Bombing Syria: What's in it for Australia?
By CJ Werleman
August 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Australia’s isolation from its western (white)
allies has bestowed on the Australian people a deep insecurity that
long ago metastasised into a permanent siege mentality - the belief
that “uncivilised” hordes from the Asian continent will invade,
conquer, and colonise the Australian mainland the same way the
British usurped indigenous Australians 227 years ago.
For the first half of the 20th century,
Australia turned to its colonial master - Great Britain - for its
national security blanket. For much of the first half of the 20th
century, Britain was the world’s unrivaled naval superpower, which
assured Australians that no potential foe would "mess with the South
Pacific" - equivalent of Texas.
When the natural resource hungry imperialist Japan
swept China, and the respective colonial militaries of Thailand,
Burma, and the Philippines aside, only Singapore and the British
military stood between the Japanese military and Australia.
Long story short: British guns were pointed the
wrong way. Expecting a naval invasion, British artillery faced the
sea, but the Japanese invaded overland via the Malay Peninsula. And
when the British signed the surrender of Singapore on 15 February
1942, what was once Australia’s security blanket had been fretted
away into a flimsy white sheet.
Out of strategic necessity, Australia promptly
adopted a new big brother: the United States of America.
For the past 70 years, Australia has acted like
the wimpy kid who sucks up to the schoolyard bully for the purpose
of ensuring his own protection. While the US media lavishes
accolades and praise on Israel and Britain for their respective
“special relationship” with the United States, Australia is the only
country to have followed the US into every international conflict it
has fought since and including World War II.
When the US invaded the Korean Peninsula,
Australian troops were there. When the US invaded Vietnam,
Australian troops were there. When the US invaded Iraq in 1990,
well, you guessed it - Australian troops were there, and my
countrymen were also there in Afghanistan, Iraq 2003, and Iraq 2014.
Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, a
conservative, was so lock step with the US Administration during the
early years of the War on Terror, that some in the liberal press
anointed Howard with the embarrassing, yet comically accurate,
nickname - “Bonsai” - as in a "little Bush". Get it?
Living up to his nickname, Bonsai Howard, speaking
at an Asia-Pacific Summit, boasted Australia is America’s
“sheriff” in the South Pacific region.
"I suppose America wants a puppet of its own in
this region whom they can trust who will do whatever they wish,”
responded Malaysian Deputy Defense Minister Shafie Apdal.
There was no justifiable or valid reason for
Howard to follow Bush into a war of choice that was Iraq. All it did
was put a target on Australia’s back. Australia’s involvement in
Iraq made it precipitously more dangerous for Australian tourists
abroad – and several al-Qaeda led attacks specifically targeted
against Australian interests and people in Indonesia in the years
2002 to 2009 speaks to that assertion.
The right-wing led argument for supporting the US
invasion of Iraq was built upon the contention that read, “If we
(Australia) don’t support America over there, America might not
support Australia the day the ‘enemy’ comes here.” An absurd
argument given Australia and the US share a NATO like treaty (ANZUS),
and equally absurd given a number of US dependent military allies
sat out the Iraq invasion – including Canada, France, and Germany.
When America rings, Australia answers.
A couple weeks ago, the Australian prime
minister’s phone received an incoming call from the office of the US
president once again. Obama asked Prime Minister Tony Abbott, a
conservative, to
increase its commitment towards the fight against the Islamic
State (IS) group.
Australia already has six fighter jets and a
number of support aircraft involved in the effort to defeat IS, and
Abbott has said he is “seriously considering” Obama’s request to
expand its role into Syria, and that he’ll make his decision in a
“couple of weeks”.
A decision that, as Australian journalist
Peter Hartcher contends, has already been made. “In truth,
Australia engineered the request from the Obama administration,
according to sources involved,” writes Hartcher. “In the customary
way, the matter was closely coordinated in secret well before the
formal American request arrived last week.”
In other words, the Australian prime minister is
so eager to please his American master that he has orchestrated and
engineered a narrative that allows Australia to actually volunteer
for what amounts to an air invasion of Syria.
In a recent
interview, Abbott illustrated his argument for expanding
Australia’s airstrikes against IS: "Whether it's operating in Iraq
or Syria it is an absolutely evil movement and in the end, when they
don't respect the border, the question is why should we?"
Wait, what? I can think of at least one reason why
we should “respect the border.” That reason is a little notion
commonly known as international law. You know, it’s actually quite
illegal to invade a sovereign nation. But Australia’s equivalent of
secretary of state, Julie Bishop, echoed Abbot’s line of reasoning
when she said, "Under the principle of collective self-defence of
Iraq and its people, the coalition have extended that self-defence
into Syria because the border between Syria and Iraq is no longer
governed."
It’s extraordinary that Australia’s political
leaders are suddenly so indifferent to international borders given
said leaders have been incessantly banging on about Australia’s
“immigration crisis” – a manufactured pseudo-crisis manufactured by
the right to whip Australia’s deep rooted fear of brown-skinned
immigrants.
Allow me to put it bluntly: Australia is an
isolated Pacific island at the bottom of the earth that shares a
border with dolphins and fish. It will never have an “immigration
crisis”.
In returning to the overarching point, however,
what can Australia possibly gain by bombing yet another country in
the Middle East? I mean, what’s in it for us? And more importantly,
why aren’t an overwhelming number of Australians asking, “What’s
bloody in it for us?”
You don’t need to be a military analyst to know
that America is the world’s unrivalled military superpower taking on
a terror group that gets around the mostly desert wasteland of Iraq
and Syria in the back of pick-up trucks. A Toyota Hi-Lux is the IS
equivalent of a F-18 fighter jet. If America needs our airplanes to
defeat an enemy like this – maybe Australia needs to remember
Singapore – and then appoint China as its new big brother.
Moreover, there is no shortage of fighter jets and
bombers in the region. US allies Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Jordan,
Egypt, and Qatar are armed to the teeth with US manufactured
military aircraft. These allies can see the Islamic State from their
backyard. Australia can’t even see New Zealand from its.
Notwithstanding the fact that US led coalition
airstrikes against ISIS have been ineffective. In an interview with
VICE News, Paul Stanley, director for a private security firm in
Iraq, said, “The air campaign has the appearance of being reactive
and opportunistic… but the overall impression is that they are not
the force multiplier that was anticipated."
Australian airstrikes in Syria would be especially
counterproductive given the Iran nuclear deal has opened a path to
diplomacy with the Assad regime – an opening that has already
kick started talks between Assad, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Russia.
Clearly, Australian military involvement in Iraq
and Syria offers no measurable or tangible benefit to the US led
coalition effort to defeat ISIS. Clearly, there is no measurable or
tangible benefit to Australia for bombing another country in the
Middle East.
Clearly, Australia’s ever reliable eagerness to
please its military minder is yet another reminder that Australia
remains an insecure country ever fearful of its brown skinned
neighbours.
CJ Werleman is
the author of Crucifying America, God Hates You. Hate Him Back,
Koran Curious, and is the host of Foreign Object. Follow him on
twitter: @cjwerleman