Australian
Government Boasts of Helping US Kill Its Own
Citizens in Middle East
By Mike Head
May 08,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
-
Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull and his senior ministers this week
welcomed the reported assassinations, via US
airstrikes, of two young Australians in Iraq and
Syria and declared that Australia was directly
involved in targeting them.
Interviewed
on Sky News on Thursday, Turnbull went further,
warning that other Australians allegedly supporting
the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in the
Middle East “will be targeted” in the same manner.
Turnbull
hailed the news as a “very positive development in
the war on terror,” while Attorney-General George
Brandis said “we should be gladdened by this news.”
These
remarks—and Turnbull’s chilling threat of further
assassinations—have not received the slightest
criticism in Australia’s political and media
establishment, even though they amount to
sanctioning extra-judicial killings as a matter of
government policy, without the pretence of any legal
process.
This
development demonstrates the readiness of
Australia’s ruling elite to abrogate even the most
fundamental legal and democratic rights as part of
the fraudulent “war on terrorism.” Officially, the
death penalty has been banned by Australian law for
more than four decades, but these young people were
summarily executed, without trial.
One victim,
24-year-old Neil Prakash, was said to have been
killed by an American airstrike in Mosul, northern
Iraq, on April 29. The joint media release of
Brandis and Defence Minister Maris Payne said
Prakash was targeted because he was a “terrorist
recruiter” and “attack facilitator.”
Prakash was
not accused of being an ISIS fighter, nor was he
killed on a battlefield. Instead, he allegedly
appeared in “propaganda videos” and “encouraged acts
of terrorism.” These activities may have been crimes
under the terrorism laws introduced since 2001, but
Prakash was not charged or convicted of any
offences. Instead, in the words of Brandis, he was
“taken out.”
The other
victim, Shadi Jabar Khalil Mohammad, a student
believed to be in her 20s, was apparently even
further removed from any military combat. According
to the official media release, she was killed “near
Al Bab, Syria, on 22 April 2016, along with her
Sudanese husband,” Abu Sa’ad al-Sudani.
Both were
said to be “active recruiters of foreign fighters”
and “had been inspiring attacks against Western
interests.” The only other fact cited to justify
Mohammad’s murder was that she was the sister of
Farhad Mohammad, a 15-year-old boy who was shot dead
by police in Sydney last October after fatally
shooting a police employee.
Despite
offering no evidence of any involvement in fighting,
Turnbull justified the killing of these two young
people, both of whom grew up in Australia, declaring
they were “enemies of Australia” who were “waging
war against Australia.”
Turnbull
indicated that other Australian citizens were on a
death list. Asked if Prakash was specifically
targeted, Turnbull replied: “Yes, and has been for
some time.” While refusing to elaborate for
“operational” reasons, he declared: “We are
unrelenting in the war against terrorism …
Australians will be targeted.”
This “war”
has nothing to do with protecting people against
terrorism. For more than 15 years, the “war on
terror” has been waged by the US and its allies,
with Australia in the frontline, to seek to
establish American hegemony over the resource-rich
and strategically-vital Middle East. Entire
countries have been devastated—Afghanistan, Iraq,
Libya and Syria—fuelling the rise of ISIS. In fact,
the US and its partners have funded and armed ISIS
and similar militias linked to Al Qaeda in order to
oust governments, and then exploited the atrocities
of their proxies to escalate their predatory
interventions.
Interviewed
on Sky News, Brandis echoed the assertions of the
Obama administration that the US president has the
power to routinely select citizens for
assassination. At least three American citizens have
been killed so far, in flagrant breach of the US law
and constitution: Anwar al-Awlaki, his 16-year-old
son Abdulrahman al-Awlaki and Samir Khan.
Brandis
confirmed that Australia cooperated with the US in
“the identification and location of Prakesh.” He
insisted that it took “quite a while” to isolate a
target in order to avoid “killing innocent people”
and “family members of targets.” Australia took this
responsibility, under international humanitarian
law, “very, very seriously,” as did the US.
In reality,
the targeting is based on unproven allegations, as
well as family links. Moreover, tens of thousands of
innocent civilians have been killed throughout the
Middle East by US drone attacks and Allied
airstrikes.
The
attorney-general pointed to the integration of
Australia’s military and intelligence agencies into
the global operations of the US, referring to the
cooperation throughout the Five Eyes countries,
which also include Britain, Canada and New Zealand.
The joint US-Australian spy base at Pine Gap in
central Australia plays a crucial role in
pinpointing targets and coordinating US military
operations across the region.
The
Liberal-National government’s blatant celebration of
the assassinations of Prakash and Mohammad marks an
escalation of a bipartisan policy of placing
Australian citizens on US hit lists. In April 2015,
the Australian reported that an Australian
citizen, Mostafa Farag, had been selected for drone
execution in Syria, initially by the previous Labor
government. A year earlier, another citizen,
Christopher Harvard, and a dual Australian-New
Zealand citizen, Muslim bin John, were killed in a
US drone strike in Yemen.
Significantly, Turnbull’s government proclaimed the
two killings on the eve of calling a “double
dissolution” election of both houses of parliament
in an attempt to remove a political blockage to the
imposition of deeply unpopular social spending cuts
and other austerity measures. Once again, the
fraudulent “war on terror” is being ramped up to try
to distract the population and whip up support for
militarism abroad and unprecedented attacks on basic
democratic rights domestically.
In the
media, Prakash has been demonised for alleged
procurement of young Muslims to attempt a series of
terrorist attacks in Australia. These
unsubstantiated claims have been splashed throughout
the media, prejudicing the trials of a number of
teenagers whose cases have yet to get to court.
The
allegations are also being utilised to bring forward
another package of “anti-terrorism” laws, which will
feature detaining and interrogating suspects, as
young as 14, for up to 14 days without charge. These
measures, agreed to by a meeting of federal and
state leaders last month, will also include keeping
prisoners convicted of terrorism offences
incarcerated indefinitely after they have completed
their sentences.
In his Sky
interview, Brandis said “jihadists” had to be kept
in prison beyond their sentences because they were
“driven by ideology to violence.” This logic could
be used against a wide range of supposed
“extremists,” including political opponents,
allegedly motivated by ideology.
These
draconian laws, like the unlawful executions, have
the full support of the Labor Party. The Greens,
while previously professing opposition to aspects of
the terrorism laws, have remained silent on the
latest assassinations, as they were on the earlier
ones.
This
alignment behind the criminal activities of
Washington goes far beyond killing Australians in
Syria and Iraq and victimising vulnerable Muslim
youth at home. It is a warning to workers and young
people of the brutal methods that will be used by
the political and security establishment to suppress
opposition to the underlying agenda of war and
austerity.
The
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