Militarising Australia
The military exercise Talisman
Sabre and the establishment of three new US 'training bases' (the Bradshaw
Training Area and Delamere Air Weapons Range in the Northern Territory and
Shoalwater Bay in Queensland) are further steps in the accelerating militarisation
of Australia. The US is intent on upgrading and expanding its military capabilities
in Australia and this process is being organised and promoted by the Howard
Government. Examples include:
- Former Defence Minister Robert Hil announced in Washington in late
2003 that joint exercises and other measures would be taken to ensure
seamless interoperability between the US and Australian military. Interoperability
is the process of the gradual fusion of the Australian Defence Force
into a defacto arm of the US military.
- The Defence Capability Plan - a ten year $50 billion high tech military
hardware spending spree.
- Involvement in the US missile defence program (Star Wars) through
the US base at Pine Gap, upgrading the Jindalee Over the Horizon Radar
(JORN) system, and the $60 billion being spent on three air-warfare
destroyers with long-range anti-missile (Aegis) capabilities to be based
off the coast of Western Australia.
- A new US tank base in Darwin.
- The US navy's Sea Swap (rotating US navy crews) program in Western
Australia.
- Adoption of a pre-emptive strike policy. This is both an excuse for
intervention and invasion and a cover for the reoccupation of former
colonial countries. During the election, Howard promised to form two
'flying squads' of federal police for use in the Asia-Pacific region
'and beyond'. His government is massively increasing expenditure on
weapons systems that are clearly not for the defence of Australia but
for operations in the Asia-Pacific region.
War fighting:
US bases and joint war games on Australia's soil contribute to the US' war fighting strategy. The new bases will assist the US to prosecute wars against the poor in our region and beyond and help swell the list of Australia's enemies.
Civil liberties:
An atmosphere of fear and insecurity is being fanned to assist a massive attack
on civil liberties. Federal and State legislation, being used first against
the Muslim community, is intended to destroy democratic rights and stifle
all dissent.
Sovereignty:
Integration into the US war machine brings with it massive secrecy and denial of national sovereignty. The Australian parliamentary Joint Standing Committee on Treaties has complained that MPs are kept in the dark about the US base at Pine Gap and are 'entrusted with less information than can be found in a public library.'
Security:
Security comes with jobs, homes, education and health care, food and clean water, democracy and human rights. Australia's current military spending of over $55 million a day steals the resources needed to provide these necessities.
Young soldiers
The lives and health of young Australians in the ADF will be at risk of terrorist
attacks and US use of depleted uranium and chemical warfare.
Militarising Australia and delivering unfaltering support for US aggression and threat to use force against other countries cannot ensure security for Australians.