TIME
to STOP Fighting Other People’s WARS
It is 50 years since
the US got us into another conflict, one no one wants to remember.
Tony Abbott was 3
years old when Australia went to war with Vietnam.
Australians born in
the last ten days of April, 1965 began turning 50 on Tuesday this week. It
so happens Tuesday was also the day our latest Prime Minister flew to
Brisbane's Enoggera army base to farewell the latest Australian troops to
be sent overseas to someone else's war at someone else's request.
Those of us with any memory or
sense of history would know April, 1965 was seminal in yet another –someone
else's war into which we were drawn by the same-someone else's request
half a century ago.
Don't we have any national self-respect in what we
do and how we're seen when we persist in kissing foreign backsides?
That war was the 13-year Vietnam
conflict, and those who got us into it were the Americans and our
own duplicitous politicians. It lasted, for Australia's armed forces,
ten destructive years and 500 dead, and gained nothing other than
ignominious defeat and humiliating withdrawal for the United States in
March 1973.
The prime minister who involved
Australia in Vietnam's war between the predominantly Catholic south
and the Communist north in May, 1962 was the Liberals' Bob Menzies, known,
among other political insults, as Ming the Merciless. And it was Menzies
who, three years later, on the night of April 29, 1965 announced
Australia was now sending a full battalion of 600 combat troops, plus
support ancillaries, to join the by-then 200 Australian military advisers
already in Vietnam.
Nine months later, on Australia
Day, 1966, Menzies stepped down as prime minister, quitting political
life altogether and leaving his successor, the Liberals' Harold Holt,
to announce military conscription of 20-year-olds two months later and the
tripling of our ground forces in Vietnam to 3000. These numbers peaked at
8000 in 1969, from a base of just 30 initial advisers in May, 1962.
Political conduct of the war also
saw off four of our prime ministers, all Libs, from Menzies, through Holt,
to John Gorton and Billy McMahon, until Labor arrived in government
under Gough Whitlam in December 1972. By then McMahon, in an election
year, already had withdrawn the last of our combat forces the
previous February. It remained only for Whitlam to end conscription,
which he did in Labor's first week of office.
Fifty years later and the
anniversary of Australia's entry into its first war without Britain, the
"mother country", is ignored, smothered by the jingoism of
the circus the Gallipoli centenary has become. Two defeats, both conflicts
in which Australian forces were no more than battle-field fodder
manipulated by two "great and powerful friends", one defeat
deified as "glorious" and "nation-defining", the other
nobody wants to know.
Now, a further 12 years on
from yet another military debacle – John Howard's decision to
contribute 2000 Australian troops to Washington's manipulation of the
invasion of Iraq in March, 2003 –the Liberals' Simian Man has
said yes to Washington yet again in committing, in total, almost 1000
troops in nine months to help train Iraqi soldiers how to be soldiers,
even though 3000 Australian troops who thought they were largely
doing just that were withdrawn seven years ago, in 2008, by the Rudd
Labor government.
Tony Abbott says this
latest "training" program – cutely labelled the Australian Build
Partner Capacity program – is to be a two-year project to be
reviewed after 12 months. So how do Australian numbers get to
be almost a thousand?
Seven months ago, at Washington's
request, the Abbott cabinet sent 200 special forces troops, plus
400 military support staff and six Australian jet fighters, to Iraq
to join a US-led multinational force to "assist" the Iraqi
government in its campaign against Islamic fanatics, whom Abbott prefers
to call "the death cult".
After a "formal
request" from Washington with the "support of the Prime Minister
of Iraq", the Abbott government last month agreed to commit another
340 ground troops, in tandem with 143 New Zealand troops who will
join the Australian "training" force at a base north of Baghdad
next month.
It was these additional
Australian troops Abbott was farewelling in Brisbane this week. What he
doesn't seem to realise is that his government's piecemeal
decisions on military deployments to Iraq eerily mirror what
the Menzies and Holt governments said and did exactly 50 years ago as
they persisted with the pretence that they were reacting to appeals from
South Vietnam's besieged government rather than colluding with Washington
in an escalating Asian civil war that, unlike Australia, Washington's
European allies wanted nothing to do with.
Doesn't anybody in this
ridiculous government of ours pay any attention to the mistakes, blunders,
lies etc of their predecessors when it comes to forever
knuckling under, previously, to London, and now to Washington?
Don't we have any national
self-respect in what we do and how we're seen when we persist in kissing
foreign backsides?
No Australian under 50 today was
alive when we went to war in Vietnam in April, 1965. Our
London-born Prime Minister was just 3 when his parents migrated here
in 1960 and 7 years old that April night Menzies announced we
were sending ground troops to Vietnam.
Is lack of firsthand knowledge,
of having lived through those often dramatic and hugely divisive
times, political and social, any excuse for repeating the folly
of Australia having joined the United States in Washington's
war there?
Or are the lives of 500 dead
Australians seen as acceptable in keeping favour with the White House
when the United States sorely needed, for political and strategic
reasons, other white faces alongside American ones in an otherwise
wholly Asian war?
And now, for the second time,
Australian forces are back in Iraq, and we are participating in our
seventh conflict in half a century – Vietnam, confrontation
with Indonesia in Borneo, the first Gulf War, Afghanistan,
East Timor, the invasion of Iraq, and now the Islamist uprising in
Iraq and Libya – while 11 prime ministers have come and gone and we've
reached far down in the barrel to find number 12.
Dick Woolcott, a former senior
diplomat and respected head of our Department of Foreign Affairs emailed
this week: "Australia should not be involved in this many-faceted
imbroglio and we should review our policy and extract our forces as soon
as we can [from Iraq] before even more damage is done to our
national interest and security. Sound political leadership
is overdue."
Nobody seemed to be listening
amid the clamour of the weekend football and various other
extravaganzas which seemed to say very little about
genuine remembrance of a century of war dead. Alan Ramsey, SMH
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