All posts by Jack Robertson

The ABC of journalistic precision

A New Millennium Master Class in television political interviewing, by Kerry Green Pen’ O’Brien and our ABC. Excerpts from last night’s 7.30 Report contribution to the Australian Public’s new millennium defence of our secular liberal democracy. My comments in bold.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Tony Abbott, when you established the slush fund to get Pauline Hanson politically, you called it Australians for Honest Politics. Was that some kind of a joke, a bad joke?

A typically ‘biased’ anti-Howard ABC start? Absolutely not. Read the letters pages. Listen to talkback radio. Read Fairfax’s online ‘Your Say’ comments regarding the name: ‘Australians for Honest Politics’. O’Brien – paid by the PUBLIC – is simply given PUBLIC proxy-voice to the common response of millions of wryly-gobsmacked Australians of all stripes. To start with, this dig (to the man who set up the trust and coined the name) is not remotely biased. It’s pure observation. It’s also funny.

TONY ABBOTT, EMPLOYMENT & WORKPLACE RELATIONS MINISTER: Of course it wasn’t and it wasn’t a slush fund. Here’s the Macquarie definition of ‘slush fund’: ‘A fund for use in campaign propaganda or the like, esp. secretly or illicitly, as in bribery.’ ABC bias or apt description? You decide. It had three trustees – myself, two other distinguished Australians, one, Peter Coleman –

KERRY O’BRIEN: You count yourself as a distinguished Australian?

Masterly journalistic footwork; instinctive Australian larrikanism at its fertile best, too. In seven timely and laser-guided words, O’Brien has got right to the heart of the Hanson-to-Liberal voter switcheroo of the last few years. Politicians like Abbott, being mainstream, get away with so much more than fringe-dwellers like One Nation simply by dint of the presumed respectability that comes with main party status. O’Brien isn’t copping it. But not out of ideological spite (that is, not as a matter of bias); instead, he allows Abbott the fair chance to hang himself, to make fully explicit at last, entirely of his own volition, the way in which that fundamental Australian assumption about Liberal (and ALP) politics has been so powerfully exploited by this in fact very radical government. Seven cheeky words getting right at the meat of Howardism’s success. Thank God for instinctive Australian tall-poppy lopping and scepticism, I say.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, it had two distinguished Australians – Peter Coleman, former federal member for the Liberal Party, and John Wheeldon, who was a minister in the Whitlam Government – as its trustees and we had a perfectly honourable intention to fund legal actions to challenge the validity of the registration of the One Nation Party in Queensland. Nothing wrong with that. And ultimately a Supreme Court decision in Queensland vindicated the position we had.

O’Brien has deftly got Abbott to place the lying triple core of his own Hanson hypocrisy AND the fundamentally dishonest inner-workings of John Howard’s version of the ‘political mainstream’ on full display. One – my trust fund included the mainstream respectable anti-Hansonite Righty Peter Coleman! cries Tony. Read Coleman’s transparent attempt in today’s Australian Op-Ed pages to flesh out the thrust of his involvement: that the ‘distinguished’ Liberal Party was simply trying to be perfectly honourable and counter the socially divisive rise of Hansonism all along. Rather than the dirty truth, which is of course that they wanted to knee-cap her in private while simultaneously dog-whistling her voters into their camp, by publicly indulging their nastier whinges and adopting some of her more superficial policies. Though certainly not her flailing anti-globe economic ones, which of course Libs like Abbott (and Lib-benefactors like Dick Honan) are never going to ditch, even though these are what truly drives Hansonism.

Two – my trust fund included the mainstream respectable anti-Hansonite Lefty John Wheeldon! cries Tony. With monstrous gall he even squeezes in dear old Gough’s name, in the usual pre-emptive attempt to neutralise any objections from mainstream Lefties; the Federal ALP, say. (Margo: Wheeldon is now a right-winger linked to radical-conservative magazine Quadrant.)

Three – Abbott laughably invokes the third in his triumvirate of sanctifying political respectability: that bastion of the Oz civic mainstream, which his Liberal Party of course positively despises and which Bishop and Howard and even he himself (in the very same breath!) undermine with their public comments querying the sentence, anyway – those pesky old ‘separation of powers’ Courts.

These three dishonest appeals to the ‘mainstream’ in Abbott’s answer (the Liberal, Labor and Legal establishments), so beautifully teased out by one tart comment from O’Brien, are all critical components of what is the broader Liberal Party defensive move now: trying to cover their grubby tracks by resort to what Abbott (Liberal MP and Minister of the Crown) thinks is still his automatic right to presumptions of political distinguished-ness. This is the core factor in understanding the enduring mainstream electoral tolerance of John Howard’s government of opportunist grubs, even after its embrace of many hitherto fringe-dweller policies. If Hanson The Ratbag says: Turn the boats around by force! she’s a socially divisive fringe-dweller. When Howard The Distinguished Lib deploys the ADF and does just that, why, he’s simply responding sensibly to legitimate mainstream concerns. When Hanson The Ratbag cries: Stuff land rights and bugger the Wog Boat People! she’s a racist. When Howard The Respectable Lib tears Wik to bits and shouts kids overboard, he’s sensibly preferring to focus on practical reconciliation, or voicing mainstream concerns about uncontrolled immigration. It’s all a matter of language and tone and context, isn’t it. Hanson The Ratbag spruiking from the back of a ute in Longreach is a divisive fringe threat to mainstream social cohesion. Howard The Distinguished Lib orating at the Sydney Institute is relaxed and comfortable, reaching out to the respectable Australian mainstream.

The things you can get away with when you wear a nice shiny suit and talk posh, eh?

Except that Kerry O’Brien, with that one superb interjection, coldly reminds Abbott that he and his Party are suddenly, on matters Hanson, as suitlessly, stark-bollocky naked as the wriggling little grubs they have long been. That in the end all the retrospective ‘noice’ talk is just so much self-deluding bullshit. That ultimately, it’s what you’ve DONE (to the country) in your time at the helm, the policies you’ve embraced, that will determine your historical place on the political spectrum. The Libs know it, and a whole lot of the younger, slightly-wetter and more idealistic types who still have long careers ahead of them, are starting to wonder just what Hard-Right Social Policy life might turn out to be like, once Howard himself has triumphantly retired, taking his sanitising sheen with him. Phil Ruddock going to court to KEEP five-year-olds in detention? Our black-clad SAS lads terrifying refugees FROM Saddam? Remove the wholly-manufactured political fiction that is dear, reassuring Mainstream Honest John himself, and it all looks rather excessive, nasty and un-Australian, doesn’t it. Could it be that Howardism without Howard will turn out to be just a little bit rat-bag fringe-ish, a tad mainstream voter-lonely? Yikes! Man the retrospective ‘respectable’ battle-stations, Tony Abbott and the Oik Exploiters Team!

KERRY O’BRIEN: There are a lot of people out there right now who would believe that you’re anything but honest in the way you’ve explained all this.

Watch now as Tony tries to stitch his shredded suit back together.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, I think that I can live with my conscience. (Read: Trust me, mainstream Australia – I’m still The Honourable Member! Honest!) I think it was very important to challenge the Hanson juggernaut back then in 1998. (Read: Trust me, small-l Boomer Liberals and mainstream Boomer Whitlamites: I was on your bleeding heart side all along! Kennett said we should challenge the Hanson juggernaut, too – in public. Like honest gutsy leaders would.) The difference is, Kerry, that a lot of people who were angry with her then feel sorry for her now, and I suppose I do myself, because I think that there’s a sense in which the punishment meted out to her doesn’t really fit the crime, but certainly, at the time, the reality of her so-called party needed to be exposed and I was happy to try to do it. (Read: But if we Libs had done it Jeff’s way and approached Hansonism honestly and healthily in cooling, defusing public debate – that is, if we’d GENUINELY ‘exposed the reality of her party’ IE to open debate – well, her supporters just wouldn’t have voted for us, would they!? And unless we can continue to maintain our hypocritical duality on poor/nasty, hard-done-by/socially-divisive Pauline Hanson now, as I’ve just tried to do here, then they won’t vote for us tomorrow! Certainly not now they’ve found out that the Oik Exploiters Team was nutting her all along!)

KERRY O’BRIEN: We know you established that fund to use Terry Sharples as a stalking horse in 1998.

TONY ABBOTT: No, that’s not right. Stalking Horse: Macquarie definition 2: “Anything put forward to mask plans or efforts; a pretext.” Alstonian biased language, or acute linguistic precision? You decide.

KERRY O’BRIEN: No?

TONY ABBOTT: No. I had dealt with Terry Sharples – I had dealt with Terry Sharples because he was the person who initially was going to bring this legal case to stop Des O’Shea from providing that money to One Nation. Terry Sharples and I came to a parting of the ways and it was after that parting of the ways that I set up the Australians for Honest Politics trust.

KERRY O’BRIEN: But it’s not the first time you talked about money with Terry Sharples?

TONY ABBOTT: Well, I promised that Terry Sharples would not be out of pocket.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Hmm. Well, just on this issue, let’s briefly flash back to the interview you did with Tony Jones on Four Corners which went to air on August 10. You did that interview, I’m told, on July 31, ’98, where you denied any knowledge of any sort of fund for Terry Sharples. We’ll just have a quick look.

In a small stroke of production genius – 7.30 Report supervising producers are Clay Hichens and Phil Kwok – we’re treated to an inset box monitoring Abbott’s death-roll expression, as he is hoist slowly on the petard of his own rank historical lies. A grand use of real-time technology to help give us, the Public, a better chance of grasping the Public Truth. Pictures tell a lot of stories, and for us to be able to watch Abbott’s facial contortions in the next few seconds, which represent a veritable War and Peace of duplicity and deceit, is fabulously civically-inclusive. Abbott’s discomfort? Well, it’s as if we’re rubbernecking on a younger Tony being caught red-handed behind the bike-shed with a dirty magazine by some bruiser Jesuit Brother.

*

TONY JONES: So there was never any question of any party funds –

TONY ABBOTT: Absolutely not.

Oh dear me. I bet John Howard – Master Obfuscator – has nightmares about that answer for years. Chortle.

TONY JONES: Or other funds from any other source –

TONY ABBOTT: Absolutely not.

I believe the appropriate Spin Doctor post-mortem is: ‘Bugger’.

TONY JONES: Being offered to Terry Sharples?

TONY ABBOTT: Absolutely not.

Poor pious Tony, three times the denier. Perhaps he can find post-political career grace in a seminary? We segue back in on O’Brien, in very best icily-controlled killer mode now. And just how nail-gun precise is this next question – he knows he has to contemporaneously re-pin Abbott to this ‘ancient’ history for it to ‘matter’.

*

KERRY O’BRIEN: And you’re saying now that wasn’t a lie – not just Liberal Party funds but any other funds?

Check. Abbott’s got two choices: a) just admit that it was a lie back then and brazen it out, or b) try to waffle around it. You can imagine Howard’s spinners positively screaming at the TV at this point, urging him to cut his losses now. Abbott, like all arrogant cooked gooses, takes the fatal second option.

TONY ABBOTT: I had promised that he wouldn’t be out of pocket, but there’s a difference between telling someone he won’t be out of pocket and telling someone that you’re going to have to pay him money.

Check-mate, give or take a few days or weeks. It’s all over. Abbott’s just dug his political grave. O’Brien keeps handing him the tools: shovel, pick-axe, crow-bar…

KERRY O’BRIEN: What’s the difference? If you say to me, “Kerry, you won’t be out of pocket for this”, aren’t I entitled to assume that means you’re going to guarantee the funds for me?

TONY ABBOTT: But the thing was that it was an entirely contingent matter. Money would only have gone from a person who was willing to support this case to Sharples in what I thought was the then-unlikely event of a cost orders being made against him.

…dynamite, hammerdrill, bobcat…

KERRY O’BRIEN: Let’s just look at precisely the question that Tony Jones put to you in ’98. He said, “So there was never any question of any party funds –

TONY ABBOTT: Party funds.

KERRY O’BRIEN: “Or other funds?”.

TONY ABBOTT: Yes and as you’ll notice –

…excavator, steam-shovel, nuclear-powered diamond-driller…

KERRY O’BRIEN: And you didn’t lie in your response when you said, “Absolutely not, absolutely not.”?

Daffy old Tony Abbott seems to be on the way to bloody China!

TONY ABBOTT: And as you’ll notice, Kerry, he said “party funds”. I started to answer the question and I went on to answer the question, but strictly speaking no money at all was ever offered to Terry Sharples. Pro bono lawyers were arranged and someone had offered to stand a costs order, should a costs order be made, but, no, no money was ever offered to Terry Sharples.

It’s true that O’Brien is working with an apparently-willing feed man now, but his professional control and focus and precision is supreme. Watch this methodical filleting unfold now. It’s fantastic television journalism; a towering example of how this medium, in the hands of skilled and experienced professionals operating via a public broadcaster, can help pull down the contemporary firewalls separating the public from the powerful, giving us ALL a chance to see for ourselves the massive, self-serving self-delusions and polite fictions that people like Abbott sustain in their own (respectable, mainstream, pious!) consciences, such that their own dirty, amoral backroom machinations won’t cause them too many sleepness nights.

KERRY O’BRIEN: When you put out your statement last night explaining your position, you were at pains to say that your answer only applied to the first part of the question, that is to Liberal Party funds, but it didn’t apply to the second part of the question – “or other funds”.

TONY ABBOTT: And then I went on to say, strictly speaking no money at all was offered to Terry Sharples, and that’s correct.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Look, by your own admission now, you set up the fund –

TONY ABBOTT: Yes, after – well after –

KERRY O’BRIEN: ..for the Australians for Honest Politics Trust –

TONY ABBOTT: Well after that incident.

KERRY O’BRIEN: ..on August 24.

TONY ABBOTT: That’s correct.

KERRY O’BRIEN: On August 24, 25 days after the interview.

TONY ABBOTT: Yeah.

KERRY O’BRIEN: That’s not well after.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, it’s after.

KERRY O’BRIEN: It’s three weeks.

TONY ABBOTT: So I was supposed to say, Kerry –

KERRY O’BRIEN: But nothing was in train?

TONY ABBOTT: So I was supposed to say, “Oh, and by the way, Tony, in a few weeks time I’m going to set up a trust fund that is going to fund a different legal action”? Was I supposed to say that?

KERRY O’BRIEN: And you weren’t working on setting up that fund?

O’Brien’s hoping for a solid denial, because he knows that he and other journos can go on and check this out. He gets it. Another groan from the Spin Doctors, I’ll bet. Abbott’s toast – if there’s still such a thing as Public Truth, that is.

TONY ABBOTT: No, because at that point in time I believe I may still have had some kind of an involvement with Terry Sharples, but after the Sharples matter wasn’t going to progress anywhere, or certainly wasn’t going to progress anywhere with my assistance, I then thought, “Well, it is really important to regularise this whole thing”, and that’s why –

KERRY O’BRIEN: So in the space of three weeks you got around all these other people and organised and set up a trust fund in three weeks?

TONY ABBOTT: You’re amazed by that, are you?

KERRY O’BRIEN: I am.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, get real, Kerry.

KERRY O’BRIEN: But you did? You did all that in three weeks?

TONY ABBOTT: Yeah, yeah, sure. Sure.

KERRY O’BRIEN: It must have been really urgent.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, look, it was. Think back, Kerry, to that time. I mean, you were crying, as were so many other people, for someone to stop this terrible Hanson juggernaut.

KERRY O’BRIEN: I was asking questions. I wasn’t crying for anything.

The desperate Abbott having a go at him personally now, but O’Brien’s in masterly control. (‘I was asking questions.’ Priceless.)

TONY ABBOTT: If you go back, Kerry, to the parliamentary debate on 1 July, I think it was, of 1989 – 1998 – Labor speaker after Labor speaker were demanding, screaming, that the Government in general, but I in particular, do something to stop this terrible Hanson woman. Well, I did.

KERRY O’BRIEN: What we’re focusing on was whether you misled the people of Australia –

TONY ABBOTT: The ABC?

KERRY O’BRIEN: No, the public, the audience that watched the program.

Priceless. Absolutely priceless. We’re here, all right. We watched. Man, are we watching what you do now with Tony Abbott, Prime Minister.

TONY ABBOTT: And I believe that my answers were justified.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Well, Terry Sharples says you had a meeting with him and others on July 7, ’98, where you offered him $20,000 to cover his legal costs.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, see, I dispute that and I always have.

KERRY O’BRIEN: You did have the meeting though, didn’t you, on July 7?

TONY ABBOTT: Yes, so what? Big deal.

Take a shower, Tony? The last Liberal Party defence: public apathy. I s’pose it might work yet again.

KERRY O’BRIEN: And the question of costs didn’t come up?

TONY ABBOTT: Look, the question of how much it would cost, what would be the possible downside of a court case – sure, that came up.

KERRY O’BRIEN: So you did talk about costs with him and you talked about meeting the costs?

TONY ABBOTT: Yes, but there’s a difference between offering to pay someone money – offering to pay Terry Sharples money – and supporting a legal case.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Where were you going to get the money?

TONY ABBOTT: Well, I’m not going to tell you that, Kerry.

KERRY O’BRIEN: When you offered him the money where were you going to get it from?

TONY ABBOTT: Kerry, I am not going to tell you that.

KERRY O’BRIEN: So you didn’t have a fund in mind?

TONY ABBOTT: No, I didn’t.

KERRY O’BRIEN: You didn’t have a fund in train?

TONY ABBOTT: No, I didn’t at that stage.

KERRY O’BRIEN: But you were confident that you would be able to find money for him, presumably not out of your own pocket?

TONY ABBOTT: Not for him not for him – but for an action, for a legal action.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Let’s not split hairs. Let’s not split hairs.

TONY ABBOTT: Well, let’s not.

KERRY O’BRIEN: It was to fund his action?

TONY ABBOTT: Yes, and there is a world of difference between funding an action or, at least, getting pro bono lawyers to act without charge and having someone who might stand a costs order in the contingency that a costs order might be made and offering him money. I did not offer him money.

KERRY O’BRIEN: And then you offered to underwrite effectively his costs in a legal action. That is money. Costs is money, isn’t it?

So where are we finally at? Well, O’Brien has coldly, relentlessly, irreversibly and brilliantly manoeuvred Abbott into that rock-and-a-hard-place where many of us, probably since about kids overboard, or maybe ‘never-ever GST’ times, or maybe even ironic ‘Honest John’ days, have wanted the Howard Government to be: publicly and unambiguously forced to argue that black is white and two plus two equals five. Read and enjoy (the endgame bold highlights are mine):

TONY ABBOTT: Well, I said that he would not be out of pocket.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Is costs money?

TONY ABBOTT: Well –

KERRY O’BRIEN: When it really gets down to it, costs is money, isn’t it?

TONY ABBOTT: What I said was that he would not be out of pocket.

KERRY O’BRIEN: He wouldn’t be out of pocket?

TONY ABBOTT: That’s correct.

KERRY O’BRIEN: With money? Money? Cash? Money?

TONY ABBOTT: Well, I said he wouldn’t be out of pocket.

KERRY O’BRIEN: And on July 11 you met him again and you handwrote a guarantee, didn’t you?

TONY ABBOTT: I had sent him a note, but this is not new news, Kerry.

KERRY O’BRIEN: No, but then on July 31 –

TONY ABBOTT: All of this was on the record years ago.

KERRY O’BRIEN: But on July 31, you told Tony Jones – you gave him an “absolutely not” denial about any kind of funds going to Terry Sharples.

TONY ABBOTT: I said that I had not offered him money and I stand by that.

KERRY O’BRIEN: You offered him costs?

TONY ABBOTT: Well, I said that he wouldn’t be out of pocket.

KERRY O’BRIEN: That’s money!

TONY ABBOTT: Oh, come on, Kerry.

KERRY O’BRIEN: Tony Abbott, that is money. Let me hear it from your lips — that is money!

TONY ABBOTT: Let’s move on. I did not offer to pay Terry Sharples any money.

KERRY O’BRIEN: You offered to cover his costs.

TONY ABBOTT: But I did not offer to pay Terry Sharples any money.

KERRY O’BRIEN: I think the audience understands that costs is money, so we’ll move on..

You bet your toasted political arse we do, Tony.

***

If John Howard won’t sack Abbott then John Howard presumably believes that court costs are not money, too. That, of course, is a matter for the Liberal Party and its supporters to address. Though a Minister of the Crown who truly believes such a thing, and says so right out there in public, should, I submit with some embarrassment, more properly be regarded as occupying a place on the Australian political spectrum some considerable way beyond the conspiratorial fringe of even we Lunar Lefty Greens and Redneck Righty Hansonites.

Certainly not in the ‘respectable mainstream’, anyway. Then again, I’m not an economist, and don’t fully understand Tony Abbott’s new-fangled Market Theory ways.

But it does pay to remember, when reflecting on this fine piece of Public Broadcasting, that the 7.30 Report specifically, and the ABC more broadly, is under considerable attack from such Ministers right now. (If Abbott can’t grasp that court costs are money, then what on earth would he make of a more complex fiscal concept like ABC funding!?) And if Australian Citizens think that programs that enable interviews like this one are worth defending in the Australian Public Interest, then maybe you should drop the show an encouraging line at guestbook.

Where-ever you stand politically, I think that this sort of work is an incredibly important check-and-balance component of our threatened secular liberal democracy, and as such deserves our strongest possible support. The ABC has its shortcomings just like every other part of the Australian Public Polity, but when it works – and it mostly does – then it works for nobody but us Australian Citizens. Bravo, Kerry O’Brien. Bravo 7.30 Report. Bravo, Aunty.

No clothes, John, but what a spinner!

The Prime Minister’s spin on today’s Mike Seccombe ethanol scoop (PM’s officials labelled as ethanol spies) is so transparent, so predictable, so lame and so typically cowardly that he really is, now, doing little more than exposing his complete contempt for any voter with a brain by even trying it on.

Now we have coal-face Australian embassy staff at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) joining that long line of public servants, ADF personnel, anonymous advisers and sundry Howard fall-takers who have in their bemused day been subtly maneuvered, by this most devious of Prime Ministers, into absorbing the worst of whatever the scandal of the day may, or may not, bring down.

