation of these weapons of mass destruction.
https://johnmenadue.com/penny-wongs-pacific-delusion/
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