Here is what Honest John had to say today about our Free Market government’s poxy case of retrograde, 1950s, State-mandated protectionism, as reported in the Herald. Watch how the firewall manoeuvre, in all its magnificent subtlety, is set in motion, just in case it turns out to be needed later. My bold:

But Mr Howard said there was nothing wrong with the phone calls.”What the embassy was doing, and I’ve no doubt it made inquiries, what the embassy was doing the normal thing that a post would do because the government was considering a change of policy to remove the excise exemption,” he told Sky News. “Whenever a decision like that is taken some companies benefit, and some companies are disadvantaged. I am sure that inquiries were made, that was an entirely routine proper thing to have been done.”

Mr Howard said the information gathered was routine, about the size of the shipment and its planned departure time. He said the government may have first heard about the shipment from Manildra. “I think in factthat we first would have heard from Manildra about the possibility of the shipment coming,” he said. “I’m not the least embarrassed about the fact the embassy made inquiries, that’s their job.”

Now it may seem on the face of this that the Prime Minister is defending the embassy staff for their ‘four phone calls a day’ zeal here, but that is wrong. He is only ‘defending’ the embassy staff in the same way that Max Moore-Wilton ‘defended’ the Royal Australian Navy and Defence Department people on the day he announced his own retirement as head of the Prime Minister’s Department, when he was quoted on kids overboard in an Australian article by Dennis Shanahan (18 December), as follows. My bold:

“I understand the criticisms, and, of course, mistakes were made. But all of the people concerned did what they could to the best of their ability. I stand by them 100 percent. There was no malice.”

Again, it sounds like Moore-Wilton is defending the RAN and the bureaucrats. In fact, by introducing the idea that they need to be defended, he is doing precisely the opposite – setting them up, in a gutless mock-innocent way, for him or his successors, should future developments require it, to shaft them completely.

Webdiary readers may recall my Christmas Letter to our Leader, in which I requested the PM to take on board full and explicit responsibility for all aspects of Operation Relex, precisely because the games his team were playing had become so obvious. It came as no surprise to me, then, when I read this Shanahan interview just a few days after Liberal minister Mrs Danna Vale had acknowledged receipt of my PM’s letter. In turn, I sent her this further email. Introducing it here will help amplify why the PM’s comments in ‘defence’ of the embassy staff today are nothing of the sort, are equally just a grubby preliminary act in the now-standard firewall process. My bold:

From: Jack Robertson, BALMAIN NSW 2041

To: Ms Nicholls, Electoral Office for Ms Danna Vale, MP

Information copies: All Federal MPs and Senators; the Parliamentary Press Gallery

18 December 2002

Dear Ms Nicholls,

Thank you for acknowledging receipt of my letter to the Prime Minister, of 14 December 2002, in which I expressed serious concern over unanswered Human Rights Watch allegations of brutality during Operation Relex made against our Australian Defence Force (ADF).

Ms Nicholls, in this holiday period, I would be grateful if you could urge Ms Vale to bring this matter to the attention of the Prime Minister as a matter of considerable priority. I draw your attention in particular to press reports today of imminent preparations for war (although noting the PM’s comments on them), and suggest that it would be unfair of us to deploy our men and women to Iraq with any allegations hanging over their heads.

On what I can only consider a more ominous note, I noted the recent resignation of Mr Howard’s Cabinet Permanent Secretary, Mr Max Moore-Wilton, and was particularly unsettled by his comments on the so-called Children Overboard affair quoted in the front page article of today’s Australian as follows: “I understand the criticisms, and, of course, mistakes were made. But all of the people concerned did what they could to the best of their ability. I stand by them 100 percent. There was no malice.”

Ms Nicholls, I would be grateful if you would ask Ms Vale to stress urgently to the PM that, in fact, despite these words, Mr Moore-Wilton is actually NOT standing by anyone ‘100 percent’, as he is now heading off to some lucrative and unaccountable position in private industry (arguably, in a similar way as did Mr Peter Reith last year). Since, also like Mr Reith, Mr Moore-Wilton was a very powerful and influential man at the very epicentre of Operation Relex, the last election campaign and what can only now be described as your government’s sloppiness, incompetence, recklessness or economy with the truth, its wilful ignorance, and/or the outright malicious dishonesty that resulted from this combination during the kids overboard matter, you will naturally understand my growing anxiety as to whether or not the men and women responsible for exposing our ADF people to the allegations in the Human Rights Watch Report are truly committed to standing by them.

As you may be aware, Ms Nicholls, when a public official or politician starts to say things like: ‘I stand by my subordinates 100 percent’, even as they cut and run, it is usually the time to start watching your back! And if I may be perfectly frank, I personally do not believe anything Mr Moore-Wilton says, I do not ever trust him, I do not think he should have been a senior public servant in the first place, and I do not believe he cares one bit for anyone else in Australia but himself. (I do, on the other hand, think that he is a liar, a thug, an intellectual coward, a bully, a wrecker and an opportunist.) Naturally, you will understand why I am so keen not to allow any member of our ADF to be screwed by him, and similar non-military people, in any way.

To that end, Ms Nicholls, please urge Ms Vale to bring my growing concerns, and the respectful requests I make of the Prime Minister in my previous letter, immediately and urgently to the appropriate people’s attention, in particular to that of Mr Howard, and Mr Moore-Wilton himself, who naturally will remain responsible for any and all of his decisions and actions during his time as Prime Minister’s Department head long, long, long after his appointment technically expires on Friday.

Ms Nicholls, thank you for your prompt and courteous response in the first instance.

Jack Robertson

***

Nothing further from Mrs Vale, and sure enough, with utter predictability, just a few months later, that great and fearless and honourable ex-Public Servant Max the Axe – with his fat public purse payout tucked snugly in his bank account, and with his fat snout now buried deeply and safely in the utterly-unscrutinised pig-trough that is the newly-privatised Australian Airports Free Market Game – showed us what he meant when said he was ‘standing by the kids overboard crew 100 percent’. This from the Sunday program’s 64th birthday special on the PM a few weeks ago. My bold:

JOHN LYONS: The Government’s position on the so called “children overboard” issue also polarised the nation. Clearly, sections of the government misled the public but supporters of the government now blame the defence forces.

MAX MOORE-WILTON: In future I think the defence force including he captain of the vessel should be more careful in the reports they give to their superiors because the one thing that’s never been said, I think clearly enough was, this report would never have past unless the captain of the vessel at the time had said something. Now the captain of the vessel has been regarded by the senate and others as a semi hero.

Forgive my by-now standard bile, Daniel Moye, but I put it to you and fellow conservatives and small ‘l’ Liberals that Mr Max Moore-Wilton, like everything he represents, is a foul, opportunistic destroyer of Westminster conventions and principles, and a self-incriminating enemy of the health of Australian civic life.

But I digress. My more relevant point is to demonstrate the pattern, to show more clearly why I am contemptuously sceptical of the PM’s apparently sincere ‘defence’ of embassy staff and their exposed role as politically-manipulated ‘spies’ in this matter.

Notice how the PM’s language becomes abstract in tense and voice, oh-so-subtly disengaging itself from the actuality of the Manildra case – as if our PM is an aging Sir Robert Menzies conducting a fatherly tutorial in Westminster & Civic Administration 101, rather than an incumbent Prime Minister caught red-handed misusing DFAT channels and assets to enable rank political favouritism, and then misleading Parliament thoroughly about it. Such is Howard’s now-instinctive capacity and appetite for removing himself from the specific consequences of his style of governance when the specific consequences of his style of governance backfire on him. Examine the habitual way that he says: “I have no doubt (the Embassy) made enquiries”, and “I am sure that enquiries were made” (as if he is musing on detached first principles), instead of saying simply: “Yes, the embassy made enquiries”, and “Yes, enquiries were made” (as he surely knew and probably directed then, and as he in any case absolutely would know now).

It’s precisely the same mode of speech as when he generally preferred to argue: “If a country like Iraq is allowed to keep WMD, it would be dangerous if we did not invade”, rather than the more concrete: “Iraq has WMD, so we must invade”; and “I don’t want the kind of people who throw children overboard in this country” rather than: “These people threw children overboard, so I don’t want them here”.

Executive government by foolproof Motherhood statement, firewalling-as-you-go.

The truth on Manildra? My guess is that the Prime Minister, or more probably one of his tame anonymous underlings, picked up the phone (or whatever) last year and left relevant embassy staff in no uncertainty about what he required – hard, specific information about this shipment, way above and beyond the ‘normal routine thing’ of DFAT practice. However it was done, all such instructions would have naturally been conveyed in that soft, clubby, oh-by-the-way off-the-record mode, the greasy cogs of our once frank and fearless and proper Public Service turning ever-more easily and automatically at his unspoken wink-and-nod, lubricated as it has been by long years of politically-loaded appointment and patronage. Precisely the same way as Howard fixers spoke by phone directly to the Commanding Officer of the SASR at the height of the Tampa crisis and various naval Captains during Operation Relex intercepts, equally doubtless leaving these coal-face operators in no doubt of the lack of policy compromise he demanded (regardless of their own on-the-spot operational judgements), and yet equally leaving almost nothing on the official Public Record for Parliament or his Citizens to nail him down with later.

So, my prediction on this latest buck-passing outbreak is hardly rocket science: if Ethanol-gate proves to have any legs at all with the public (if it gets past Howard’s first defence, that of public apathy), then ultimately – once the Prime Minister’s Department has directed DFAT to conduct an internal enquiry into what commercial spying (tut-tut) the Embassy staff did in fact do at the government’s behest – it will transpire that some staff were perhaps a little zealous in their pursuit of information; that inexperienced junior DFAT personnel possibly overstepped the bounds of the DFAT ‘routine proper thing’, blah blah blah. And so ‘lessons will be learned’, and ‘procedures will be tightened’, and somewhere deep in the lower reaches of DFAT, another few decent and honest public servants who tried hard to do the right thing on an unwritten wink-and-a-nod basis will have the Westminster scales torn from their eyes, and learn to make bloody well sure that they get something in bloody writing next time around. And hell, the PM will possibly even say something statesmanlike and magnanimous and generous to wrap the latest storm-in-a-teacup up in his usual relaxed and comfortable, populist, Public Opinion-proofing, prophylactic persona.

Such as: “Well, obviously, Kerry, in the end I have to take full responsibility for these small errors of judgement at the Embassy, even if perhaps they went a bit overboard (whoops!) on their Trafigura enquiries. And I do that, I really do. I mean, it’s my responsibility in the end, I accept that, of course I accept that. And you know, our DFAT people are truly excellent people, and I stand by them 100 percent. But I mean, you can’t expect Old Bailey standards of perfect judgement all the time, especially given that our DFAT staff are under so much pressure in these uncertain TERROR times.”

And then The Australian’s editorial writers will write another mildly wrist-tapping apologia and a wink-wink call for tighter accountability next time, and then a Janet Albrechtsen will line up and have another go at us sad, nit-picking Lefty wannabe elites for our ‘anti-Howard obsessions’, and then Paul Kelly will drone on over the weekend in his sanctifying way about how the ALP is missing the point on Manildra anyway, which is the Howard government’s on-going failure to fully re-embrace economic reform, and blah blah blah.

And the whole thing will blow over, and the government will have got away with lying through its teeth once more, to cover its bum for blatantly feathering the nest of its big end of town mates, in a dirty and hypocritical Protectionist episode that makes a total mockery of the vicious treatment meted out not so long ago, by this government, to every battling waterfront worker who ever had an alsation dog set on him in the name of ‘global economic competitiveness’.

And Howard’s popularity ratings won’t budge an inch, and white will turn a darker shade of black, and one day, pretty soon, when someone grown-up and honest in the government or public service says: “Terror alert!” and it’s actually for real, not one of us will take them at their word, anyway.

Again, sorry sorry sorry to harp, but this relatively minor kerfuffle has it all. It captures beautifully the cowardly, corrosive, buck-passing, arse-covering sickness of this now out-of-control and civically-bankrupted gaggle of conmen and women we call Federal Government. Howard’s personal tactical armoury, and thus that of the entire crowd, is now nothing but a grab-bag of all our most base Human instincts. Division, populist stirring, bureaucratic delay and ‘security’ suppression, policy hypocrisy and piecemeal opportunism, waffling obfuscation, faked conviction, endless condescending exploitation of the battler, the Anzac, the non-existent Ordinary Australian.

Howard is like a school-yard gossip-stirrer, setting up fight after fight after exhausting, community-cleaving fight, and then standing back to await the arrival of the schoolmarm – Electorally-Usable Public Opinion – so he can lord it up as the Statesmanlike Teacher’s Pet, well above the domestic fray. (“Hey, I’m not saying I believe this myself, Penny, but I heard Timmy say that Betty said that maybe Jimmy said that you said that refugees are terrorists and we should reintroduce Capital Punishment so we can get the bastards who did this! Eh? Eh? Eh?”)

And there, too, are all the other kids in the playground – there’s Peter, and Phillip, and Brendon, and Amanda, and Tony, who all should know better – all playing his dirty game, even jumping in there defending the grubby little bastard whenever anyone who is not in his gang catches him at it red-handed, as Costello is defending now. There’s a deputy mug born every second, I suppose.

Oh look, maybe I am obsessed now, and maybe this sort of transparent tosh doesn’t matter to most people – especially when it comes to mouse poo like ethanol and public moneys and rich, industry-protected Liberal Party donors. But it matters a hell of a lot to me, because it represents a pattern, and the more and more I observe the way this gutless government firewalls its way clean out of any hint of electoral trouble (whether it be Iraq reconstruction casualty-grief, or WMD lies fallout, or kids overboard, or Education Report censorship, or plasma TV or phone card mischief, or whatever), the more I worry what such shameless adroitness might one day mean, when it comes to assuming full responsibility for what our soldiers, sailors and airmen might or might not have been forced to do during Operation Relex.

All in the name of an uncompromising, election-winning Border Protection beat-up.

When black is white it’s easy being green

Since political ‘manifestos’ seem to be the order of the Webdiary moment, I’d like to take the opportunity to write in defence of being Green.

To me, voting Green, as I have done in every election post-1990, is much more than just an expression of political support for the only party that seems to be serious about safeguarding our collective ecological future, but that the Greens are such a party is alone enough to win my vote.

Yes, it’s true that the jury remains out on much of the science associated with the hot Green issues – global warming, threats to biodiversity, genetically-modified crops, and so on, but there is already more than enough Empirical evidence on such matters to convince me, a science graduate. The way I look at an issue like climate change is very hard-headed: we can either take the chance that the doomsdayers are right (and there are increasing numbers of them), and thus make major strategic changes now (while they would still have an effect); or we can wait and see. Most scientists seem to think that the ‘Old Bailey jury proof’ on global warming won’t be available for another twenty years or so – by which time, of course, it will probably be too late. And then what? The Greens get to say ‘We told you so’ as a thousand Pacific Islands disappear under the waves?

Sorry, but I’m not prepared to take that chance. What I find bemusing is that so many allegedly ‘practical’ mainstream voters of a more conservative (left or right) bent are – the kind of voters, what’s more, who were prepared to support, on almost no evidence, a speculative invasion and occupation of another country to ‘pre-empt’ a future WMD catastrophe. (Laugh at Greenies like me on far more potentially-disastrous threats, dismiss me as a scaremonger? Curious double-standards here.)

I suppose it’s sometimes easy to ridicule Green tactical excesses – the ‘feral’ aspects of environmental protest, the unorthodox economic theories, the ‘dancing with pixies at the bottom of the garden’. And yet, I have no doubt that future generations will look back upon the turn of the third Millennium, and conclude that the Greens, of all political groupings of our era, were the only ones with their eye on the real ball, the most far-sighted of us all.

Climate change, salination and soil erosion, the looming crisis in fresh water supply, rising sea levels, depleted global fish stocks, the advance of deserts – these are surely not chimeras in a strategic sense, however much we might care to debate the nuances of the short-term numbers. They are real and, arguably now, exponentially-accelerating processes, and only Green parties the world over are placing the finding of timely solutions to them at the heart of their political philosophies, which is what it will take to deal with them effectively. We can argue about Kyoto until we’re blue in the face, but something, ultimately, will have to be done about carbon emissions on the kind of globo-strategic scale that individual, short-term, left-right domestic political cycles simply cannot effect.

The truth is that neither mainstream party in Australia is truly serious about Green issues, and the same is generally true of politics worldwide: Conservatives and neo-conservatives increasingly dismiss them outright, while Progressives usually still pay patronising lip service only, seeing such matters as just another opportunity to rope in a few extra bleeding heart votes by cynical, opportunistic default.

To make a real difference to our ecological future, Green issues must form the bedrock, not the periphery, of a political party’s platform. Legislative aims must begin with the question: ‘What is good for the sustainable future of the planet?’ and then flow from there into all other policy areas – economics, public infrastructure, employment, research and development, education, industry – not the other way around. Otherwise, you might as well not bother.

And it’s for this reason that my support for the Greens as a growing global political force goes beyond matters that are merely ‘ecological’ (if such a distinction is meaningful anyway). Of all global political philosophies available to us, only the Greens’ has a central theme that is, ultimately, still grounded in any meaningful practical expression. You cannot get a more benign and utilitarian and accessible ‘Big Idea’ than the future health of the planet on which we all live.

True, so far, some environmental groups have at times embraced extreme methods and varying degrees of fanaticism – and, yes, ill-judged scare-mongering, too – but as the Green movement has evolved, a startlingly-diverse range of political strands have begun to coalesce around the one central aim of taking care of Humanity’s home. Tree-huggers, farmers, billionaires, students, baby boomer Seachangers, international scientific groups, local mothers clubs, industry leaders, rock stars, grass-roots ‘save-the-local-parkers’, New Agers, indigenous groups – all are increasingly finding common philosophical ground in Green issues.

And it’s not just a matter of saving this forest or that whale or that other piece of Kiribati shoreline over there. It’s far broader, far more holistic and, I suggest without a speck of embarrassment, far more beautiful and Human, too. As the pace of contemporary western life accelerates, as our befuddled idea of ourselves as a species – who we are, why and how we live, what things are truly important to us – fragments under a thousand artificial and self-created pressures, perhaps now to the point of collective Human schizophrenia, there is, I think, a growing hunger afoot in the developed world for us all to stop, pause, and snap out of our mild collective madness. To me, the Green movement is by far our best shot at giving meaningful political expression to that hunger.

And in any case, there is no longer any worthwhile democratic political alternative available. I am, at last, thoroughly through with both ‘Conservative’ and ‘Progressive’ political groupings, for the simple reason that there are no such creatures any more, at least not in the Australian political landscape. There are only populist opportunists for whom power, and power alone, is the only political principle embraced. I read Daniel Moye’s fine articulation of the Conservative Ideal (Why conservatives fear John Howard) and found it admirable but utterly unrecognisable.

I listen to a Bob Carr or even a Paul Keating speech, and for a short moment, I start to believe that ‘Progressivism’ too is still possible in mainstream Australians politics – until the harsh reality of the next ALP branch-stack, the next grubby and cynical attack on a Carmen Lawrence idealist, bursts that hopeful bubble.

Ultimately, I realise that the gap between the expressed ideals and the dirty daily realities of traditional political groupings has been rendered too wide by the entrenched habits of pragmatism. There is always a ‘reason’, an ‘excuse’ for the jettisoning of principle by our two mainstream political groupings, and the net result is two mainstream political groupings that operate according to no over-arching principle at all.

Left and Right is over; it is a dead division; it has ceased to be. There is only the fight for raw power now, and perhaps a little half-hearted window-dressing to disguise that ugly fight. The John Howards and their power-opportunists pay their hollow ‘tributes’ to Deakin and Menzies, while the Simon Creans and Bob Carrs and their power-opportunists lift their goblets of Grange in hollow ‘homage’ to Curtin and Chifley and Whitlam. But it’s all the same game, and that same game is telling believable lies.

“The things that unite us are more important than the things that divide us,” declares the Prime Minister, even as he wedges the nation apart with a casual brutality that will take a generation to heal.

“We are a tolerant and inclusive country,” he says, before dog-whistlingly ‘reminding’ us that that gay men and women have no place in the future of the species, let alone the nation.

“We are fulfilling our legal and moral obligations to refugees and treating them with compassion,” Phillip Ruddock assures us, even while fighting, inch-by-bloodless-inch, a court determination that the detention of a few scared kids behind razor-wire is not merely illegal but also, as anyone with an ounce of honesty and Human instinct would agree (if they allowed their better instincts to prevail), inhumane, cruel, harmful, ludicrous.

“The Australian Labour Party is committed to re-embracing its grass-roots membership,” says the too-clever-by-half ‘intellectual politician’ Bob Carr, even as the Mayor of Parramatta is summarily dumped as Labor candidate in favour of the nobody wife of some nobody Right Faction power-broker.

“This is a victory for the True Believers,” announces Paul Keating smugly, having just destroyed, with breath-taking cynicism and shameless scare-mongering, a Liberal Party opponent who, for once, was actually presenting a political package of considerable idealism and vision.

“Trust me, I am a born-again Greenie,” puffed Graham Richardson once upon a time, and like a fool, I took him at his word. (Never again, Richo. Never, ever again, mate.)

“I did not have sexual relations with that women,” said Bill Clinton, with a hot tear of ‘Progressive’ conviction in his eye.

“Saddam Hussein has sought uranium from Africa,” said George W. Bush, with a resolute, Churchillian gleam of ‘Conservative’ conviction in his.

“Iraq can launch WMD in 45 minutes,” swore Tony Blair, and his brand of political conviction goes, I’m told, by the dull bureaucratic name of ‘The Third Way’ – but it was just another cynical, power-grubbing lie, too.

Such rank public dishonesty has many mournful effects on the civic health of a democracy – disengagement being the political word of the day – but by far the most damaging effect of all is, I think, the long-term damage that it has done to the idea of ‘public truth’ itself. Because when a politician stands before us and, in the face of all the evidence we can see with our own eyes, swears blind – eloquently, passionately, with conviction – that mandatory detention of children is ‘compassionate’, or that Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda are working together to attack us with WMD, then what is destroyed is not just our belief in that particular politician, or their party or political philosophy, or our belief in politics as a civilising force, or our belief in the institutions of democracy, or even our belief in the worth of civic participation in general.

What is truly destroyed, with each rotten public lie – big or small, explicit or implied, outright or dog-whistled, lie of fact or lie of spirit – is our collective belief in belief itself.

And that is why, the older I get, the more comfortable I am with embracing what is quickly becoming an unstoppable global political movement – the simple belief in doing whatever we can to nurture and protect the future of our planet, which is no less, of course, than nurturing and protecting the future of our kids, and their kids, and so on, for all time.

Because for all the many criticism that can be directed at the Greens as a political force – and I concede that there are still many – one that cannot honestly be made to stick is a lack of belief in their own expressed principles and philosophies; Green principles and philosophies which, even better, an individual like me can try to put into meaningful practice. It’s becoming easier to ‘live Green’ all the time, and that doesn’t just mean taking the bus, not flushing the dunny and rolling your own cigarettes. Unlike all other political parties, aspiring to being a ‘good Green party man’ is an entirely personal, individual, and non-ideological lifestyle choice.

Sure, the Greens are no more in possession of all the answers for the future than anyone else, but what I do know is this: what I want from my public representatives is that what they say in public retain some core connection to what they do in public, to the policy decisions and positions they make.

I want Public Truth from our leaders, and the only place I’m getting it consistently these days is from Senator Bob Brown and Company. Liberal, Labor, National, even the Democrats – as parties, they’re all the same to me now: populists, cynics, game-players and patronisers of one sort or another.

And so, in the absence of honesty from Conservatives and Progressives out there in a dinosaurian political Luddite Land where two plus two is now five and white is fast becoming black, the only conclusion any rational voter can draw is this one: that the future story of Public Truth – of global democracy and meaningful civic participation – will be a future written with a billion and more nutty Green Pens.

Fisking John

Speaking of WMD Spin, let’s do a little brief deconstruction ourselves. Here’s one cute Prime Ministerial soundbite, hot off the Spin Central presses today:

“We entered the war in Iraq based upon the failure of the Iraqi government of the time to comply with United Nations’ resolutions, we had intelligence assessments of WMD capability and we reacted appropriately.”

It’s been a while since I’ve hung out with the warbloggers, but let’s see if I can remember how to Fisk such waffle. (Margo: Fisking is blogger talk for taking apart someone’s work line by line. I had a go at fisking Howard’s press club question and answer session at the press club just before the war in Deconstructing JW Howard.)

1. “We entered the war in Iraq…”

Passive, weak and slippery verb (a real give-away). We didn’t ‘enter the war in Iraq’, Prime Minister. We helped start the bloody thing. We were one of only three countries in the entire United Nations of nations to do so meaningfully. No Australian government has ever done this before – helped start a war. Yours did. Our country won’t ever be quite the same again. No matter what your ‘profound conviction’ might be. Australians don’t start wars, John. Thanks to your government’s strategic stupidity, it’s what Australians now do. You might not think so. Most Australians might not think so. The majority of the world’s countries do. They are more right than we are.

2. “based upon the failure of the Iraqi government of the time to comply with UN resolutions…”

This statement is Classic Spin, which really means lies. The Prime Minister is merely ‘fuzzing-up’ the ‘reason’ for invading Iraq – from the very precise (read: dramatic, scary, public opinion-winning) reasons that were quoted daily, to an over-arching ‘sound-good, feel-good’ cure-all which in reality can never be tested or disproved. The Coalition of the Willing specifically claimed at various times (and among much else), that

a) Saddam Hussein was both able and willing to deploy WMD against his neighbours within 45 minutes;

b) had sought to obtain uranium from Nigeria;

c) had direct and dangerous enabling links with al-Qaeda;

d) possessed unmanned drones capable of delivering WMD beyond its borders;

e) had obtained aluminium tubes intended for use in its nuclear weapons programs, and

on, an on, and on.

These are hard, specific claims which, correspondingly, can be proven wrong or right – and all have been proven wrong. Nothing has so far turned up that ‘proves’ Saddam had ‘failed to comply’ with UN resolutions. In the absence of UN sanction for this invasion this is in any case an absurd accusation, since without the UN’s own imprimatur that very ‘reason’ to invade becomes a bitterly-dishonest forgery. The Coalition invading Saddam’s Iraq for his ‘failing to comply with UN resolutions’ – even as the UN refuses to support the action – is like thumping a kid because he ‘looked at your mate funny’, even though your mate is himself urging you to calm down and not hit him.

‘Failure to comply’ is an arbitrary, malleable, meaningless standard when you alone are the sole arbiter. ‘Failure to comply’? What is ‘compliance’ in measurable terms, John?

How can we ever prove or disprove ‘compliance’ now? This is uber-Spin; Alice-in-Wonderland stuff par excellence: Saddam Hussein will have ‘complied’ with UN resolutions when, and only when, the Coalition says he has. A self-defined, UN-excluding, self-serving linguistic roundabout. Spin. Spin. Spin – any faster, John, and your government will whirl right up its own ‘profound convictions and fundamentals’.

Also Spin here is that nifty ‘Iraqi government of the time’ bit – it’s pure (instinctive) Howard verbiage, designed to add an artificially sombre and measured tone to his reference to Saddam’s regime, and to inject a subtle reminder that ‘the world has changed’, that ‘we’ve moved on’, that of course everything (including the ’emerging’ facts) is now ‘different’, and thus, you surely can’t expect the government’s position not to change subtly, too?

As transparent as a sheet of glass. The Emperor has no linguistic clothes.

3. “we had intelligence assessments of WMD capability…”

Big deal. I’ve got my own intelligence assessments of WMD capability, too. So has every other man and his dog on the planet, now. My brother, who’s just spent several savage months in Iraq, could tell you a thing or two about ‘intelligence assessments of WMD capability’ too, John, but I bet you wouldn’t like what he’d have to say, mate. (And you wouldn’t be able to destroy him as an anti-American Lefty loon, a cowardly appeaser, or un-Australian, either; he was nicked by shrapnel once and got a richochet under the chin for your troubles, John. Didn’t find any WMD, though – maybe he was too busy reading Greg Sheridan’s riveting prose).

So – now that we’re all on a ‘WMD intelligence assessment’ level playing field – namely, none of us really have a bloody clue what was what – do tell us about these ‘intelligence assessments’ of yours, John. What did they all specifically say? Which ones (‘sexed-up’?) did you choose to accept with glee, and which ones (sexed-down? boring? too long and measured and grounded in grown-up, detailed, expert opinion?) did you choose to ignore completely? And why, and how did you make those subjective judgements, and where is the hard vindication that your choices and judgements were better than mine, or Bob Hawke’s, or Ray Funnell’s, or Scott Ritter’s, or Robin Cook’s, or Peter Gration’s, or Andrew Wilkie’s, or the late Dr David Kelly’s?

And if you can’t give us that now or soon, with Coalition soldiers increasingly being picked off in the ugly mess you’ve dumped them in, doesn’t that mean your government and your intelligence advisers are incompetent, weak on security, cavalier with our soldiers’ lives, and – above all else – not not not to be trusted on future ‘intelligence assessments’ of when and where they should be sent, in this ‘war on terror’ we are fighting?

Prime Minister – do you (and George W. Bush and Tony Blair) know what the bloody hell you are doing in this war? Or is it time for a change of government? Australian conservative leaderships, as history reminds us, have a proven knack for getting Australia into the kinds of strategic military messes that require fresh, sceptical and lateral-thinking governments to extract us from.

Are you weak on security, Mr Howard? Is George W. Bush? Because it seems pretty weak to me to commit the grand bulk of your fine fighting forces to occupying a country half-way around the world where there was no real threat to begin with, either to you or your allies.

Where was (and is) the true Middle Eastern threat to America, England and Australia? And, for that matter, to Israel? Iraq? Or was and is it from Hamas, from al-Qaeda, from Jemah Islamiah, from Saudi Arabia, Syria, Iran, North Pakistan, the remote Afghanistan deserts? Because it’s pretty clear that none of these groups or places had, in relative terms, very much to do with Saddam Hussein’s WMD or his version of Iraq – however awful either was. Or at least, not until we waded in there with our guns blazing, anyway. Now, of course, the world has changed again; an increasing number of Iraqis hate our guts just as much as the next self-respecting anti-Western fanatic.

So why, for our own sakes, don’t Bush, Blair and you at least admit the awful truth: that of all the countries in the Middle East to invade and occupy – creating chaos, misery, resentment and increased anti-Westernism – Saddam Hussein’s Iraq was, in hard-nosed military-strategic terms, the very stupidest, most self-defeating choice. While 200, 000+ American soldiers have their hands full with newly anti-American zealots in Iraq, established anti-American zealots worldwide are cheering with glee and busying themselves with their next box-cutter or Bali plans.

So tell us a few details about these ‘Iraq threat intelligence assessments’, Prime Minister. What we want to know is why you sent our soldiers to disarm Iraq’s WMD threat by brute force if, as it looks increasingly likely, there wasn’t much of a WMD threat after all. British and US soldiers are still dying every other day. Meanwhile, we don’t even know where Saddam is, let alone what Osama bin Laden and his friends – our true arch-enemies – are currently up to. I just hope that the Coalition’s ‘intelligence assessments’ of that are a touch more reliable.

4. “…and we reacted appropriately.”

‘Appropriately’ – the most pointless word in the English language. Appropriately to what? Appropriate to John W. Howard is what, because as today’s frightening polls show, the bulk of the population in this country is utterly committed to you, John, and nothing else. A majority of Australians still cling desperately to your contrived ‘politics of conviction’ Presidential persona, Prime Minister, even in the stark face of their own dawning realisation that you lied through your teeth on WMD.

So many voters have invested so much in you personally that they have now apparently embraced an almost visceral refusal to allow the scales to fall from their own eyes. Refugees, WMD, ASIO, ANZAC deployments, Reconciliation, the Republic – swathes of ordinary Australians are screwing their eyes and minds shut against ugly facts, against their own common-sense instinct and decency, simply – disastrously – trusting in the convictions of the self-ordained Battler’s Best Mate. Welcome to Louis the Fourteenth territory, Prime Minister: L’etat, c’est Moi! Where ‘appropriate’ means whatever the hell you think is ‘appropriate’. Fine. Let me ask you about the modern Spin Doctor’s ‘Word of Mass Delusion’ I:

Is it ‘appropriate’ that Australia has ‘moved on’ from Iraq even as many Australians are still over there in-country, hunkered down in their flak jackets outside Baghdad airport or patrolling the streets with their anxious Yank and Brit comrades, wondering when a grenade is going to blow up in their face, or an anonymous bullet enter the back of their head?

Is it ‘appropriate’ that David Kelly – Iraq WMD expert – killed himself in isolated despair while gutless politicians just like you keep running like buggery and persist in avoiding the deeper truths about Iraqi WMD that he was trying to make public?

Is it ‘appropriate’ that American soldiers are being daily killed by an increasingly hostile and resentful Iraqi population that just doesn’t really want them to be there any more, and almost certainly never will again?

Is it ‘appropriate’ that George W. Bush recently excluded many of those same soldiers – low-paid political cannon fodder – from the swathe of tax cuts he bestowed upon his most supportive constituency – the rich, many of whom helped sweep him into office, and thus helped drive that an already-dangerously threatened America into an unnecessary and probably-unwinnable war? I

Is it ‘appropriate’ that your own Liberal Party backbench continues to raise not a squeak of dissent about this staggering strategic fiasco? Is it ‘appropriate’ in a modern liberal democracy like Australia – Peter Costello and Phillip Ruddock and Robert Hill and anyone in Cabinet or the back seats – that so many voting Australians continue to ‘support’ your Prime Minister, even while simultaneously agreeing that he lied to them to gain their support for sending our sons and daughters away to kill other human beings?

This, to me, at last, is lunacy territory, and with Australian soldiers again outbound on an unpredictable international intervention, it’s time for the broader parliamentary Liberal Party to wake up, re-assert some Westminster collective balance, and force our Prime Minister to stop spinning his self-serving and now dangerous webs of deceit. Or have they, too, now got too much vested interest in continuing to place their deaf, dumb and blind trust in our nation’s Spin Doctor-in-Chief?

When spin starts to kill it’s time to kill spin

The suicide of Dr David Kelly, the microbiologist at the centre of the battle of wills between the BBC and the Blair government, ought to represent a loud wake-up call to politicians, political advisors, and political journalists in democracies everywhere, and in Australia in particular.

The Howard and Carr governments’ versions of Blair’s unsavoury spinner Alistair Campbell wield every bit as much shadowy influence here as does Campbell in London. Figures like Miles Jordana and Jane Halton and the departed Max Moore-Wilton – unelected, unaccountable, unchecked, unscrutinised – are, if not subject to proper media pressure at last, likely to drive Australian public life as far into the gutter as has this latest tragic result of New Labour’s increasingly dangerous, soft-totalitarian attempts to control every aspect of debate.

Dr Kelly’s death is another urgent call-to-arms for serious journalists everywhere to pause, step back from the pressures of minute-to-second coverage, re-appraise what exactly is occurring in the guise of ‘harmless’ Spin and how they are acquiescing to it, and then try to forge a big shift in the way they collect information and present it to us, the public they serve.

The media, no matter how much we like to criticise them, are on our side. And we need them to start fighting hard for us. The BBC Director-General and his journalists, despite some minor mistakes early in this affair (mostly over-personalising their response to Campbell’s opening attacks on them), are clearly up for the battle. Let’s see how many other journos are ready to get serious at last, especially those in the Murdoch outlets. I personally have a feeling that the Sun-style tabloid hacks, rather than the broadsheet nancy-boys, might prove to be our most powerful shock troops when it comes to breaking down the ‘information barrier’ now dividing the public from our leaders. If only they would get their tongues out of their proprietor’s bottom from time to time.

Here are five angles on defeating the Spin Doctors. Webdiarists might have others. ‘Defeating’ is not hyperbole, either; as the Kelly tragedy shows, there has long been an information war going on between the media and the political estates and it is now starting to cause fatal ‘collateral damage’ out here among the public.

1. Introduce the public to the Spin Doctors.

We need a comprehensive list of who exactly these people are. So powerful is their influence over public life now that we are surely entitled to know far more about them than we do. Someone in the mainstream press should publish an in-depth expose of who ‘spins’ for whom, and details of their employment contracts – including how much they are paid (if they are the public payroll), their working briefs, their security clearances, and their professional histories.

2. Banish Spin Doctor and press release anonymity.

The terms ‘official spokesman’, ‘a spokesman’, ‘a press secretary’ and ‘an official speaking for the government’ and so on should be banished from the press. Instead, even the lowliest official mouthpiece should be precisely identified and named, and press releases should not be accepted unless/until specific authorship is revealed. In opposition to my belief that news reporters should ideally be heard, read but never by-lined, anonymity in influential government circles is a wholly-insidious mechanism and one critical to a government’s ‘firewall’ and ‘dog whistle’ tactical modes. It allows ‘junior spinners’ safely to make (planned) ‘unauthorised’ statements or release information of dubious morality or veracity which, while proving useful in a short-term political sense, never-the-less allow the associated politician the escape route of disowning them later.

Here is an example of how Spin Doctor anonymity destroys public life from today’s Herald; Andrew Wilkie is describing a sick personal attack on him by the Howard camp, following his principled resignation over WMD:

The day after I resigned somebody in the PM’s office leaked to the media that I am having family problems, and that I was mentally unstable. Events were moving pretty quickly, but I clearly remember thata guy called me, around midday, and said he was from the Prime Minister’s office. . . . He said that Howard was personally very sorry that this story had been leaked by a junior person on his staff. They told me that they would retract the story, and to its credit, the press did not follow the story or ask me about it. My wife and I are separated, but I don’t think that means I’m crazy, and the only reason I’m explaining it now is because I don’t want people to think that any of it is true, but that’s the kind of thing that has been happening to me.

You can see what’s happening here. A dual Spin Doctor aim has been achieved – the intended target in this case is not the public, but the Press. Firstly, journalists have now been ‘made aware’ that the ‘real story’ (wink wink, dog-whistle-firewall) here is that Wilkie’s marriage is collapsing and he’s nuts. This is intended to undermine the context in which they receive and report Wilkie’s statements.

Secondly, however, John Howard pre-emptively distances himself from the mucky tactics (in this case almost immediately); journos are ‘made aware’ by another anonymous Spinner that Howard is ‘personally very sorry’ that they now know about Wilkie’s private life. Howard’s circulated regret is no more (or less) genuine than was his public ‘agreeing to disagree with Fred Nile’ over banning Muslim headdress, or his being ‘personally angry’ that ‘someone’ in his office ‘didn’t pass on’ the children overboard or Nigerian nuke-link truths ‘in time’.

His own ‘profound regret’ doesn’t matter; the filthy Wilkie story is out there. (No doubt Howard media supporters will ‘blame’ Wilkie himself for ‘further spreading’ the story now, even in trying to hose it down.)

This is how the anonymous Spinner spins the filthy webs that his ‘respectable’ boss climbs up, creating the opportunities for him to deploy the dog-whistles, the insinuations, the mock-Socratic ‘innocence’, denying stories precisely to stoke them, ‘disavowing’ bigotry and division and gutter-politics precisely while piggy-backing on them.

But these tactics can only work if there is someone putting the dirty cards on the table in the first place. (You can see this tag-team mode of Spin swinging into action now in Britain; Blair is in ‘conciliatory’ mode towards the BBC over Kelly’s death even as his friend and former Spinner/Minister Peter Mandelson is savaging the broadcaster viciously over it).

The role of the anonymous Spinner in particular is to spread the unrespectable dirt: a ‘statesman’ can’t react in (mock-concerned, luke-warm, half-hearted) denial to a suggestion that all Muslims are terrorists, say, unless someone makes that suggestion in the first place. It might be another public figure – Nile, Hanson – or, increasingly (since other public figures can’t always be relied upon), it might originate internally, in the form of ‘an error’, a ‘lapse of judgement’, an ‘unauthorised statement’, a ‘bureaucratic blunder’, and so on.

In the latter case, what is critical is that the originator must be Mr Nobody. A Howard or Carr populist opportunist can only pull off the dog whistle + firewall manoeuvre if he is able to distance himself safely, and you can only do this if there’s no specific person you might have to public ‘finger’ (to prove you’re serious about your ‘disavowals’ – which of course, you are not.).

Clearly, if he was really sorry about this dirty Wilkie story emerging from his office, John Howard would have outed the ‘junior person’ who spruiked it and sacked them, not merely cried crocodile tears; just as, if Blair really is trying to be conciliatory to the BBC, he’d be denouncing Mandelson’s ugly accusations vehemently. But if they both did that, Howard would run out of anonymous spinners willing to leak the useful dirty stories in the first place quick smart, while Blair would have no-one shifting the heat for Kelly’s death onto the BBC on his behalf.

Low-level Spin Doctors know that they’ll never have to personally account for their own immoral tactics, which is the only way immoral tactics ever flourish and flourish. Doing truly filthy anonymous work is all part of the Spinner’s junior apprenticeship. The Republican Party in the US has a huge army of these clowns – the kind of low-level, wannabe-Dick Morris interns and undergrads who organised and peopled the ‘spontaneous democratic voters protests’ (in reality, violently pro-Bush intimidations) in ballot officials’ offices during the Florida recounts.

But now this stuff is turning increasingly poisonous, and in this case fatal. This is hardly the first time an innocent and honourable citizen has committed suicide as a result of anonymous political filth, but it’s an incredibly unambiguous example, and for once it’s not hyperbole to argue that Alistair Campbell, at a minimum, has at least some blood on his hands.

The BBC will wear much artificial opprobrium over this in the coming days, but in fact the journalists involved seem to have behaved with admirable principle and strength of purpose. Still, Kelly, by going to the press with highly-damaging information, stepped outside the government safety zone where anonymity is desirable. Suddenly, it was imperative that he be indentified, so that – like Wilkie – he could be subjected by the likes of Campbell to a vicious credibility-assault. (This is why I argue for anonymity for news reporters – the second a reporter ‘becomes someone’, they are a discreditable target. Witness also Campbell’s intense attacks on BBC reporter Andrew Gilligan, who broke the story.)

I also experienced how government Spinner anonymity is deployed when I tried to defend Margo’s reputation at State Parliament last year (see In which Jack is repelled from the citadel and Jack’s back.) The ‘firewall’ low-level person in Bob Carr’s office, to whom I spoke at length, refused point-blank to identify herself, even while she demanded very, very aggressively all my own personal details (which I happily gave). If it’s good enough for the Kellys and Gilligans and Wilkies to become targets when it suits governments the same should apply to all government personal staffers, right down to the phone boy if necessary.

The time has come to put an end to the anonymous safety for the low-level dirty-work foot-soldiers of Spin. Who are these people, what nasty little things do they get up to from day to day, and – in the case of this ‘junior person’ in the PM’s office, say – how do we, the public, get rid of them, if we can’t vote them out?

The press alone are in a position to flush such grubs out into the harsh light of democracy, and they should do start doing so before the next honourable and idealistic citizen kills themself in demoralised frustration.

3. Point out that the mini-Emperor has no clothes in real time, face-to-face.

Journalists must recognise that there is only one way to take on the smooth and slick Spin Doctor, and that is head-on, using the great traditional strengths of the working reporter: drag the bullshit detectors out, and brush up on the swear word vocabulary. Good spin doctors rely above all else on tame journalists remaining tame (University-tamed, you might say); exhibiting nice manners, personal restraint, a sort of mildly-embarrassed unwillingness to make a gauche scene in front of their journalistic peers.

Margo wrote of the mostly-prissy, foot-shuffling silence from colleagues that greeted her angry tete-a-tete with Bob Carr last year. Alan Ramsey once stood up in the Canberra Press Gallery and shouted “You LIAR!” at John Gorton. Neither episode was sophisticated or elegant, but it is precisely this jettisoning of the self-censoring press conference ‘conventions’ that is now needed.

Since when have Spin Doctors been allowed to tell journalists which questions they can and can’t ask, and when, and how? Why do journalists so meekly follow the Spin Doctor rules? Personally, I crave the day when someone of the stature of Kerry O’Brien or Laurie Oakes simply says, in response to a typical slice of spin doctoring: “No offence, mate, but you are frankly full of bullshit.” I once suggested (in ‘ 52 Ideas for a healthier Australian news media) that reporters should be polite and civil, but it may be that they would make a lot more headway in regaining public support with a little more fruity aggro. Put it this way: reporters can’t sink any lower in the public eyes than right now, so there’s little to lose.

And journalists might be surprised at the effect a little contemptuous rudeness could have on the smarmier Spin Doctors. Most spinners rely heavily on an assumption that no journalist is ever going to stop playing the game. Yet laughing, sneering dismissal of any charlatan’s lies-on-behalf-of-the-boss are usually the best way to burst the bubble they try to construct. If you make them look stupid on-the-spot, then the whole charade tends to collapse. However it’s done, journos need to get the initiative and momentum back from the Spin Doctors. You can only so this by throwing them personally off-balance first.

4. Treat Spin Doctors as the powerful players they are.

As Alistair Campbell has lately discovered, the best way for the press to destroy the power of the Spin Doctor is to manifestly transform him from a nominally back-room player into the front-room ones they really are. The Spin Doctor’s most powerful weapon, both defensive and offensive, is the disingenuous claim to be ‘simply doing a job’. It is precisely why the Spin Doctor’s function is so poisonous – all care and power and influence, zero responsibility or accountability. In times of high crisis, the Spinner seeks to appear as a hapless ‘little man’ buffer, gamely doing an honest job of work on behalf of the ‘accountable’ politician. And so they stand bravely at the podium in a kind of bemused but good-natured funk, pretending to be trying hard to be straightforward with the jackals under difficult conditions.

This is, of course, exactly his role in the politician’s overall team – to act as a point man for the heat. Thus, journalists should cheerfully oblige by giving it to the bastard full on, extending absolutely zero of the professional sympathy the Spin Doctor seeks to elicit from them in such circumstances. In the absence of the relevant politician, the Spin Doctor should be savaged as if they are that politician; inspiring a ‘hey-go-easy-on-me-personally-mate’ attitude is a key to how Spin Doctors protect their bosses during crises. They should be torn to pieces by reporters so ferociously and personally that they will think twice before taking the heat again. There is no such thing as the Nuremberg defence. No-one on the planet can take refuge in, or seek an easier ride from, the ‘only doing my job’ line.

5. Reclaim language as the journalist’s vocational weapon.

Maybe this is the most important shift of all. Journalists, who more than anyone else know exactly how language can be blurred and manipulated to just about any end, must regain the high linguistic ground. And they have to be willing to challenge Spin Doctors – also linguistic gymnasts – on what might seem like tedious and even pedantic matters of language, ad nauseum, in real time. They need to be prepared to fight cant with an on-the-spot deconstruction of that cant which may seem at times a little anal. The debasement of public language has to be fought, inch-by-inch, and journalists are the ones at the front line. Favourite Spin Doctor cliches and phrases have to be blown out of the water as such, the instant they are heard. Meaningless adjective + abstract noun linkages like ‘appropriate action’, ‘inappropriate behaviour’, ‘debatable merit’, ‘compelling argument’, ‘absolute conviction’, or hard adjective + imprecise verb linkages like ‘definitely address’, ‘seriously consider’, and ‘fully reflect upon’ are all the more dangerous because they sound so convincing. ‘It is my understanding that’. ‘It could be argued that.’ ‘Some people might take the view that.’ Reporters should point out aggressively that this sort of slippery, disconnected Spin Doctor bullshit is utterly meaningless, null language; pre-emptive Alice-in-Wonderland tossing-off that allows anyone and everyone to delude themselves that whatever follows means only – and whatever – the hell they want it to mean, at any given time yesterday, today, or tomorrow.

‘It remains my absolute personal conviction that there was a very compelling argument that Saddam was a serious WMD threat, and I made the appropriate decision based on my understanding of the facts, only after a profoundly serious consideration of all aspects of the debate, on merit’. This sentence means nothing, nothing, nothing. It’s less than a lie. And yet we went to war thanks entirely to rubbish just like that.

It’s this watery, limp, gutless, waffling, obfuscating, muddying, underhand and deeply cowardly poisoning of our public conversations that is quickly eroding all the grand things that define Western civilisation, and which we are supposed to be defending against terrorist nihilists: our capacity for self-improvement through tough self-criticism, intellectual precision and rigour in language and debate; honesty, honour, humility, moral courage, principle. The rise and rise of Spin Doctor mediocrity is neither the fault of one person or group or political tint, nor is it within the power of any individual to combat alone. But it’s rising and rising never-the-less, and it’s driving the broader public increasingly into cynicism, political disengagement and civic despair.

And now suicide. I think that it’s only by political journalists confronting Spin Doctors and their Spin head on – calling bullshit bullshit in real time, like Australians in particular used to do as a matter of instinct – that these two central, and symbiotic, components of our public polity will begin to force, or scare, or intimidate, or embarrass each other – and therefore our elected masters – into ensuring that civic life becomes defined by a little more responsibility, restraint, grace and accountability once more.

UPDATE: A quick extra note. It seems there is also growing disquiet at the BBC that Gilligan may have ‘sexed up’ his reporting of ‘Kelly’s sex up’ allegations against the government. In other words, that the BBC is guilty of the same kind of spin itself. In which case, it’s an even better demonstration of the way the two sides of the Spin v Journo war tend to poison each other’s modes of communication to the public.

Two letters to the future

Hi. On each side of the war against war, hopes soar, hopes dive, hour by hour now. Resignations abound, timetables slip, and the world waits, mesmerised.

I’m off to Melbourne to record an arts chat show on a book about violent sex and a movie about punk rock – seems crazy stuff to think about now, but the demands of my diary are a comfort of sorts. Life goes on, for now. Back Thursday.

Today’s entry is by a stalwart, always-passionate contributor on the war, Jack Robertson, who’s more directly connected to the war than most as his brother is in the SAS. He’s written two letters to the future – one to John Wojdylo, the other to ‘Brian Dabeagle’, who wrote to Webdiary last week saying he was in the SAS and that Howard had committed the force to war a year ago. (A letter to the SAS?)

***

Letters to the future

by Jack Robertson

Dear John Wojdylo,

Mate, I’m not sure why you’re suddenly so inspired to bray somewhat hysterically – like an Andrew Bolt or a Piers Akerman – that Saddam Hussein’s enduring regime is partly my fault, since I am Against Human Rights in Iraq. That I ‘give the green light for dictators.’ That I ‘have failed to consider the viewpoint of the Iraqi people’. That ‘neither [I] nor Amnesty are focussing on the individual’. That I ‘have you not bothered to find out what the Iraqi people think before involving [my]self in actions that would influence their fate’. That ‘Iraqis seeking liberty have become an abstraction to [me] – [I’m] preoccupied with [my] own concerns, in [my] self-centred world, despite the lip-service [I] pay to noble ideals’. That I am ‘clearly imprisoned by the rationalisations inside [my] head, by this self-obsession, and have lost the ability to see the world outside, the world of another person – particularly the world of the Iraqi desiring liberty’.

John, there’s a shameless audacity to this attack that makes me grin a bit nervously, and, even though I said I wasn’t going to jabber on about this foregone conclusion of an invasion any further, overheat the keyboard yet again in long response.

But how the hell do I answer your accusations? Do I whine back at you about much time I spend as Balmain AI co-convener writing letters, articles and appeals, helping run market stalls, collecting furniture, collecting money, collecting members, collecting signatures and advocating on behalf of Iraqi refugees and Iraqi HR-abuse victims – along with a lot of others – who ‘desire liberty’? Or would that be more ‘Western self-obsession’, Western moral preening, Western do-gooder-hood? It strikes me as so.

But I simply have to protest that it’s asking a bit much to expect me to cop it sweet when someone like you tries to blame us anti-invasionists for Saddam. All the warhawks are doing it these days, I notice.

Yeah, you’re not the first pro-war ‘Born-Again Human Rights Believer’ who’s berated me over my refusal to support the act of bombing Baghdad into HR submission, John. Nor, no doubt, will you be the last. ‘Against Human Rights in Iraq’. Jesus.

John – I can’t be sure, but I might just have written my first letter in protest against Saddam’s regime way back in 1983, the year I first joined AI. That was back in the days when Donald Rumsfeld was shaking the man’s hand and selling him weapons, and the Brits were financially-backing his mustard gas factories, knowing exactly what he was up to with the Iranians and the Kurds.

Now you may say ‘let’s forget about those mistakes, let’s get on and make amends now’. Maybe there’s an arguable argument for a Human Rights invasion somewhere, but why do you so desperately need to make it by painting harmless lefty plonkers like me as the HR enemy? Is your case in fact so flimsy and tenuous that you need a ‘bad guy’ against which to set it firmer? Must I – to prove my HR credentials to your satisfaction – climb heartily aboard your Iraq invasion bandwagon?

In any case, mate, a few minor points: As far as AI itself is concerned, they, as usual, have ‘no position’ on the power-politics of the invasion. I only disclosed my involvement with AI – while making it clear that my views were personal – because the piece I wrote at the time was a response to an earlier attack, on the same grounds as yours now, on HR groups in general (Take a risk for human rights: Back Bush).

I wasn’t then and am not now arguing on behalf of anyone but myself. Incidentally, I’m not a ‘senior’ person in AI. I’m the co-convener of a volunteer grass-roots group which has about eight active members. I can’t remember seeing too many pro-war hawks at our last public letter-writing day, either. Why is it that HR only becomes important to so many neo-cons when there’s a sexy war to fight in its name?

If you wish to know more about my general views on HR, then go back over the Webdiary archives and read some of my stuff from the Tampa time. If you want to know how I’d deal with Saddam’s hateful regime, read my alternative plan (Looking for John Curtin).

You’ll notice that my explicit aim in that (two-month-old) alternative is to get rid of Saddam. A plan which, contrary to your other claims, cheerfully and pragmatically employs the Great Satan’s (very handy, sometimes) military power, and in a far more moral, intelligent and focussed HR way than full-scale invasion and occupation will (oh, and I get the UN to pay the bill for the Yanks, too). That is, it’s anything but ‘Utopian’.

Sorry to mess up your knee-jerk lefty stereotyping, John, but I spent a good deal of my time in uniform finding practical solutions to real-world problems – floods, bushfires, aerial search-and-rescues, the odd delicate ‘crowd situation’, h/c medical evacuations, and so on.

It’s you, I think, who are the real Utopian – vague, assertive, short-sighted, unpractical, seeming to believe that an invasion will magically ‘cure everything’, even if it’s run by, and/or for the partial benefit of, oil ‘parasites’, to use your term.

You’re blindly hoping for the best, John, and not remotely preparing for the worst. Others – men like my brother and ‘Brian Dabeagle’ – will have to deal with that. You’ll notice that no-one has mentioned RULES OF ENGAGEMENT yet, by the way. Thoughts, John? Which ‘Iraqis desiring liberty’ shall we have these men kill in our names, mate, and which not? And how will we have them tell the difference in the heat of combat? Do you remotely care, John? Or is it their ‘real world problem’ to solve alone, out there on the solitary battlefields?

And my kind of plan is also far, far more likely to achieve a good HR and democracy outcome in Iraq in the long run than yours, mate, since mine involves a degree of active Iraqi participation, rather than simply a passive acceptance of your Western ‘largesse’, and the imposition of an external military/expatriate government.

You’ll agree that the West didn’t bring the Wall down by bombing Leipzig flat first; the inspiration and some assistance came from the West, sure, but the true, lasting urge for freedom welled up from within. That was certainly how all the people of Dresden still saw things when I lived there eight years later.

It was the same case with East Timor. And in every other post-war liberation that has stuck, too. You can’t democratise a country by imposed force, mate, any more than you can smack a child into adulthood. You’re supposed to inspire, demonstrate, show, lead by brilliant example.

After WW2, until now, that’s just how the gentle, democratic West, wherever in the unfree world it has achieved lasting results, has done it: by lifting struggling, rising Peoples up with a helping hand, mate, not smashing them further down with a swinging fist, in the vague hope that we’ll create an entirely new People in our own image from the pile of hard-smote corpses.

‘Shock and Awe’, and then proud, strong self-determination for Iraqis? More like dulled, numbed submission, I would have thought, John. Or angry, anarchic rejection. But we shall see.

But did you actually bother to read my alternative plan for the use of the West’s power, before you decided to declare me a self-obsessed, Utopian, pro-Saddam ignoramus who was too pathetic to try to exercise it at all? Does my willingness to use military force – intelligently – to help the Iraqi people save me from your stern lecture? Does it put me on the side of the righteous war angels? No? You’re either with-us-or-against-us, Jack?

Back to writing wussy HR letters for me, I suppose. I wonder if I will be excluded, by the triumphant warhawks, from any immediate post-Saddam celebrations that take place in Iraq? In the same way that John Howard and the neo-conservatives retrospectively appropriated the cause of the East Timorese, after a lifetime of opposing their independence.

Those like John Pilger and Noam Chomsky and Tom Uren and my Balmain AI predecessors and countless others, who spent thankless wilderness years trying to keep that issue in the global spotlight, might as well never have existed as far as the ‘pragmatists’ of the world were concerned. And now in East Timor, as in Afghanistan, the warhawks have wandered off again, uninterested in the longer-term security of that new nation, not particularly worried by what the militia might get up to in the future.

Because you’ll note, John, that the Australian government who so nobly ‘gave’ the East Timorese their independence have not wasted much time in stiffing them over the Timor Gap. Have a read of the Downer transcript over at www.crikey.com.au, mate; are these the kind of ‘free’ negotiations that await the newly ‘free’ people of Iraq when it comes to the untapped Western Desert oilfields, I wonder?

Is this what our SAS soldiers will soon be fighting for in Iraq? So that a pompous, silver-spoon prat like Downer can deliver the ‘free’ Iraqis a smug ‘lesson in democratic politics’, too? Is this the way to help ensure that those fiercely-independent, proud East Timorese do not rise against the Colonialists again?

Can’t you see the mistakes we risk making? It’s one thing for a fledgling democratic government to accept a skewed revenue split on disputed Greater Sunrise resources in the name of short-term ‘realpolitik’. It’s quite another to expect that the fledgling democratic people beneath it will do the same in the longer run. How long before the anger filters down, and up, again? How long before such rank neo-paternalism starts to bite?

You warhawks keep wanting to use force to bring stability to the unstable world. Sometimes, as in East Timor, force is needed; yet you then seem unable or unwilling to treat the newly-stable world with fairness and honesty and decency in the long-term, which is the only way it is ever going to become permanently stable. Australia and East Timor are now both equally part of the world community of the free; except that Australia is still more equal and free than East Timor, and Downer has just arrogantly and publicly rubbed the militia’s noses in it. How stupid are we? And do you think the Indonesian masses, the estranged, resentful ones who might be drawn to groups like JI especially, won’t draw ugly conclusions from such strutting, private-schoolboy behaviour?

John, there is an ugly dishonesty at work in your attack on me: I don’t agree with your plans for carpet-bombing Baghdad into freedom; ergo, I must be ‘against Human Rights in Iraq’. These tactics, so typical of your side in this debate, hit me like a battering ram. A righteous club. An intellectual cosh. It’s childish nonsense, but it’s impossible to counter, and that’s exactly why this invasion is going ahead. We just can’t hold back a zealous, charging steamroller with logic, reason, fact, foresight, or careful thinking about what exactly we’re unleashing in the longer term.

But enough about me, John. (A touch self-obsessive, no?) Mate, there are many Iraqis, here in Australia, around the world, and in Iraq, too, who don’t share your views that we in the West should ‘liberate’ Iraq by pure brute force. This debate is dividing Iraqis, just as much as it is dividing the rest of us.

Which is the more arrogant decision to make on behalf of them? To invade and occupy their country, or not to invade and occupy their country? Neither of us can say. I simply don’t know what ‘most’ Iraqis want. To live in a free and just country, certainly; but how, exactly? And does a ‘free’ and ‘just’ Iraq mean different things to a Shi’ite, a Ba’athist, a Kurd, a Persian, an Arab, a gay, a woman, an Israel-hating and a Western-expatriate Iraqi? I bet it does.

But you tell me, John. You’re the one about to summarily take over the joint, and tell everyone who lives there what ‘free’ and ‘just’ is going to mean to them all, from now on. I wish you luck. Personally, I just don’t know what all the many different, individual Iraqis want. Maybe they don’t yet, either.

Although we can make confident judgements about what they don’t want; to be tortured, beaten, imprisoned, raped, executed. Or blown to smithereens by a Tomahawk cruise missile, John. You’re quite wrong about AI, by the way – concentrating on individuals is exactly what our little group does.

We identify specific cases of HR abuse, and try to target those. Why? Because we can be sure of individual HR-abuse when we see it. What we can’t be so sure of is the ‘big picture’, the ‘sweeping solution’ that people like you – the real Utopians – love so much. That’s why AI has no over-reaching position on the ultimate pros and cons of this invasion and occupation. Though respect for international laws and covenants and organisations, however imperfect, does remain the fundamental basis for its work, and its best hope for the future.

We all want to ‘do something to help Iraq’, John, but we just don’t know what that might mean, perhaps beyond getting rid of Saddam. Or perhaps not, too. Or how we are going to go about ‘doing something to help Iraq’ once we have done that first bit, or even in fact whether our summary ‘getting rid of Saddam’ in this all-conquering, humiliating way isn’t going to make ‘doing something to help Iraq’ forever-after impossible for us. We just don’t know what all the twenty-three million individual Iraqis want, John. I don’t, anyway.

Still, pro-invasionists like you get bored by plodding, case-by-case grass-roots work. You crave the quick fix, the instant HR revolution, the ‘grand vision’, the control-freak external imposition of democratic order, freedom, justness. But because the Iraqi internal question is such a complex one, you’re all a bit confused about your good intentions; even Tony Blair – the great moral, Just War Crusader – is now once again suggesting that Saddam can in fact stay in power if he simply disarms fully.

I’m sorry, I’m now all confused again. This is your problem, John. For all your pompous bluster, none of you war-hawks have a clue what your invasion aim really is. Is it a WMD invasion? Is it a regime change invasion? Is it a democratisation invasion? A HR invasion? A terrorism-busting invasion? As Somalia should have shown us, having no clear, constant aim is a recipe for a humanitarian disaster.

I reject Margo’s claim that ‘it doesn’t matter what the reason for the war is if its effect is to liberate the Iraqi people’. That’s a dishonest, dangerous, backwards way of writing it, Margo. It’s true enough if the second clause does end up prevailing, but putting it that way leaves everything to chance, makes everything absolutely a hostage to ever-changing fortune. If we wish to make sure that the effect of the invasion is to liberate the Iraqi people, then we MUST start by saying: “The aim of this invasion is to liberate the Iraqi people’, first and foremost, and all else comes second.” Otherwise, conflicting aims interfere with each other. Then we must ask ourselves: what does liberating the Iraqi people mean? Installing a military government? Installing an expatriate crook like Chalabi as leader? Making a hell of a big mess, and then asking the UN to help clean it up?

John, what if our imposed liberation leads to a polite request from the newly-liberated people of Iraq to hand over fully-nationalised control of their newly-liberated oilfields? (Cf: Downer’s patronising ‘approval’ of the East Timorese government’s embrace of private firms to run their gasfields.) Or what if a majority-Shia democratic government decides they do not wish to award the Halliburton Oil Services company their oilfield reconstruction contracts? What if they prefer to have the Chinese, the Russians, the French do it? Or what if the Kurds decide they wish to assume control of Kirkuk? What if the new Iraqi government has no desire to smash OPEC? In short, John, what happens when ‘liberation’ means that serious conflict arises between the ‘invasion oil parasites’ and the ‘invasion democrats’? Who do you think will prevail? How do you think the Iraqis – all the different and conflicting groupings there will be – will respond? Will the Iraqis consider themselves truly ‘liberated’? These are real-world questions, John. This is what awaits us post-Saddam.

As you yourself point out, the politics of oil and the politics of Iraq – of the whole Gulf – have always been impossible to separate. Yet it has nearly always been the politics of oil that has prevailed in the region, and (now) disastrously so for the West. The long-term hegemony of oil over democracy in Saudi Arabia is, if we care to tell ourselves the truth, precisely what gave us al-Qaeda in the first place. What makes you so blithely sure that this invasion, run almost exclusively by oil men, is going to make Iraq turn out differently?

This is the whole point of my obsession with the black, sticky stuff in the Persian Gulf, John. The long-term ramifications of how the globalised world shares its spoils around. Not because I care less which oil-men get rich and which don’t – American, French, Russian, Chinese, British, is not the point. But because I don’t wish to be blown up by resentful Iraqi-born al-Qaeda terrorists in the future, any more than I wish to be blown up by resentful Saudi-born al-Qaeda terrorists now. Or Indonesian-born ones. Or Pakistani. Or East Timorese. We simply cannot keep treating non-Western Peoples as lesser Peoples, John. Not in the name of realpolitik – or human rights, or democratisation, or any other nice words, for that matter. Nice words are just nice words. Actions count. Our long-term actions in Iraq will count most of all.

The first Principle of War is ‘selection and maintenance of the aim’. If we don’t know and state clearly exactly what we are going into Iraq to achieve, then we go into Iraq inviting confused, anarchic disaster. We CANNOT put our soldiers into a pre-emptive combat zone on the basis of ‘suck it and see’, mate. Are they liberators? Peace-keepers? Peace-makers? Humanitarian aid workers? Nuke-busters? Counter-terrorists? (What are their Rules of engagement?)

Or are they just oil conquerers? I suggest to you, John, that in the absence of any rigid, limiting and public clarification of the aim from the Western warhawks – before you start this pre-emptive war – this last description is the only one that long history will ultimately recognise as fitting. I hope very much that I am proven wrong, and you are proven right.

***

Margo: I published an email last week from ‘Brian Dabeagle’, who said he was an Australian SAS officer. I do not know if it is genuine. The email follows, then Jack’s reply.

I am a currently serving soldier in Australia’s Special Air Service Regiment (SAS) and believe me it has taken weeks, if not months of agonised soul searching as I have tried to decide whether to make my views public or not.

As you can understand, if my identity is revealed, my career (in a job that I love) is finished and as such I have taken some steps to protect my identity. However, some of the information that is in this email is not on the public record (but not vital to operational security) and can be checked to confirm my bona fides. I write this because I am sick of John Howard and the Federal Government’s lies about our position re Iraq and our role within the coalition.

By the time that you read this, it is quite possibly too late to influence the outcome of events regarding our involvement, but at the very least maybe one of you guys may have the courage to make the public a little more aware of what really is happening regarding our (the SAS) role in this conflict.

John Howard stated that we had only recently started preparing for this looming conflict. Bullshit! We, that is, 1 SAS Squadron (please refer to it as One SAS Squadron, not 1st SAS or anything else) were given orders to prepare for a war with Iraq around July 2002.

The Australian Special Air Service Regiment was specifically asked for by US planners after they had observed our performance in Afghanistan, where we demonstrated a capability that had been neglected by other Special Forces units who until recently had deemed it obsolete. Our skills in what is termed Strategic Reconaissance (SR) are unsurpassed by any other Special Forces unit in the world. This includes other so called Tier 1 (a system of rating free world Special Forces units devised by the yanks – Tier 1 being the highest rating) units, including the Brit SAS, US Delta and US Dev Group units.

What happened was we were initially deployed into areas deemed ‘clean’ by the coalition as we were viewed by the US command as really just a token gesture made by the Australian Government (as was our deployment to Kuwait in 98). We were also viewed as an ‘unknown’ quantity as our last real operational deployment working with the yanks was Vietnam. But, because we had maintained the skills of remaining ‘behind the lines’ for much longer periods without resupply or external support, we started to find things that had remained un-noticed by the coalition. Taliban & al Qaida forces started to reappear in the areas we operated in, thinking the area was secure. And, we started to find things that had been missed by the coalition as they passed through. Our discoveries led to some of the coalition’s biggest successes and suddenly the US planners started to realise that we were providing a service that they no longer had the capability to provide AS EFFECTIVELY.

Consequently and as a result of our operations in Afghanistan the relationship between the Australian SAS and our US counterparts is closer than at any time in our history. It is because of our ability to provide a service to the US effort that CANNOT be as effectively carried out by US forces that we were specifically asked for by the Pentagon right at the start of planning. Our role in this conflict is crucial to the outcome and there is no way that we can be taken out of the conflict without seriously affecting the US operational capability. Our planning was at such an advanced stage that whilst the parliamentary debate was raging, we were already into advanced planning of specific targets (not just general planning, but actual targets and operations) … quite contrary to what John Howard was stating. Without going into too much detail (for obvious reasons) what we will be doing is absolutely vital to the successful prosecution of the war. There is no way we are going to be withdrawn. This is nothing like Kuwait in 98, back then we were “untested” in the eyes of the yanks, now we are crucial to their plans.

So why am I sending you this? Because I am proud to be a professional soldier (not a nazi as I felt on the Tampa) and relish the job that I do, but I am concerned that as a human being that the war we are about to embark on is wrong. As important is the fact that I think that Howard is pandering to the will of that redneck Bush, without considering the long term consequences of this action, not just for Australia but for the whole world. He is lying to Parliament, he is lying to the people of Australia and no doubt he will lie to the dependents of any of us who don’t come back. This Government has a history of the latter as Kylie Russell, Jerry Bampton and the next of kin of the Blackhawk disaster can attest to.

As I mentioned at the start of the email, I think that maybe it is too late to do anything to affect our deployment, but at least if the truth as to our build up and deployment is made public, maybe it will give the parliament and the people of Australia food for thought.

***

Dear Brian Dabeagle,

I’m writing this letter working on the assumption that you are genuine. Your comments about operations in Afghanistan ring true, even if your claimed identity is in fact not; especially your allusions to the Seppo’s loss of capacity (or appetite) for bandit country recce ops longer than a couple of days at a time. (Guess those poor wannabe Tom Cruises start to pine for their PX Big Macs, huh?)

But then this sort of information – about the differences between US and Brit-Oz Spec Ops philosophy, in these tech-heavy times – is, as you yourself note, hardly a state secret. So if you’re not who you say you are – if you’re just some shit-stirrer with an interest in the SAS and an axe to grind (because you failed the Cadre course, say) – then you are beneath my contempt, mate. Especially for your references to the Regiment’s past casualties, including the Blackhawk disaster. If you are not in fact truly one of ‘your’ guys as you claim you are, you are making a public fool of me here, and a mockery of the history the Regiment and AAAvn have long shared.

But in fact those SAS NOK names you mention are partly why I choose to take you at face value. None of us like to throw the names of departed comrades around lightly. Nor, as you note, is it an easy thing for a proud professional soldier to break ranks and try to send a rocket up the lazy, ignorant, uncaring Citizens in whose name he is being sent off to fight by a thoroughly opportunistic and cowardly government.

The content of your letter tallies with my experiences of working with the SAS and the Yanks (albeit yonks ago now), and of my own readings of official and public information (especially re Operation Anaconda). So I will take you at your word. More fool me if you’re a sad cyber-con-artist, I guess. It won’t be the first time I’ve made a fool of myself due to a natural excess of Citizenly idealism.

Brian, I just wanted to say thanks for risking everything. I don’t mean your next promotion, either; I mean the whole ‘Andy McNab’ thing. (You will know what I mean.) The greatest asset the SAS Regiment has is its fraternal closeness, its tightness, its low, low profile (even though Howard’s men have made you jump through so many public hoops lately. What simpering Army PR clown agreed to put your medal-winners on the front page of the f**king national newspapers, mate?). But if you’re worried that you may now have run against that close-knit grain yourself, then don’t.

Mate, for what my opinion is worth, what you’ve tried to do is priceless leadership. Real leadership. Looking after the interests of the soldiers under your command. Christ knows that Peter Cosgrove – such a tamed, politicised pawn these days (an Australian General presenting Logies???) – just doesn’t seem interested in that side of soldiering, anymore. Apparently.

Mate, I agree with your implied view that this government has nothing but contempt for our professional soldiery. Howard, Reith, Max Moore-Wilton, Miles Jordana, Jane Halton – these grubby civilians have been cynically using you and our Navy and our Air Force as political tools for ages, now. If it all turns to shit in Iraq, there is every chance they will duck for cover all over again, just as they all did during the children overboard fiasco, and leave your boys flapping in the wind.

So what you did by writing to Margo and Bob Brown may not achieve much, but it was necessary, and it was right, and it was in the very best traditions of the Australian officer corps. (And WHAT, by the way, are your bloody CO and your RSM up to these days? Why don’t THEY get off their arses and start protecting their soldiers’ interests, too? Or are they sycophantic political placemen by now, too? Where’s a Jim Wallace when you need him?)

Again for what it’s worth, I’ve tried hard and often in the past to get answers out of Howard and his useless gaggle of tamed backbench arse-lickers. You might have read my latest letter to him, over Christmas last year, about the Tampa stuff, about the various HR accusations which have left your guys exposed, undefended, and no doubt feeling angry. Dave Marr’s book on all that comes out today. I hope he hasn’t stiffed you guys. I don’t think he will have.

My brother – if you’re for real, you’ll know him well – and I have never spoken much about what went on up north. He is well aware that I write for Webdiary, and knowing that I have become a bit of a wet, HR-Lefty in my post-AAAvn career, he is ruthlessly tight-lipped about the sensitive Op. stuff when we communicate now, which is pretty rarely, anyway. (If you’re for real, you’ll know why. Incidentally, if any of the Regimental boys bad-mouth him on account of me and my sad civvy grandstanding-by-association here, tell them to f**k off. I can assure you that he spills no unit fraternal stuff to a shiny-bum like me. He thinks I’m a bit of a wet-Lefty himself, actually. He is relentlessly schtum and proper.)

But one personal thing he did once casually say in passing is that he went up to the Tampa/Manoura fiasco ‘prepared to lose his job’ over it, if necessary. For mine, that grubby episode – the one during which this government made you feel like a Nazi – remains the most disgusting misuse of a world-class Special Operations asset by any Australian politician, ever. Howard – the self-proclaimed ‘ANZAC’s mate’ – pissed on the Regiment during that affair, Brian. Just as his government pissed on our Navy, via Operation Relex.

I’ve attached below for your wry bemusement the letter I received in reply to my Xmas greetings to the PM, mate. It came not from the PM himself, of course – like most pollies these days, he likes to construct an arse-covering ‘paper-chase buffer’ between himself and the real world – but from some minor functionary. Note the weaselly language. Note the complete ignoring of the core requests about HR abuse, and the buck-passing of responsibility to a Federal Court that this government usually treats with contempt. Note the sheer dulling meaninglessness of it. The utter disconnection from reality, the ‘one-way, on-message, spin delivery’, completely bereft of any engagement with the questions I asked.

If you received a wafty, waffly reply like that to an O-Group ‘question of fact’ from one of your dopey troopers, you’d kick him from arsehole to breakfast, and rightly so. Sloppy language leads to sloppy ops, mate. Nice words mean nothing. Actions count – as your pointers to those casually-ignored NOK names underscores. A dead soldier’s widow gets a dead soldier’s scrawny pension. Peter Reith runs away from the Tampa Senate Enquiry, with a raised middle finger for the Australian public on one hand, and a massive golden handshake from the tax-payer in the other. Straight into a lucrative consultant’s job shifting units for Tenix Defence Industries. All the while, protected by our ‘ANZAC’s hero’ PM. It sucks. And no-one in the press gallery gives a blind shit for more than ten seconds.

But the rubbish, bureacratic response below is in exactly the same vein in which this Prime Minister refuses to debate the issue of Iraq in Parliament, or answer media questioning about our involvement because it’s all still ‘hypothetical’. I wonder if the Welfare Officers back in Perth are having much luck calming the Regiment’s wives with that one, mate! No, he simply goes on controlled, friendly, talkback radio stations, and condescendingly chook-feeds us Australian Citizens, in whose collective name you will soon kill fellow human beings, his meaningless bullshit, without any return pressure at all.

A new age of magic interpretation of the world, Brian, in which all that matters is that the powerful retain control of the means by which they ensure that their interpretation of the world is the one that is most widely promulgated. “I acknowledge your concerns about these allegations and wish to assure you that the government has acted decisively but compassionately to protect Australia’s territorial integrity.” The second clause entirely disconnected from the first. Weak public language. Dead public language. ‘Nice’ words, backed up by ZERO action to investigate the damning claims made against you, our soldiers, much less to defend you with pro-active linguistic precision. The kind of moribund, dulled, vacuous public language that Heinrich Heine, and George Orwell, and every other writer worth reading, recognises is both necessary precursor to, and braying harbinger of, yet more of mankind’s ‘accidental’ inhumanity to man.

Death by default, mate; falling into war, simply because our public leaders refuse to speak precisely and bluntly in timely time. Waffle, waffle, buck-pass, lie, spin, waffle – then bang. (Oh – are we at war?)

Yes, apparently we’re at war already, mate: ‘The War On Terror’, Brian. What a crock of shit. Have you ever come up against one of them nasty ‘Terrors’ in combat, mate? Goodness! Whatever does a ‘Terror’ look like? However does one kill a ‘Terror’? H&K burst? Glock double-tap? Wombat gun? With helpless f**king laughter?

And does the meaningless, disconnected, surreal, bureaucratic pap below from this faceless Howard underling – in response to my urgent queries about internationally-promulgated HRW allegations that you and your men ‘beat refugees with batons and used unnecessary force against vulnerable refugees’ on the Tampa – fill you with confidence now, mate, as you head off to help start the most unpopular war in Australia’s history? A REAL one, this time, not a convenient ‘wag the dog’ one: a war on terror when it should still just be a fight against crime (one we are winning, too, closing in on Osama’s murdering thugs). Do you feel happier going into pre-emptive battle, knowing that this ‘Mr Richard Sadleir – Deputy Secretary, International Division, DPM&C’ is standing right behind you?

Oh yeah, and if this war does go badly, rest assured that the right-wing media – especially the rah-rah war-bloggers and the Murdoch Press – will run for cover just as quickly as the neo-con politicians and their pet paper-shufflers do, mate. You watch the buck-passing explode onto the broadsheets.

In fact, it’s already going on now – pre-emptively you could say. Even blokes like Paul Kelly and Dennis Shanahan are backing off a bit now, lobbing the hot ‘non-UN invasion’ hand grenade strictly in Howard’s direction, as they recognise that just maybe the Bushies are nuts, after all. The Australian is re-trumpeting its ‘kids overboard’ scoop in a vaguely anti-Howard riff; even Greg Sheridan’s mostly gone back to whining about disengagement with Asia – another oblique hack at Howard.

They’re all setting themselves up with escape routes, Brian; all getting in a position to re-adjust their stances, their focus, their personal Op Ed ‘spin’ so that if this all goes strategically wrong, they can stay on top of ‘public debate’ by shifting seamlessly, without a backwards glance, to other issues.

The Australian political media is starting to look ahead, mate. To Costello, to Abbot, to the post-Howard era, to ‘ongoing economic reform’. It’s a bit pathetic, I know, but that’s the way the Baby Boomer Op Ed leaders have learned over the years to work the McLuhanite Mass Meeja game, mate. Play along with stirring up a newsworthy ‘event’ – a leadership tiff, a little war, a ‘law and order’ panic – and then stand back tut-tutting and sighing as the rest of us (especially our pollies) try to cope with whatever it all unleashes. Always tearing off their acres of copy, yet never actually getting involved in making our society better themselves. Modern political journalism is the ultimate freeloader’s career, Brian. The ultimate way to get close to the dirty action without having to get your own hands the slightest bit dirty. The ultimate ‘public eye’ contact sport, all with no risks attached.

Howard will go down one day, just as Keating, Hawke, Fraser, Whitlam, McMahon and Gorton went down. Yet Laurie Oakes is still in there, tearing down a Cheryl Kernot just for kicks, just for a Walkley. Alan Ramsey – who once upon a time was gutsy enough to stand up in Parliament and shout ‘You LIAR!’ when a politician told a lie on the public record – is still there, still trying to help take down our elected political leaders (back then it was Gorton, now it’s Crean).

These guys learned this trade from Alan Reid – maybe the first and most devious, shit-stirring, game-playing modern political journalist in Australia’s long line of devious, shit-stirring, game-playing, modern political journalists. There’s been plenty of good journos, too – men like Neale Davis and Greg Shackleton, who knew what war was, and ALWAYS screamed the truth about it in public, as loud as they possibly could.

There’s still plenty of good ones now, too, but they’re all too cowed, or cowardly, or self-interested, or just plain ignorant to give a shit about a letter like yours. You’ll notice, mate, that no-one has really touched it, not even Margo. Even though – if it turns out that you are for real – what you say about SAS planning would expose this government’s posturing, and thus Bush’s and Blair’s too, as the purely convenient bullshit that it really is.

But then maybe the whole lying edifice of justification for invasion – the WMD, the UN resolutions, the HR, the ‘democracy for the Middle East’, the ‘last chances’, the ‘real and present danger’ – might tumble down, too. Some stories, mate, are maybe a little too hot, especially those where the press is implicated, too.

Who are these journalist colleagues of yours, Margo, and where exactly do they get off freeloading like this on the rest of us? Why do you get to be the gate-keepers of public truth? Why are some things off-the-record, and some things on-the-record? Why is it that you, and you alone, get to decide which becomes a public spectacle, and which remains an insider’s secret – Sheridan’s cosy off-the-record chats with Kissinger, Keating’s Kirribilli Pact, Hawkie’s shenanigans in office, Richo’s backroom doings, all the little open secret Canberra goings-on that, by withholding them from us, make your lot feel bigger and more important than the rest of us? Why do YOU get to decide that Cheryl Kernot’s private emails are worthy of placing on the public record, Laurie Oakes, but that Brian Dabeagle’s public letter is not? Have you tried to check it out? If not, why not?

And then there is modern war, the ultimate media-insider’s spectacle now. Do you ever wonder how the average Australian or American would react to seeing some of the insider combat footage from the first Gulf War, Brian, the un-CNN-sanitised stuff? The savage, disproportionate, technically-triumphant butchery that goes on nowadays, all in the name of gentle democracy? ‘Smart bombs’. ‘Shock and Awe’. ‘Full spectrum dominance’. Do we the people understand what this actually looks like? Jesus Christ – you simply have to laugh bitterly at our trusting ignorance, don’t you. Or else you’d probably cry.

And it’s bitterly ironic, Brian, in a sick post-modern kind of way: as the ‘new journalism’ becomes more and more invasive and pervasive and ubiquitous and instantaneous in peacetime, we get to see less and less of what happens in wartime than we used to. So much ‘Reality TV’, so little plain, old-fashioned reality on TV.

Carmen Lawrence has written about this on this site. We’ll see almost nothing of this war’s violence, even though, in Iraq, there’ll be thousands of war correspondents swarming the joint. And every single one of them, even the good ones, will be desperate to make their names from all the death and destruction that unfolds. They’ll want to be the next Peter Arnett, or Richard Carlton, or Martin Bell, or Walter bloody Cronkite, or whoever. Try not to think too much about the big bucks, the future book deals, the Larry King interviews and the celebrity the more opportunistic, the more successful among them will doubtless extract from this next bloody, newsworthy event, mate, as you help put the bloody show on for their and our dirty, vicarious pleasure. (Maybe you should write a book yourself, like McNab, and make a killing from the killing too, mate. Why not? Everyone else, from CNN down, will be. Better retirement plan than a pissant widow’s pension, I would have thought.)

Since East Timor, and especially right now, the media can’t get enough of you guys. (Makes a change from when I was in, I s’pose.) But never forget one thing, Brian: exposing a military f**k-up is a major, name-making news coup, and this time around the Gulf paddock, you will probably not get any leeway from the Press, if there’s a Pulitzer or a Walkley in the offing.

Underlying public opinion is largely ambivalent about this war, for one thing, which means that explicit public opinion is highly-unstable, and will turn viciously if it doesn’t go near-perfectly well. And if there’s one thing that the commercial Press especially hates above all else, mate, it’s to be on the wrong side of public opinion for too long.

If it turns to shite, the Murdochians will swing against the whole misadventure in a flash. Just remember that when our boys really needed his support, the pompous Piers Akerman was throwing pig’s blood at our Vietnam soldiers and calling them ‘mercenaries’. Back then, of course, the smart, ambitious journo made his name by being anti-war, not pro-war. Times change, mate! Either way, I’ll guarantee you now that most Boomer journalists of his latter-day pro-war ilk simply won’t be much help in making damned sure that the politicians and the press, and not the soldiers, shoulder responsibility when some angry Iraqi calls one of your diggers a baby-killer, and might even have the accidental grounds to do so.

Nope; you won’t get top cover from these tame media clowns any more than you’ll get top cover from the PM’s office. If Regimental NOK really have been screwed around by this government, then dear Piers has hardly gone out of his way to help publicise their plight, has he. Nor has Miranda Devine, who at the time of one Regimental combat death you mentioned made a huge meal of it with a resoundingly patriotic column, you might recall.

These pro-war journalists are not the soldier’s friend, Brian. Their own upward career trajectories are simply far too precious for them to ever admit they got something wrong. So if it does go wrong in Iraq, they will simply quietly move on to other matters as the current politicians retire quietly, and they will end up taking no responsibility at all. The war they have pushed for, pushed hard and long to help make happen, will retrospectively become simply an inevitable, ill-judged, well-meaning (but disastrous, tut-tut) piece of old news. They’ll ignore its aftermath, just as they are now ignoring Afghanistan’s aftermath.

In the world of ‘new journalism’, mate, there is no such thing as truth or history, there is no yesterday and no tomorrow. There is only what gets written today. Aging Boomer journos and intellectuals and ‘celebrity thinkers’ never die or fade away, Brian. They just keep putting a fresh sheet of A4 in their typewriters and printers, keep tap-tapping merrily on, forever retrospectively changing their opinions and their opinion-histories as they go, changing with the times and the newsworthy trends to stay in the risk-free public game.

Still, for what it’s worth, Brian, I take you at face value, and I take your going public like this so seriously it hurts, even if no-one else does. If you’re a fake who’s just made a dickhead of me, then good for you. I hope you feel pleased with yourself, now. But those who haven’t served in uniform – and especially in the SAS – will find it very hard to grasp the magnitude of what it is you’ve done, and as a former officer I cannot accept the possibility, if you are for real, that no-one will acknowledge your gutsy attempt to tell the truth publicly, and what it has cost you to do so. So I take you at your word, and say again: thanks for trying, mate. Excuse me if I’m being a bit presumptuous or over-the-top, but I promise you I’ll continue to make a fool of myself, doing whatever I can, in whatever bloody public forum I can find some space in, to make sure you and your soldiers are not let down by this government, its compliant media, and we the Australian people, whatever happens in Iraq. ‘Whatever I can’ probably won’t be much at all, mate. My stupid letters to our politicians and our press will probably continue to be ignored, as usual, as the self-obsessed rantings of a borderline green-pen loon. Sigh.

But the really important thing to take on board is this, I think: right now there are hundreds and hundreds of thousands of us nobody Australian ‘loons’ who, while we may oppose this invasion vehemently, are rock-solid in our support of you and your colleagues personally. We are with you personally with a white-hot, Australian passion. And there is NO WAY we are going to allow you guys to carry the can for what we vehemently oppose being done in our names in the first place, and especially for whatever might go badly wrong with it.

So go onto the two-way in Iraq with one thought only. You have a job to do for now. Just do it, and do it as well and as humanely as you can. You will simply be fulfilling your part of the paradoxical bargain the professional soldier of a civilised country makes with his Citizens – to commit uncivilised acts in our name, when we, the non-violent guardians of our shared civilisation, ask you to. It is up to us, not you, to take full responsibility as a society for those uncivilised acts, even those of us who don’t support you being there, or being there in the pre-emptive way that you will be there. If it turns out that they were unnecessary and ill-judged uncivilised acts, or in grave error, then the responsibility will then especially lie with us.

You may have no useful top cover from our politicians and our press, Brian, but I am utterly sure – having marched in the peace rallies a few weekends ago and having heard nothing but deep concern and support, among those gentle civilised crowds, for you and your men – that you have buckets and buckets of top cover from the Australian people.

We will do our best to make sure that the responsibility for, and any subsequent moral pain resulting from, this war is – unlike all other wars before – appropriately shouldered by the people who have made this war happen. I hope whatever it is that you and your men are ordered to do in Iraq turns out brilliantly, for both Iraq and the West, mate, and that the likes of John Wojdylo get to consign the likes of me to the dustbin of history with a vindicated sneer.

I truly hope my opposition to this invasion and occupation, and especially my oil obsessions, end up making exactly the self-obsessed, Western loser of me that John claims I am. Better that I turn out to be hysterically wrong, and then simply go away and shut up, than that I turn out to be right.

Good luck, Brian. Stay sharp. Safe return. Say hi to my ratbag brother if you see him around the place.

Warmest regards,

(Stephen John) Jack Robertson

Captain AAAvn, 1987-1994

***

PS: A pathetic post-script. Here is the final, operative paragraph of my Christmas letter to our leader:

To that end, I respectfully request you to a) publicly respond on behalf of my brother and his ADF colleagues to the HR abuse accusations in the HRW Report, and do your best to ensure that the mainstream press gives that response the fullest coverage; b) publicly state for the record – ‘before the fact’, so to speak – that responsibility for any such accusations against any member of our ADF that are subsequently proven lies ultimately not with them, but with you, your Ministers and your government for placing them in such difficult, non-military situations in the first place; and c) re-affirm that all past, present and future activities relating to ‘border protection’, on the part of our soldiers, sailors and airman, along with our AFP and ASIO, have been, are, and will continue to be, carried out with your government’s full authorisation, support, supervision and acknowledgment. Thank you.

And here is John Winston Howard’s reply. This is what we have backing up our soldiers in Iraq, if and/or when HR abuse allegations are made against them there, too:

Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet

18 February 2003

Dear Mr Robertson,

Thank you for your letter of 14 December 2002 to the Prime Minister regarding human rights abuse allegations against Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel. The Prime Minister has asked me to reply on his behalf.

I acknowledge your concerns about these allegations and wish to assure you that the government has acted decisively but compassionately to protect Australia’s territorial integrity. Australia has a proud humanitarian record and the government remains committed to meeting Australia’s humanitarian obligations. On 17 September 2001, the Full Bench of the Federal Court of Australia confirmed that the Australian government acted within its powers in taking the action it did in relation to the people rescued by the MV Tampa. The government, through the ADF, ensured that those on board were properly cared for through the provision of appropriate food, shelter, medical assistance and other supplies.

The Prime Minister has on numerous occasions expressed his strong support for the ADF in the performance of its many difficult roles. Specifically, on the day that the Special Air Service personnel took control of the MV Tampa, the Prime Minister made a statement expressing gratitude to the ADF personnel involved in the operation. Separately, he has reaffirmed the country’s pride in the courage, integrity and professionalism of all the ADF personnel.

Thank you for bringing this matter to the attention of the Prime Minister.

Yours sincerely,

Richard Sadleir

Assistant Secretary, International Division, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet

Arse-covering, bureaucratic, meaningless nonsense. Our soldiers are, in my opinion, gravely exposed. It’s time to get angry about it, and fulfil our responsibilities as Citizens to them, by DEMANDING real honesty and accountability from this government, at last. Over to you, Australian Press. Start doing your jobs.

Controil

Since September 11, even their best friends – the American oil industry – have taken to calling Saudi Arabia the ‘Kernel of Evil’. It doesn’t take an Einstein to recognise why Iraq is suddenly so important. A unilateral Saudi cut of even a few million barrels a day now – or the total overthrow of the government by extremist Muslim students and clerics, a revolution of the kind many current Bushies experienced up close in the friendly oil pump of Iran back in 1979 – would be globally, economically catastrophic.

Webdiarist Hamish Tweedy asked me a while ago to explain what I meant by ‘control’ of Iraq’s oil. I started with a few paragraphs about production rate manipulation and the irrational amplifying effect of oil marketplace paranoia since 1973. Then I started reading more deeply into the oilier Bushies, and before I knew it I had a major X-Files thesis on my hands, in danger of paranoia-overspeed myself. When you start to doubt that the Bilderberg Group really is just a bunch of rich guys who happen to get together once a year for a bit of harmless fun, you know you’re in serious need of spiritual guidance.

There is no doubt that the Bush oil men are mostly obnoxious berks who operate fast and loose commercially and who clearly don’t give a hoot about Middle Eastern and Caspian Sea Basin democracy, Human Rights, WMD or terrorism sponsorship, except as it might effect their oil operations. But as I’ve argued before, the way in which this invasion and occupation of Iraq is ‘all about oil’ is no Big Oil conspiracy. In fact, as this invasion looms, many Big Oil players are even growing anxious; having spent so much time and money championing the Bushies, it’s now as if they can’t quite believe, at this late hour, what kind of grand, crazy oil misadventure they have actually helped set in motion – not that it is stopping them from jostling and clawing for the best of the commercial spoils.

But the truth is this global oil-energy crunch was always going to happen; in the end, it simply comes down to the runaway freight-train of Western globalisation, the awkward matter of who owns the oil that is fuelling its charge, and how the irresistible force of the former has now come hard against the immovable object of the latter.

The people involved are irrelevant, really. It’s the oil, and the global oil numbers, that matter. So I’ve largely ditched the Machiavellian side of the story except for some general observations about neo-conservative economics as a postscript. Sorry about the delay, Hamish, and the hideous length of this fairly dull reply. But a fairly dull reply is, alas, the only way to answer your question properly.

Here is why and how I think this invasion and occupation is about controil.

LET THE LIFEBLOOD OF THE GLOBALISING WORLD FLOW ‘FREE’

‘Whoever’s in power, the oil will flow.‘ Global Oil industry mantra

Oil is the most traded commodity on the planet in both volume and value. It is impossible to overestimate its importance to the globalised economy, in the same way that it is impossible to overestimate the importance of the English alphabet to the complete works of William Shakespeare. The global oil market is globalisation; industrialisation – ‘economic development’ – means little more than increased oil use. All markers of world economic health, as we in the West define it, stem from the state of the oil trade. Control it to a greater extent than anyone else, and the choice fruits of tomorrow’s crop are yours.

The Global Oil Marketplace

But there are two oil markets, in truth, and this is where the battle for ‘control’ of the world’s oil is fermented. The global oil marketplace is where the polite game is publicly played out; a commercial network of oil-producing countries, oil-using countries, production, exploration, support, refining and distribution companies, financing and trading enablers, regulatory bodies, analysts, commentators, research and development sectors, and consumers.

Although this marketplace is built upon regional and domestic marketplaces, the ubiquity and fungible nature of oil, the sophistication of information and transport networks, the break-down of some trade barriers and the multinational flavour of the major corporate players makes this marketplace truly a globalised one, albeit far from truly free. Oil and oil products are bought and sold daily, via thousands of trades on many different forums, in an ongoing and essentially worldwide auction. The biggest market forums are in New York, London and Singapore; the global oil trade is hellishly complex, but broadly, there are three key buying and selling arrangements.

Most oil changes hands via contracts – term bulk supply deals between producers and oil companies, suppliers, refiners, all combinations and permutations in between. Contracts differ, but payment is now invariably tied to the daily marketplace; while terms are agreed at time of contract, it’s by linkage to a fluctuating price marker, usually a crude benchmark spot price. Thus, all global oil exchange, the vast bulk of which is predictable in volume and rhythm, is exposed to short-term marketprice fluctuation. The oil may flow and flow, boy, but the price jigs about like a drunk at a hoedown; if you have the shootin’ irons to fire bullets at its feet, then you have a powerful economic lever at your disposal. This is why this invasion and occupation is ‘all about oil’.

Spot trading is the daily buying and selling of individual amounts of oil, and is what determines the marketplace price of oil. Theoretically, spot trading smooths out short-term imbalances in the underlying (real) oil market supply-and-demand equation; companies with a short-term excess of regional supply (relative to their own output market demand) sell it to those who have a short-term shortfall. Check out a website like http://www.platts.com to see the oil cargoes being traded daily.

There are also ‘merchant refineries’ who trade solely as third party middlemen in such transactions. Reduce global oil trade to an oil pump at one end and a gas station at the other, and spot trading should represent the station manager’s fine-tuning of bowser pressure according to where the cars are lining up. Spot trades are made for prompt delivery (real time), and also on a ‘forward’ basis; buying and selling of spot oil that will be available in the short future. The state of the marketplace spot price – rising, stable, falling – is supposedly an indication of the underlying (real oil market) supply-and-demand equation. Sometimes it is.

Futures trading is a purely financial mechanism via which oil marketplace whizzkids can take a lot of the risk out of the oil trade, and/or speculate profitably from it. Buyers and sellers make 1,000 barrel+ oil deals up to eighteen months in advance; a futures trade is an agreement to exchange a certain amount of a certain oil product at a certain time and place for a certain price, although the deals are rarely actually effected, just continually on-traded. Using this mechanism, though, real oil traders can lock in a futures deal profit-loss hedge to offset loss-profit against the oil they buy on a contractual or spot basis, as a way of minimising exposure in volatile times, and making their financing more predictable. The futures market has become another supposedly important indicator of underlying (real) oil market trends. And sometimes it is.

Key oil marketplace spot price benchmarks are Brent Crude (European markets); West Texas Intermediate (sweet light crude, American markets); and Dubai Crude (Eurasian and Asian markets). Another important price indicator is the OPEC Basket Price, an average of seven OPEC crude spot market prices, which that organization supposedly uses to determine production policy. And sometimes they do. OPEC’s aim is to maintain basket price a $22 – $28 per barrel. It’s hovered well above $30 for some time now.

Until recently, the trading price was not marketplace-determined as such, but ‘posted’ (quite literally on a noticeboard at the well-head in the early days) by oil companies, and later OPEC. Now spot price is king, but it’s still not truly market-determined; the price of oil has always been controlled, and we’ve always paid far too much to the producers and suppliers, relatively too little to the refiners and retailers, and generally almost nothing to the proper owners. The oil marketplace is not really a commodity marketplace. It’s more like a speculative one. Except that there’s no risk at all if you have a big enough stake in it.

The Underlying Oil Market

This is the underlying global oil equation, the ‘rational’ one where over time supply-and-demand principles should apply. Sometimes they even do.

Global Oil Supply: The crude oil pumped from the ground by the oil-producing countries on a daily basis, plus existing oil stocks worldwide (see below).

Global Oil Demand: The crude oil used by the world on a daily basis for refined products: engine fuels, heating oils, lubricants, and feedstock for chemicals, construction materials, dyes, paints, industrial catalysts, all the synthetics, plastics, and general muck.

Global Oil Stocks: The crude oil that exists at any given time in the refining, transport, storage and reserve movement chain, and which, with spot trading, helps in smoothing the oil market supply-and-demand pressures. Oil stocks rise and fall, especially seasonally, but are estimated at up to 7-8 billion barrels of oil at any given time. Most is held in commercial storage, only some is discretionary (ie it can easily take up the slack), and some, as in the US and Japan, is held in official government strategic reserves. This last is the ‘backs-to-the-wall’ public oil weapon net importers now have to combat the oil-producers’ production weapon. The International Energy Agency (see below) states that its member countries now hold about 4 billion barrels in oil stocks (public and commercial), or about 115 days of IAE country net imports.

US Public Stocks: The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve salt-domes currently hold 599.3 million barrels, the most ever. In November 2001, President Bush directed the SPR to begin filling to maximum capacity, which is 700 million barrels. It’s arguable that at this point America had already decided to invade and occupy Iraq. The current level represents 53 days inventory import protection. With commercial stocks (which are now at a long-term low), total US import protection is still currently about 150 days.

Some extra-marketplace players

OPEC: Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, an oil cartel founded in 1960 and headquartered in Vienna, now consisting of Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Venezuela, Qatar, Nigeria, Indonesia, Libya and Algeria. It aims to co-ordinate action to safeguard joint and individual member advantage, including oil revenues, market share and price stability, and OPEC power.

OAPEC: Organisation of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia and United Arab Emirates. More of a squabble forum than a useful cartel up to now.

OPEC Plus: An informal description used to note recent decisions of non-OPEC producers like Mexico, Norway, Russia and Oman to participate in OPEC-led production cuts, to counter enduring low prices following the Asian economic collapses of the mid-nineties.

IEA: International Energy Agency, a twenty-six member anti-cartel energy organization formed by the OECD in 1974, and based in Paris, to safeguard the energy interests of members. In particular, each member maintains minimum crude oil stocks equivalent to 90 days’ imports (based on previous year’s import rate), and agrees to mutual ‘oil shock’ relief activity in direct embargo supply crises. Australia is a member.

How the two oil markets interact

You can, I think, summarise this in the same way that William Goldman once described the art of screenwriting: ‘Nobody knows anything.’ Some general comments can be made, though. Most importantly, oil is a price-volatile commodity. This is a reflection of several things, including the near-monopoly nature of oil production, the profound artificiality of oil price, the paranoia of the oil marketplace since 1973, and the symbiotic and thus unpredictable nature of the underlying oil use supply-and-demand rhythms.

Oil, more and more quickly than any commodity, reshapes its own marketplace, way beyond the mere reactive correcting of imbalances: expanded oil use itself creates expanded oil use, and vice-versa. The time lag between marketplace price changes and underlying market supply-and-demand pressures is where all the economic fun arises. Balancing short-term oil profit an/or national revenue against long-term market maintenance and growth has always been a tricky affair, and since the chaos of the seventies and early eighties, achieving marketplace price stability has been impossible.

There are two interlocking components to ‘control’ of the oil market. Short-term control, still up for grabs, depends on the ability to control or influence marketplace price, and is now a matter of production power. Long-term control is a matter of total reserves and production expansion potential, and the ability to direct future investment and oil market growth.

Brief history of global oil price v. global market forces

Before 1973, the big global oil companies had always held the actual and psychological cards in the global oil pricing game. In the simple beginning, annual oil royalties were paid to governments or rulers for ownership, via concession, of the oil in their ground.

US, British and European companies invested in and developed foreign fields, and sold the oil they extracted, posting a price, a controlled one usually arising from some level of de-facto company cartel liaison. All were constantly guided by those oil market considerations of making profit versus expanding this new oil global market; production patches were staked out, and although there was some competition, especially between the Europeans and the US companies in the Middle East, as non-US production grew in ubiquity and market power, the internationalised companies – the so-called Seven Sisters (BP, Shell, Texaco, Exxon, Gulf, Socal and Mobil) – colluded increasingly well to keep price a matter of collective control.

These global giants had fallen into the box seat; when Eisenhower had to introduce import quotas to defend the US domestic industry, it was clear that Middle Eastern oil especially, cheap to produce and plentiful as it was, would be, in a global market sense, unbeatable.

Over the post-war years, producer-countries began demanding, and receiving, a cut of the growing downstream profits in addition to fixed royalties, but since the companies still ‘owned’ the oil through the concessions, and still had the upper hand in investment, technical development and expertise, they maintained strong control of contractual price mechanisms.

Mexico had tried to nationalise its industry as far back as 1938, and were promptly cut out of the nascent global marketplace by investment starvation. Venezuela and the Arab countries won major contractual improvements in 1948 (including introduction of the kind of 50-50 profit-share deals that American oil-bearing land owners took for granted).

Iran’s new socialist leader Mossadeq went too far: He had the hide to nationalise oil completely in 1951. The CIA flexed its new muscles and helped the briefly-exiled Shah regain control of the country, and thus the West its oil industry – which with the departure of the Anglo-Persian Company (later BP) had collapsed. America had a new, if temporary, Persian Gulf friend.

Through the fifties, global oil demand soared but was outpaced by rapid production expansion. The Gulf countries awarded more concessions, more oil flooded onto the market, and marketplace forces started to bring the price down independently of the global companies.

Since companies still posted prices – fixed ones upon which contracts with countries were based – but couldn’t control how many new concessions countries awarded (production), the downstream marketplace price fell, and it was the companies who began to bear the weight of the difference. In the late fifties, they began cutting posted prices dramatically, which obviously cut oil producing country profit-share revenue.

The consumer was flexing his muscles, and neither company nor producer-country wanted to cop the pain; some major latter ones responded to the cuts in post price by forming OPEC, in 1960, and coordinating aggressive posted price negotiations with the companies. At this stage, US domestic production was still import-protected and Russia was Russia, so as producers, both were peripheral to the global price control battle between countries and companies.

Still, throughout the sixties, since both demand and production capacity were ballooning, there was plenty of consumer dough around for everyone, and although bickering over contracts and posted price was a constant feature, things didn’t come to a head until the seventies. On the one hand, the countries controlled total production (through the ability to award new concessions); on the other, the companies still set posted price, and had to get oil onto the market profitably. So long as overall global supply (production) exceeded overall global demand (use), the downward marketplace price pressures meant producer-country oil market power and oil company oil market power’ were working appositely, cancelling each other out, which suited the fast-developing global economy and the average American Graffiti-esque consumer.

The companies wanted to keep posted prices lowish (closer to the true marketplace); the countries wanted them highish (maximising contractual profit share) but helped lower downstream marketplace price by increasing production/supply (with more new oilfields). This combination fuelled the explosive Western industrial growths of the post-war era. It’s also a reminder of why secured Western control of tomorrow’s oil price is so important.

However, the balance shifted in the seventies when booming global oil demand began outstripping supply, or production expansion rate – a kind of slingshot effect (sell a desert island one car and then flood it with enough cheap oil and investment dough to justify their own car factory, and next thing you know, everyone there wants your oil).

Downstream marketplace price now started to exceed posted (contractual) prices, and so the companies began to make money at the expense of the countries. That is, they’d pay fifty-percent of a low posted (contractual) price profit to the oil owners, and make fifty percent of a high marketplace price profit for themselves. Once again it was a bit like the early days of fixed royalty payments, when owner countries had been cut out of marketplace profits.

This is when a second round of oil industry nationalisations began, and by this time, the heavyweight countries had a) a far greater established global market share, b) the formal OPEC framework, and c) the inclination and excuses to introduce global politics explicitly into the global oil market, where it has remained ever since.

The 1973 oil embargo

The trigger for the 1973 oil shock was the Yom Kippur War, but the true causes were the underlying supply-and-demand imbalance and marketplace over-reaction. By the early seventies, the OPEC nations wanted a bigger piece of the high marketplace price action.

Libya’s new socialist leader Khaddafi gave everyone big ideas by demanding, and receiving from the companies his oil fields hosted, major improvements in his contracts (20 percent increase in fixed royalties and a ’55-45′ profit share arrangement). Other OPEC countries followed suit, and some began formally nationalising their industries, forcing agreements for gradual transfer of Western assets.

Then, as OPEC nations began to recognise their power as ‘swing-up’ producers in a tightening oil market – those who alone could expand production in response to global demand – some members began to urge it be exercised. For the first time, Saudi Arabia, the OPEC leader and key producer, traditionally US-friendly, grudgingly agreed to mix politics and oil.

When Nixon announced a big military aid package supporting Israel at the 1973 war’s outbreak, a lot of simmering tensions came to a head. Routine negotiations with companies over posted price broke down, and OPEC assumed unilateral control of it; in late 1973, OPEC lifted posted price from about $3.00 to $11.65. Production cuts followed , direct embargoes were imposed on Israel-friendly countries, inflation ballooned, and the world went into a deep recession.

This last point is the real one. The fierceness of the recession had less to do with the crisis aspects of the oil shock – the embargoes, the production cuts, and arguably even the unilateral price hikes in themselves – and more to do with the underlying oil market imbalance and the tight oil market, giving rise to gross over-reaction on the part of a charging, oil-fuelled world economy that had come to take the ever-flowing provision of more oil for granted.

It was the global economic heart attack that resulted not from ill-health, but more from a huge fright. There was an imbalance, yes, but no real, sudden ‘oil shortage crisis’ in terms of underlying supply-and-demand. What really happened in 1973 is that the OPEC nations unilaterally ‘took back the profit slack’ from the oil companies, scaring the daylights out of the cosy Western oil market, inspiring domestic economic policy desperation tactics, and sending investment running.

The newly oil-fuelled world economy demonstrated for the first time that if the global swing producers sneeze, everyone gets the flu even if there’s no bug actually going around. Including the swing producers themselves, as OPEC soon discovered.

The Iranian Revolution and the Iran-Iraq war

Between 1974 and 1979, oil price was relatively stable at around $13-$15 a barrel, as OPEC and non-OPEC countries nervously eyed each other off. OPEC had frozen posted price and lifted embargos quickly in early 1974, doubtless a bit alarmed by the power they suddenly realised they had over the world economy, and also recognising that prolonged global recession would hit them as much as anyone else.

What did happen as a result of 1973 was that non-OPEC countries began channelling big money into non-Middle East oil exploration and development. The IAE was formed as a defensive de-facto cartel. Populations in OPEC countries realised just how crucial was their oil, too, and began examining the relationships between companies and their own mostly corrupt rulers and musing over why shared national assets hadn’t translated into better lives for all. The Iranian Revolution of 1979 was an early, and to date, unique result.

The Shah’s Iran had, since 1953, been a reliable and West-friendly producer, and was by this time the world’s second-largest exporter. During the OPEC production cuts of the 1973 crisis, it actually increased production – nominally in protest against OPEC’s failure to take even stronger anti-Israel measures, but in effect easing the impact of production cuts.

But in 1979, Iranian students and clerics, following the lead of striking oil workers, kicked out the thoroughly disgusting Shah’s regal regime. The US embargoed Iranian oil in response to the hostage crisis; Iran responded by banning exports to any American company.

Soon after, secular Iraq invaded newly-theocratic Iran – just as alarmed by the Ayatollah as the US – and Iraqi production soon dropped radically, too. The net result was about 15 percent of the global supply being removed from the global equation. Posted OPEC price rises were even larger than in 1973 – opportunistically this time, that is, member countries taking advantage of these marketplace price-spooking events.

Saudi Arabia tried to hold the formal OPEC posted price down but other countries just kept lifting individual posted prices to cream dough from a scared global marketplace, so OPEC did too, eventually. The marketplace was paranoid enough to cop it sweet for a while; between 1979 and 1981, OPEC price was hiked to $34, and individual OPEC producers kept adding to that, selling their oil to companies for as much as $46 dollars a barrel.

By this time, though, new non-OPEC production was coming online – the North Sea, Alaska – so the ‘shock’, while far larger in price terms, was less damaging to the global economy, at least for the developed countries.

By late 1981, global (total) production power began to dominate OPEC’s posted price and the marketplace price fell; OPEC responded by cutting their production in an attempt to keep that price high. There was a global recession, but it was less dramatic, because the non-OPEC oil industry was ready for the second oil shock.

The major effect on the global oil market was to dramatically erode OPEC market share; as the marketplace dragged prices down determinedly, OPEC, rather than dropping posted price, just kept cutting production, in a futile attempt to defend their high posted price. They dropped from 27 million bpd in 1980 to 13.7 million bpd by 1985.

By the time the Saudis convinced everyone to cut OPEC’s posted price, it was too late; the world was awash in non-OPEC oil, global demand had fallen (The Greens, fuel-efficient cars, and natural gas were ‘in’), and nobody was buying theirs.

By 1985, Saudi production was as low as 2 million bpd – they’d agreed to act as ‘swing producer’ inside OPEC during this new price-control experiment by adjusting to meet agreed OPEC total production output. Still the global market price fell, and OPEC belatedly recognised that global production diversification made production control useless in what was effectively now a real supply-and-demand glut – a situation not helped by some OPEC producers also cheating on their agreed quotas.

With oil revenues low, and even non-OPEC producers dropping posted prices to chase the market, Saudi Arabia summarily linked to marketplace spot price, and increased production markedly to grab a share of (falling) global oil revenues huffily threatening a price war. The spot price duly plunged to about $10 a barrel.

It was clear that the oil market was now effectively fully globalised, and from then OPEC essentially became the world’s swing producer. Western car designers, bored with Jap midget cars and wussy engine size, doubtless began musing about SUVs way back then.

Where the second oil shock was really felt was in the poor developing countries. During the post-embargo seventies, the OPEC nations were awash with cash from the new high prices, and much of this was injected, via the international banks, as investment into the undeveloped Third World. These economies planned to expand domestic industry with the aim of paying back loans via subsequently-enhanced export capacity, as the developed economies had developed through the fifties and sixties, but part of the kindly developed world economy’s response to the second oil shock was towering interest rates. This plunged these fragile new domestic oil-economies smack into the disastrous Debt Crisis of the eighties.

Many countries like Mexico, which had effectively accepted the West’s invitation to join the oil-fuelled global economy, saw their early gains evaporate and their citizens temporarily-improved standards of living plunge. (Again, this is a key to grasping the importance of control of the oil marketplace to the future, and what might perhaps lie ahead for all these newly ‘globalising’ US-friendly Eastern Europeans, too. ‘Globalisation’ is just a nice word; it can’t control where hard-nosed global investors invest, how deeply, and at what price. Democracy, freedom and stability must come before commerce.)

An uneasy truce

Since the two shocks of the seventies, there has been an uneasy truce in the oil market wars. Direct price setting as a cartel tool is a thing of the past; now it is production control alone that gives OPEC whatever power it does or doesn’t have over the global marketplace price. Although OPEC has had neither the will nor the co-ordination to fully exploit this control so far, that the marketplace price remains as sensitive as ever to what goes on in its swing supply regions is a clear indication that the power is there.

During the first Gulf War, marketplace price spiked from $15 to nearly $40 dollars before Saudi Arabia’s decision to increase production by a 3 million bpd helped calm it quickly back below $20. More recently, an ill-judged OPEC quota increase in 1997 (2.5 million bpd) just after the Asian economic collapses, along with Iraq’s modest production return (initially under 1 million bpd) via the oil-for-food program, and two warm winters added to a glut, and the drastic fall in the global marketplace price (dropping it briefly under $10 by 1999).

In response to that, OPEC production cuts through 1998 (total 4.3 million bpd), helped marketplace price rise sharply to up to $30 by 2000 again. President Clinton releases 30 million barrels of oil from the SPR in 2000; in 2001, marketplace price falls radically again, supposedly due to a US recession and OPEC overproduction. The price dropped to $15 after the S11 attacks due to fears of a global economic downturn, and has now risen above $30, thanks at least partly to OPEC and OPEC-Plus production cuts in early 2002.

All prices above are nominal (dollars-of-the-day), so it’s hard to get a real handle on the last thirty years of fun, but the wacky and symbiotic relationship between oil price and inflation is part of the point. Deciphering how much oil really ‘costs’ an oil-growth economy at any given moment in a deregulated, oil-fuelled global-growth marketplace is profoundly meaningless. You pay whatever the highly unstable marketplace price says at any given moment, and everything else adjusts to that, and so we bounce along; that marketplace price instability is not remotely matched by underlying supply-and-demand instability, although the industry will invariably try to pretend it is.

Rather, it is a reflection of the inherently artificial price of oil as a tradable product, of its all-encompassing economic role as a ‘development commodity’, of marketplace corporate memories of the roller-coaster ride of the past, and of a nervous recognition on the part of the oil-using world that one day our mighty con trick on the people who really own the oil we all exploit is going to be thoroughly rumbled.

OPEC SWING PRODUCTION POWER – THE OIL MARKETPLACE BIG STICK

Since the 1970s non-OPEC producers and some OPEC ones have pumped oil at more or less maximum capacity. By this I mean that short-term flexibility has been limited. Over time and changing marketplace price and thus investment conditions, new fields can be found and opened, inefficient or uneconomic ones shut down, but there is little fat that can be used in an economic swing capacity outside of the Middle East. In fact, since what affects the globalised spot price is (perceptions of) net changes in global production, there is none, since Middle East production flexibility dwarfs all others and Saudi Arabian flexibility dwarfs OPEC.

OPEC quotas

Twice a year, and often more, OPEC meets to decide how much oil they are going to officially produce based on the prevailing marketplace spot prices. Their stated aim is basket price stability in a band $22 – $28; each country is allocated a quota designed to ensure a total OPEC output that will achieve the best on-going balance between market share and oil revenue.

OPEC has become more sophisticated since the 80s, but there are still price hawks and doves within OPEC; generally the smaller producers, especially those with large populations to feed (Nigeria, Venezuela) prefer high prices, while the bigger producers with small populations (Saudi, Kuwait) prefer lower prices, since this ensures a more stable market share in the longer term.

OPEC is far from united; bickering, stand-offs, and especially cheating by the smaller producers, is rife. Cheating – a cartel member selling more oil than it has agreed to to snaffle extra revenue – is strategically good for the non-OPEC producers though, since it erodes collective cartel power. (Quota cheating is why Saddam invaded Kuwait. Iraq, a big producer broke after the ten year war with Iran and desperately needing oil revenue to rebuild its economy and pay war debts, had never-the-less toed the OPEC quota line to help it recapture long-term market share lost in the eighties. Next door, however, Kuwait was grossly and provocatively exceeding its quotas, helping keep marketplace price down, which hit Iraq’s revenues further. Saddam complained repeatedly to OPEC and threatened invasion unless Kuwait ceased. They didn’t, and so he did. Saddam, as hateful as he is, is not, or at least was not then, an irrational leader. The Iran invasion was a serious misjudgement – although the US didn’t think so at the time – but the Kuwait invasion was a rational act, even arguably justified. Put it this way: If you regard America’s coming invasion of Iraq as a justified, rational act, then you should regard Saddam’s of Kuwait in the same light, since both will have been done for essentially the same underlying economic reason – protection of oil price control power. On issues like human rights and democracy there was little difference between Iraq and the dictatorial Kuwait that America so nobly rescued. And Iraq certainly has more historical claim to disputed, oil-rich Iraq-Kuwait border territory than America has to Kirkuk.)

Since the second oil shock, the non-OPEC crowd has naturally pushed for marketplace hegemony – long live the ‘free’ global market – except that this has now inevitably bought them up against their fundamental problem: They ultimately don’t have much natural market power. That is, they don’t have much bloody oil. Oops.

Current OPEC quotas: Algeria – 1.2 million bpd; Indonesia – 800, 000 bpd; Iran – 3.5 million bpd; Iraq – no quota (currently producing 2 million bpd under UN supervision); Kuwait – 2 million bpd; Libya – 1.3 million bpd; Nigeria – 2 million bpd; Qatar – 600, 000 bpd; Saudi Arabia – 8.5 million bpd; UAE – 2.1 million bpd; Venezuela – 2.8 million bpd. Total – 25.2 million bpd.

Saudi Arabia can probably produce up to 10-11 million bpd right now. Of the other significant countries, Nigeria and Venezuela are effectively ‘maximum’ producers. Iran and Iraq are chronically under-developed and investment-starved; they alone are the two countries with any potential to match Saudi’s production capacity and range, and probably only Iraq ever can.

Right now, only Saudi Arabia has the capacity to dramatically reduce global production as a matter of policy. Right now, they are the world’s singular swing producer. Right now, the oil marketplace is tight, and in a tight market the swing producer has enormous power. Of course, oil revenue, global politics, market-share and field health matters affect production policy. It’s not simply a matter of ‘turning off a tap’.

But since September 11, even their best friends – the American oil industry – have taken to calling Saudi Arabia the ‘Kernel of Evil’. It doesn’t take an Einstein to recognise why Iraq is suddenly so important. A unilateral Saudi cut of even a few million barrels a day now – or the total overthrow of the government by extremist Muslim students and clerics, a revolution of the kind many current Bushies experienced up close in the friendly oil pump of Iran back in 1979 – would be globally, economically catastrophic.

Oil industry analysts always underestimate non-economic factors. That mantra – whoever’s in power, the oil will flow – is an article of faith. They never explicitly predict strikes, wars, terrorism, revolutions or political upheavals. Many industry studies have been written on ‘resource wars’ and ‘supply dislocations and disruptions’, and what strikes you about them all is their deep, almost childlike, optimism that the oil will always flow.

It’s mostly because they can’t afford to think otherwise publicly, lest they send the marketplace price soaring. But everyone knows, and has known for a long time, that Saudi Arabia is a ticking time bomb. Unemployment is now high; for all its natural wealth, the domestic economy is a mess. The young men, of which there are very many, are angry, idle, deeply anti-Western and in awe of Osama bin Laden. The powerful Wahabbi clerics who control the country socially are all uncheerfully beserk. Some of the Saudi Royals, of which there are now 8,000 (nearly all of whom are suavely-repellent thugs), are also secret admirers of bin Laden, and active financial backers of Al-Qaeda.

The Saudi oil princes have lately been trying, and mostly failing, to attract private investment back into their regal oil franchise. That no-one in the West has wanted to go there is a shrewd market indication that the Big Oil men have been holding off, knowing that even mightier – and commercially safe – oil contracts await in Iraq. What sane Western investor would put money into Saudi infrastructure, when he’s known for nearly ten years that Iraq’s oil industry, so ripe for expansion, will need a whole lot of investment very soon, and that it will all be safe-guarded by American military might?

This global oil market production power showdown was always going to come. American oil industry leaders – George W. Bush’s dad especially – have spent lifetimes cultivating the increasingly-vulnerable Saudi Arabian Royals. American Oil has bribed them, flattered them, divided-and-ruled them, ‘educated’ them in the attractive ways of the West, threatened them, grown rich from and with them, protected them and lately, tolerated them.

As in any mutually-beneficial but fundamentally-dishonest commercial relationship that has long past its use-by date, American Oil and Saudi Arabian Royalty now thoroughly hate each others’ guts. Since September 11, all the past tactics have at last been ditched. When George W. Bush talks about military action as the ‘last resort’ in the struggle for disarmament he’s not talking about Iraq’s WMD, he’s talking about the Saudi Arabian oil market weapon.

HOW DID WE GET OURSELVES INTO THIS MESS?

It is impossible to assess the real, the underlying state of the oil supply-and-demand balance at any given time. Figures are notoriously slippery. OPEC producers cheat on their official output quotas and fib about production totals. Non-OPEC producers and users also blur their numbers. Drilling companies trumpet high new field production rates and downgrade them in a mumble later. Governments obfuscate national demand statistics for security and political reasons. Commercial suppliers constantly balance transport costs and stocks storage costs and refinery costs against spot price changes; drawn-down stocks can reflect not just (or even) higher underlying ‘demand’, but also (or simply) a desire to on-sell last yesterday’s cheaply-purchased oil at today’s higher prices. The industry tells lies about why prices are high as a matter of course. US commercial stocks are currently drawn way down! There’s a bad winter! The Venezuelan strikes! Middle Eastern tension! The underlying market is ‘tight’! Demand is ‘high’!

But is it really? Are you using more petrol? Can a winter be so unexpectedly bad? Of course not. And there’s still supposedly eight billion barrels of oil floating around the planet somewhere, and probably more. Even an instant production cut of 10 million bpd is not going to grind the world’s engines to a catastrophic halt; just the world’s thoroughly-artificial ‘oil-economy’. This is the nub of it; though consumers always pay the price, it’s not you and I who rush to fill our swimming pools with petrol every time OPEC looks like sneezing, not you and I who risk giving the global economy triple pneumonia – it’s the oil marketplace. It’s been paranoid since 1973, and who knows, maybe the paranoia is justified this time.

Meanwhile, the real oil market insiders – industry leaders, financiers, Oil Ministers, some Heads of State, diplomats, dictators, assorted oil mercenaries – who do know what is going on play very close hands. Industry annual reports, new market growth rates, oilfield analyses, data collations and hard-eyed studies cost thousands of dollars. The last thing the oil industry wants is for politicians and punters to get at the inside numbers in real time. So how much oil do we daily use, or need, or globally, economically depend upon? How sensitive to those piddly supply hiccups should price really be? Is it the West’s fault for using ‘too much oil’? Is it the Yanks’, with their big guzzling SUVs? The answer to the last three questions are: not very sensitive at all; not really (not yet), and not at all.

Global Demand Big Picture

Oil demand 2002: According to the IEA, global oil use in 2002 averaged 76.4 million barrels per day (bpd).

Projected demand 2003: This is projected to rise to 77.6 million bpd in 2003. Projected major single country user will be the US, at 20.2 million bpd.

Projected long-term demand: The IEA forecasts global oil use to rise to 94.8 million bpd by 2010, and 111.5 million bpd by 2020. Most growth will be in developing economies: China, the sub-continent, Asia, Eastern Europe. If the West gets its way, maybe in reverse.

Major net importers: The US is still overwhelmingly the largest net single importer of oil in the world, importing twice as much as the next largest importer (Japan) in the first quarter of last year. Major import supply regions for the US in 2002 were (approx): Middle East (25%), Central and South America (22%), Canada (15%), Mexico (12.4%), Africa (14.4%). (NB: In 1995, US imports from the Middle East were about 17% of the total imports.) Other major net oil importers for Q1 2002 were Japan, Germany, Korea, France, Italy, Spain, China, India and the Netherlands.

Global Supply/Production Big Picture

Supply 2002

The top twelve producers in 2002 were (million bpd, 11-month average): Saudi Arabia (7.6), Russia (7.4), US (5.8), North Sea Offshore (5.7), Iran (3.4), China (3.4), Mexico (3.1), Norway (3), Venezuela (2.8), UK (2.3), Canada (2.1) and Nigeria (2.1). Under the food-for-oil program, Iraq produced 1.4-2.0 million bpd. Despite being the third largest producer for 2002, the US was still the highest net importer.

Puts those production output changes into perspective, doesn’t it. Given the amount of oil reserves and oil stocks the world retains, it’s absurd that ‘production’ is such a big stick. Blame the oil marketplace for its brain-dead stupidity. But then the ‘market’ is never wrong, is it. Just very jumpy, and this year, it has reasons to be especially so.

Supply 2003

Here’s some production factors to consider for 2003. Firstly, Venezuelan production dropped away to almost nothing in late 2002, and while Chavez’s government is now claiming that production is up to over 2 million bpd again, the main oil strike is still in fact in progress and the key oil union leader has said that true production is closer to 1 million bpd. Most agree that production won’t be fully restored (to around 3 million bpd) for four or five months.

Secondly, the Iraq invasion will likely shut down all production in Iraq again, quite possibly for years if Saddam goes apocalyptic, in which case he might even take down other Middle East production capacity, too.

Thirdly, there is also a sensitive oil strike situation simmering away in Nigeria.

Fourth, in 2001 the Trans-Alaska pipeline (1 million bpd flow) was shut down for over two days by a single bullet-hole, which doubtless will have given terrorists ideas if they hadn’t already had them.

Finally, there are many Muslim regions important to global oil supply which may respond disastrously to the Iraq invasion, including Aceh, North Africa, Chechnya and other Caspian Sea Basin areas.

Supply projections mid-term

Mid-term and beyond it’s a bit more meaningful to talk about production in actual supply-and-demand terms. The North Sea and US capacities will soon decline sharply, and new non-Middle East field expansion remains a very expensive proposition. And while the Saudis greatly increased short-term production (+ 3 million bpd) during the first Gulf War to settle down the marketplace price and have recently declared they will lift production by up to 1.5 million bpd this time if necessary, it is foolish, given the post-S11 climate and the unambiguous challenge to their oil market power that this Iraq invasion and occupation represents to expect lasting generosity in the future. If the US invasion runs into disaster – say the Iraqi oilfields are torched – why should they keep oil prices low solely to help a deadly-serious, future marketplace challenger become economically viable? Skyrocketing global oil prices during a chaotic, prolonged and militarily-unstable US-Iraqi economic reconstruction effort would be crippling.

True, OPEC has very recently raised production as a response to the Venezuelan problem, but this is as much to take advantage of the high prices they know will be sustained until the Iraq crisis is resolved as any attempt to bring the price down. The Saudis are playing very close cards now, and it’s simply daft to assume co-operation in the event of the Iraq operation going badly wrong in the longer term.

Some analysts are suggesting a possible glut (and fast-falling prices) later this year and next year, with the invasion going swimmingly and Iraq coming back online, Chavez and the Venezuelan masses kissing and making up, and Saudi Arabia reprising Gulf One, blah blah blah. One has to say: ‘Well, they would pretend that, wouldn’t they?’

The real oil market truth is that the world is entering a period of unprecedented production instability and everyone is secretly shitting bricks. Big Oil is now in fact alarmed, realising that the nuttier ‘Manifest Destiny’ Bushies they helped put in the White House are actually going to do this. Be careful, as they say, what what you casually wish for.

Supply projections long-term

Here we enter the realm of fantasy, hype, wishful-thinking, guesswork and, for the non-Middle Eastern countries, harsh, ugly reality. An IEA broad projection in 1996 predicted that the total world supply capacity would develop thus (mbpd): 1996 (62.7), 2010 (79), then a drop by 2020 (72.2). The break-up they suggested is more relevant: Middle East OPEC producers – 1996 (17.2), 2010 (40.9), 2020 (45.2), while for the Rest of the World (which includes OPEC producers Venezuela, Nigeria, Mexico, Libya, Algeria, and Indonesia and major non-OPEC producers America, Canada, Russia, the FSU and the North Sea) – 1996 (45.5), 2010 (38), 2020 (27). The relative picture is crystal-clear: Everyone knows, and has known for decades, that the Gulf is where tomorrow’s oil market power will lie.

If you can’t control directly or influence with rock-solid reliability a significant wedge of Gulf production, you’re at the mercy of those who can. September 11 – perhaps more precisely, the Bushies’ superheated rhetoric since – effectively ensured that only a strong physical presence in the Gulf could in future guarantee this for the West.

WHO OWNS THE WORLD’S OIL AGAIN?

Short-term or long-term, it all comes down, as it always should have, to where god buried all those dead dinosaurs in the first place. It wasn’t in our back yard, it wasn’t in the North Sea, it wasn’t in Alaska, and it wasn’t in the fine state of Texas. It wasn’t even really in the sunken treasure chests of the Caspian Sea Basin, as Dicks Cheney, Armitage, Perle and their sundry oily friends discovered over the wilderness Clintonian years, a frustrating decade spent making grand oily plans with the various ex-Politburo thugs who now run the former Soviet Republics, generally with brutal iron fists that make Saddam’s look soft.

Listening to Cheney speak so nobly of democracy and human rights for Iraq lately, his old Azerbaijan mate Heydar Aliyev must be laughing fit to bust. Perle’s stern calls for the West to smash states that sponsor Islamic terrorism must make the Chechnyan rebels he once called on the West to back (against ‘Russian neo-Imperialism’), smile wryly. And hearing George W. Bush wax unlyrical about Iraq’s puny WMD will doubtless raise an oily smirk from whoever in the former Soviet Union is sitting on the large number of Soviet nukes that no-one can quite account for.

Nope, god put all the serious oil in the Persian Gulf. That’s why the West is setting out to steal some real estate there, at last.

Proven reserves – oil that has been located and hasn’t been sucked up yet

There are endless nuances – possibles, probables, shades of recoverability – which tend to bounce these numbers around a bit. Exploration innovations, improved drilling techniques and investment climates do too (you can extract a barrel of oil from most places if you spend enough money to do so).

The whole world has about one trillion barrels of proven reserves. This estimate has been stable since the eighties; what we’ve extracted has been roughly matched by amended proved estimates and new discoveries. The following numbers are not a bad break-down:

Main OPEC: Saudi Arabia (260 billion barrels), Iraq (112 billion), Kuwait (95 billion), United Arab Emirates (95 billion), Iran (92 billion), Venezuela (66 billion).

Of note, again, about Saudi Arabia, Iraq and to a lesser degree Iran is that all three have potential for further discoveries. Exploration in Iran and Iraq has been neglected for nearly two decades, hampered by war and Western sanction. Most industry analysts don’t reject Iraqi claims that at least another 100-200 billion barrels exist in the undeveloped Western Deserts of the country. Saudi Arabia might have as much as a trillion barrels of reserves in its own right, but Iraq might have even more than that. The other factors are that Gulf crude is by far the cheapest to extract ($1-2 a barrel), and generally of high quality.

Main non-OPEC: Caspian Basin (60-‘200’ billion barrels), Russia (49 – 90? billion), Mexico (27 billion), China (24? billion), America (23 billion), Kazakhstan (14+ billion), Norway (10 billion).

Many of these non-Middle East fields are expensive (off-shore oil costs $13-$20 a barrel to extract), and/or poor quality, and/or in politically unstable areas, and/or above all else, running down fast. Other fields – in Asia, Africa and Latin America, the Arctic Circle, the West African deepwater reserves – can show all the promise they like, but future oil market power keeps coming back to size, efficiency of production, and potential for cheap expansion.

There’s simply no way around it: In a matter of years, no non-Gulf producer can hope to compete with whoever controls production in the five major Gulf producers, and especially in Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq, where the biggest growth of all awaits. (See http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil-gas/petroleum/analysis-publications/oil-market-basics/Sup-image-Reserves.htm.)

SUMMARY – THE STRATEGIC STAKES ARE HIGH

Why does Iraq’s oil matter so much to tomorrow’s global economy? And if it does, why don’t the Americans simply do oil deals with Saddam? Why risk radical disruption to the global supply equation now, in the post-S11 terrorist climate, of all times?

The answers are:

a) It shouldn’t, but that’s the way the oil market has set itself up. Because it’s always been a protected global marketplace, short-term production changes – marketplace supply-and-demand perceptions – count. Iraq and Iran have the only potential to match future Saudi Arabian production scale and flexibility, and successful invasion and occupation of Iran is unthinkable, un-doable, and un-sellable (for now).

b) Access to another country’s oil reserves means nothing in a globalised marketplace; effective control of significant production is what matters, because that means at least some continued artificial control over price, and that in turn means control over the world’s future globalisation patterns – where the big investment bucks go, what political disposition and strategic stance that economic development fosters, who becomes friends with whom. (Look at the US-Turkey fancy-dancing going on at the moment, for God’s sake.)

Russia is trying hard to get its relationships with the Former Soviet Union Republics stabilised; Pakistan is globalising; above all else, China is stirring industrially. These countries are far better naturally placed to develop effective, sustainable global oil market relationships with the Gulf producers in the future. Not just for geographical reasons – Eurasia is the future centre-of-gravity of the world – but also because most Middle East populations are increasingly estranged from what they see as the fat, greedy, exploiting and globally peripheral West.

c) This unique strategic window of opportunity in the Persian Gulf won’t stay open forever. Saddam opened it ten years ago by invading Kuwait, but Osama bin Laden has now almost closed it.

What price controil of our childrens’ tomorrow?

The heart-breaking tragedy is that it would be far easier, far more moral, and above all else far less doomed to failure for the West to secure our oil-market relationships with the Gulf in an altogether different, more controllable way. What we are probably about to do is deal ourselves out of the globalisation future, not retain our place in the gentle lead.

My objection to this invasion and occupation is based not simply on the obvious fact that it is all about oil; rather, that it is all about oil in the worst possible way – violent, self-defeating conquest – and in the hands of the worst possible leaders.

An essential truth: Crude oil is now the ultimate price-controlled and controlling product. Its market ubiquity and worth is based entirely on refined (and indeed non-oil) products, and yet all the big industry profits lie at the production end, which, once your field is yielding, is laughably cheap and easy in comparison to distilling petrol or designing and producing a big, sexy SUV.

Of itself, crude oil is almost useless; you can theoretically burn it for warmth and light – the Egyptians did – but its true saleability lies in the ubiquity and thirst of the downstream applications. What’s more both supply and demand are effectively limitless until we run out of oil. You can just keep drilling wells, if you’ve got the oil to begin with. (OPEC reckons they can produce at current rates for another 80 years.) Crude oil use itself generates increased crude oil use, and most agreeably for the lucky crude oil producers, there is no limit to how much that use can increase. Until we run out of oil.

The true product ultimately consumed is oil-energy – whether directly, or that oil-energy inherent in other products, which means everything that we in the developed economies now consume.

‘Consuming oil-energy’ doesn’t just mean driving a car, heating a home, using electricity or buying a plastic toy. We consume oil-energy when we read a book, go to school, debate democratically in Parliament, read Webdiary, argue over Iraq and lie naked in a grassy field protesting war.

It’s all time and human energy we’re not having to spend hunting, collecting or growing food, finding water or making shelters. In our era, all that spare time and human energy – that freedom – is created by oil-energy.

And while the resulting freedom has been almost all ours to burn in the West, the underlying oil-energy has itself been provided by someone else. We’ve enjoyed the freedom enormously, and good luck to us, but we just haven’t taken enough care to make sure those someone elses got some freedom in return, too. Spare time and human energy with which to develop, for their kids, the same levels of dignity and comfort that we can now give to ours.

This is the critical abstract concept to grasp, since the most important benefit of control of the oil marketplace is, always has been, and will remain, the capacity to control just how, and with whom, the spoils of the world’s always developing, ever-globalising oil-economy are shared around.

We can use our oil-energy freedom to design and market ourselves another electrically-warmed toilet seat, or we can use it help ensure that Saudi Arabian children get to read books other than religious ones which teach them to kill Jews and Christians.

We can design ourselves a spiffing new SUV, or we can build another 100 old-fashioned water purification plants in Nigeria.

I can watch my cricketing heroes play in the World Cup on a snazzy, oil-energy-guzzling plasma TV, or I can choose to listen to the game on a cheap radio instead, so that maybe some young Pakistani hothead will get the chance to do the same. If that happens tomorrow, maybe I’ll enjoy the game more without having to listen to the drivel of the Channel Nine commentators anyway, while maybe he’ll be inspired enough by a Saeed Anwar century to put down his box-cutter and pick up a cricket bat instead.

It all depends on the global price of eggs. Sorry, oil. Rupert Murdoch reckons it should be about twenty bucks a barrel. Osama bin Laden, on the other hand, has said he’d like to see it soar to $144. Only time, and the way we choose to controil globalisation after this invasion and occupation of Iraq – which is all about oil – will tell.

***

Postscript – the Bushies, AKA Thatcher’s Ordinary Men

Oh yes. Our global oil-economy’s current glorious leadership. I nearly forgot.

The Yanks rediscovered oil in Pennsylvania in 1859. They first figured out how best to exploit it, first invented machines that used it, first put it to mass-production work, first started buying and selling it in meaningful quantities. So obviously they created the first domestic production and marketing environment, too.

And after 1911, when the Standard Oil monopoly was busted up, it wasn’t a bad one for an oilman with big ideas and loads of drive. The American domestic industry (biggest producer in the world and a net exporter for yonks) was competitive, diversified, tough, feisty, fertile, and for a fair while, a pretty level playing field.

It was also based on a genuine recognition of the landowner’s ongoing ownership of the oil in his patch of dirt. Unlike the early days of foreign production, that landowner was dealt into the market profit equation by way of a company oil lease, rather than being annually bought out of the market action via a concession. A large wad of cash upfront always looks attractive if you don’t know what sort of goldmine you’re actually sitting on, I s’pose. But even the most Beverly Hillbilly Yank – America uniquely being a nation nurtured on the brilliant triple-whammy of individual aspiration, market capitalism and democratic freedom – was too shrewd and free to be stiffed out of the untapped oil profits he was lucky enough to own.

Even today, when the bigger oil boys have long since clubbed together, there remains hundreds of thousands of individual stripper wells and well groups throughout America – small but still-going concerns pumping marginal quantities of oil which together account for up to 30% percent of US production. Their romantic histories often make them touchstone political issues in the oil-rich states, and they’re usually now heavily-subsidised in some way, eking out their profits when the global price of oil allows it, shutting down temporarily when the climate becomes impossible. They are the local corner shops of the multinational oil supermarket industry, and such creatures exist nowhere else in the world, nor should they still exist in America, either, because a truly free global oil market wouldn’t let them. Yet it was (and in certain ways still is) exactly this highly autonomous have a go domestic market fertility which fermented, sustained and provided the launch pad for the export of all the technical, theoretical, support-industry, capital-procurement and ‘visionary’ elan that has subsequently produced such a rigidly-controlled global market.

As is so often the case with exported American genius and vision, what’s good in practice for them at home is merely what’s good in theory for the rest of us abroad. A similar process is observable in the way the US computer/software industry began as a fast-and-frisky ‘merit product’ industry, and yet became the slothful Microsoft behemoth it now is in its global maturity.

Steel. Farming. Energy. Weapons. So many American industries are moribund, wasteful, cosseted, retrograde, taxpayer-sustained market slugs at home – and still dominate abroad by sheer size and global market power alone.

This year Congress will approve $15 billion to combat AIDS overseas, and probably $150+ billion to wage war there, effectively subsiding the artificially-sustained American arms industry still more. Is it any wonder globalisation isn’t working out very nicely, when the American – the Western – people have so little control over how our wealth and genius for innovation is directed? If Bush put that $150 billion into the hydrogen car, instead – in the way that JFK put serious money into reaching the moon – I reckon we’d have one in two years.

But this is the fundamental and unsustainable self-contradiction at the heart of ‘competitive’, ‘global’, ‘free’ market economics: Once healthy and fertile open competition has selected its early winners, those winners crush all future healthy and fertile open market competition.

The people of the world – we consumers – have shown recently that we just don’t want all that Western money invested in war, in weapons, in exported death. We as a ‘global market’ simply don’t ‘demand’ it. Nor, increasingly, does the Greening West ‘demand’ loads more dough be invested into the further expansion of the world’s oil-economy. (Invent a cheap hydrogen car, instead, Exxon – we’ll BUY IT, and so will the Chinese, too, in their billions.)

We only still use so much oil-energy in the West because we have no free market choice, and we have no choice because the Western-led oil market remains so ruthlessly self-protecting. The period of artificial competition’in the global oil market since the oil crises of the seventies, which created ‘competitive’ non-Middle East producers like Canada and the North Sea, is proof.

There is only one possible way to be a truly competitive producer in the global oil marketplace now, and that is to be Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, perhaps Kuwait or the UAE. This invasion represents little more than the next ratcheting-up of the means of artificial protection by which open oil-energy market competition is crushed.

What America, inventor of the global oil market, is about to do to Iraq would be akin to Pennsylvania, driller of the first US oil well, summarily invading and occupying Texas. You can imagine how the Bushies would feel about that.

The oil and oil-energy men in Bush’s team are steeped in the history of the global oil market. George W. Bush and Dick Cheney and Condoleeza Rice and Clay Johnson and Don Evans and James Baker and Steve Ledbetter and Bill Gammel and Jack C. Vaughan Jnr and Ken Lay and Anthony J. Alexander and Tom Hicks and Steve Remp and A.R. ‘Tony’ Sanchez and Bob Holland Jnr and every one of the President’s oily backers would have grown up hearing their fathers and grandfathers bitching about Arab oil.

Their entire corporate lives have been one long exercise in seeking ways around America’s natural oil market inferiority; to observe them all so studiously avoiding the ‘o’ word in relation to Iraq – except in reactive, indignant passing – is not only comic, it is an insult to the intelligence. To hear them opportunistically braying pious words like ‘freedom’, ‘democracy’, ‘human rights’ and ‘global security’ instead is merely sickening.

But I recommend you read about such people for yourself and draw your own conclusions about their motivations, their past business dealings, and their desirability as leaders of the globalisation of our world. As I’ve said before, personal fortunes made and careers propelled don’t interest me as such. I say good luck to Dick Cheney for the millions he got from Halliburton yesterday, and the millions more he’ll probably receive in eventual retirement as thanks for all the Iraq infrastructure contracts that company will win. I congratulate Ken Lay on his personal financial acumen. I think that an oil tanker named Condoleeza is a charming concept. Good luck to them all. No doubt they’ll give generously to charity, as is the American way.

It’s the bigger picture that matters, the globalisation crunch-point this invasion represents. Oil, oil, and more oil is what feeds and directs that ravenous economic beast. To date, we in the West haven’t been paying a fair price to the poor peoples who own it, the peoples who rightfully should control it but never have.

It’s up to the rest of us now to change the way Iraq’s enormous oil wealth gets shared around, because ‘free market forces’ haven’t been fair to date, and neither will these men, in the post-Saddam future, unless we push them hard, hard, democratically hard. Nor will the dainty intellectual theorists and strategic visionaries who have championed these kinds of men so very far, sanitising their baser instincts with a sophisticated sheen, seeing economic ‘rules’ and ‘forces’ and ‘logic’ where there is really only human greed, thus propelling the rough likes of the Bushies to global prominence and power, and now the gentle, democratic West to the brink of aggressive Darwinian war.

You can find the oily thinkers – the ‘maddies’ – as easily as you can find the oily ‘fixers’. The Project for the New American Century. The Council on Foreign Relations. ‘The Grand Chessboard’. ‘The Threatening Storm’. ‘The Clash of Civilisations’. The American Enterprise Institute. The Heritage Foundation. The average, garden variety war-blogger. Just too many bored, clever, privileged Western men with too many late-night, brandy-fuelled delusions of grandeur.

But to call the rise and rise of the neo-conservative accord either a conspiracy or a three-decade revolution in intellectual thought is to flatter that ad-hoc but relentless erosion of the liberal tradition with an assigned cohesion and purpose that, for all the think-tanks and networking and strategic economic bombast, simply doesn’t exist.

There was no ‘Thatcherite revolution’, no ‘vast, right-wing conspiracy’, no visionary early leadership or generational second-wind. There was simply a collective tumble down the path-of-least-resistance to the grasping, grubby swamp in which we now flounder.

Opportunism, ambition, misplaced neo-idealism, post-Vietnam resentment and a general Revenge On The Sixties have all played their parts, but in the end, we are now slouching towards Bethlehem for no grander reason than that it simply turned out to be the least bothersome road for the straight men of the West to follow.

Just as John Howard became Prime Minister by default, it would have taken George W. Bush far more effort to avoid becoming President than to accidentally occupy the White House as he has, while Tony Blair’s well-meaning ‘Third Way’ is no more than sheer consensual laziness by a sniffier, Pommy name.

A deep fear festers in the ordinary hearts of such ordinary men, all these ordinary, natural-born followers who find themselves leading us from the rear, backwards into prehistoric history, backwards via polls and ‘public opinion’ and the deadening of language, onwards ever backwards through our very ordinary times.

It’s a fear that is now driving the West in historical reverse at accelerating speed and that fear is the fear of losing control of the world they have made. Losing control of who comes to live next door. Losing control of who comes to their country. Losing control of the global marketplace. Losing control of what someone writes in their newspaper, or says about them in public, or knows about their bank balance and their fat executive payout. Losing control of their children’s beliefs when their children are young and idealistic, losing control of what they might find on the internet, losing control of what drugs they might (or might not) be tempted to try. Ultimately, losing control of what their children will do with them, as they grow frail and old and powerless.

Always frightened by change unless they are the ones forcing frightening change upon others, these ordinary, Left-and-Right-and-Third Way neo-conservatives are now terrified, because the world they thought was finally under their control revealed itself, eighteen months ago, as wild, and brutal and still far beyond their reach, armed with all the world’s weapons though they now are.

They are like all deeply frightened men; cocooned in their certitudes, narrow in their outlook, profoundly anxious, aggressively bereft of humility lest we see how scared they really are. Our contemporary leaders are small human beings frozen in the spotlight of big history like rabbits, quivering yet rigid, cornered, ready to lash out, or bolt, or die of fright altogether at the first sign of movement beyond the light. Yet never once thinking to step boldly into the darkness, with a friendly, vulnerable and gentle call.

This invasion and occupation of Iraq is just another futile attempt to win, by brute force a supremacy over what might happen in the world tomorrow, a ‘full spectrum dominance’ that these men and their frightened, ‘pragmatic’ kind have never once managed to claim in the past.

This attempt will fail, too, and we will shed more bitter tears, because the men leading us into it are, as usual, ordinary cowards and small arrogant fools, while the future will always remain far, far beyond our control.

What the third millennium doesn’t need: Yet more dinosaurs in power

It is exactly this – this wilful refusal on our part to learn from Humanity’s recent collective mistakes – that makes following this looming war exactly like watching George Bush’s bad movie rerun: a road accident in slow motion, running on a permanent loop.

Oil, of course, is just very, very old dead dinosaurs and dead-dinosaur fodder.

Fossil fuels are just that: fossils. Not unlike grumpy old neo-cons and angry lefties who go round quoting Marx, they are the rotting remnants of an age long past, when human beings were mere unthinking animals too, and the Law of the Jungle was not a cliche but an unavoidable lifestyle choice.

Transcending that meaningless way of existence – timeless, truthless, based on sheer brute power and rat cunning – is what has defined Mankind’s journey. It’s what has lifted us half-way out of the gutter, and half-way to the stars, or at least Mars. It doesn’t really matter whether you choose to believe that the spark of Human self-consciousness which first kicked off our miraculous journey was Divine, or Darwinian, or applied by visiting aliens, or just another weird kink in the very kinky Human genome. We think, therefore we have Free Will, therefore every single individual and collective thought we as a species choose to translate into action is our responsibility, and ours alone.

So I’m afraid we can’t blame God or Allah or Satan or even Milton Friedman for whatever it turns out we are about to unleash in the Middle East.

Nor will it be a function of ‘just the way the world is’. Nor is it ‘inevitable’. Nor is it ‘realpolitik’. Nor will it be any expression of ‘moral clarity’, or ‘patriotic duty’, or ‘scientific imperative’, or ‘philosophical logic’, or ‘the Market’, or ‘the moral high ground’, or ‘Manifest Destiny’.

It will simply be what our most powerful dinosaurs decided to do on our behalf, once upon yet another time when our ugliest abstract thoughts ceased to be abstract, and became ineradicable facts of history. Truths, the only earthly ones we Human Beings can ever really be sure of: That which we did yesterday.

Tomorrow, all the fine abstract arguments about the approaching war in Iraq, including mine here, will blow away on the hot desert winds, and the bloodiness in the Middle East will simply become what we chose to do – yesterday, and yesterday, and yesterday. Never to be undone, never to be wished away. The reasons simply won’t matter.

But it’s not tomorrow yet, and so the reasons for war, which are all bad on this occasion, still need to be pulled apart, urgently. Which is why I’ll gladly repeat myself, and at length: This invasion and occupation is all about oil. All about dead dinosaurs, and dead-dinosaur fodder.

I’m well aware that many readers will have thrown their hands up in contempt or despair at my simplistic reductions last time – ‘a violent crime of theft’ (No Blood For Oil!) – but the scarier truth is that sometimes, just sometimes, the simplistic reductions are the right ones.

This is an invasion for oil. Push it, prod it, poke that truth any way you like, write a million clever words explaining carefully why it’s not, but it is. What we are about to do is invade and occupy Iraq to ‘secure’ the energy future of the West. If some people find that too intimidating, too much like ‘Western self-blame’, then that’s just too bad. Since September 11, I’ve already been called every ‘anti’ under the sun anyway; the one ‘anti’ I refuse to expose myself to is ‘anti-truth’.

Yep, this invasion and occupation is about securing (what some energy industry dinosaurs anachronistically insist must be) the energy future of ‘Western Civilisation’. If that places me too didactically close to the likes of Osama bin Laden and his various nutty mouthpieces of late, then that’s not my fault, either. Like John Avery (see Murdoch: Cheap oil the prize), I’m among the many who’ve been trying to argue, since ten days after S11 (More on War Fever), that we should concentrate on hunting that very creep down and trying him like the minor criminal he is, as our very highest priority in this ‘war on terror’. Rather than doing our best to turn him into some hateful modern-day ‘Messiah’, which is exactly what our glorious global leaders have now almost managed to do.

I’m among the many arguing for the isolation, the de-legitimisation, the ruthless, focussed targeting of Al-Qaeda, not its exact opposite, which is what this invasion will represent. I’m not the warbloggy pill pushing hysterically from the geeky safety of my little closet Trekky bedroom, for an entirely unnecessary, counter-productive and wasteful invasion and occupation of Iraq to get rid of Saddam, either.

No, in this ‘war against terror’, I’m more than happy to fight hard where necessary, but I’m buggered if I’m interested in fighting stupid, in fighting like a twentieth century dinosaur. Like many, I’ve presented what I think is a workable alternative for dealing with Saddam (Looking for John Curtin). I find it grimly amusing that the pro-invasion crew sneers at such allegedly ‘unrealistic’ plans as that proposed by the French and the Germans, too, when the cunning ‘disarmament’ plan they are helping push into actuality is the wackiest, most disproportionate, most strategically-suicidal, most apparently short-sighted and most potentially-disastrous military folly in the history of the United States.

Mark Latham was dead right: America is currently being run by clowns. And still the only response, as from the refreshed Miranda Devine in the SMH yesterday morning, is: We cannot stick our heads in the sand and do nothing about Saddam. Nothing, Miranda? Nothing? As if anyone is remotely proposing doing ‘nothing’ about Saddam Hussein.

The international community has been doing ‘something’ about him ever since he stopped being America’s second best Middle Eastern mate. These invasionists are like brattish children; if they can’t get things exactly all their own way, they stamp their little feet and call Mum a terrorist-lover until she gives in.

In any case, as I have said before, and will keep saying until I am proven wrong by the explosive resurgence in the next few years of a wildly wealthy, free and politically-autonomous Iraqi populace, this invasion is not about Saddam Hussein, it’s about dead dinosaurs.

A first step is a Socratic one, to ask ourselves this question: Would this invasion be occurring if Iraq had no oil reserves at all? The answer is obviously no. All the key invasion arguments are themselves only important because of the global leverage Iraq’s asset lends them. The trumped-up WMD/rogue state line is as much about the threat of economic blackmail as activated, enabled terrorism. The fear of a regionally-emboldened Saddam is based upon what it would mean for the oil market. Even the Human Rights-democracy line is grounded in oil in a way, for it’s the external ramifications of Saddam’s dictatorial powers that matter geo-politically – the absolutist method of ‘governance’ that gives one power-crazed man the kind of omnipotent, focussed control over Iraq’s national ambitions that democratic rulers can only envy, and how those national ambitions might just include hijacking the global economy.

This is what the Western hawks really fear about The Butcher of Baghdad; how his vicious political rule might one day translate itself onto the world stage, not all the nasty things he does internally to dissenting Iraqis to maintain it. To agree that this would indeed be a bad thing for Humanity is one thing; to support the West’s application of Saddam’s very own methods to prevent it from happening – pre-emptively applying our global brute force to neutralise his potential global brute force – is quite another. The end doesn’t justify the means; the means are the end.

To note all this is not to say that these secondary arguments for invading and occupying Iraq aren’t genuinely embraced by many of those who present them; it is simply to recognise that without the oil, these arguments become largely moot. Remove the dead dinosaurs from the Iraq equation, and Saddam Hussein becomes, even at the very worst, just another minor, regional, terrorism-supporting, WMD-craving, HR-abusing anti-freedom thug; a Khaddafi, a Ceascescu, an Idi Amin, a Pol Pot – there’s never been a shortage of such beasts, and successive US governments have never been particularly averse to tolerating them before.

Nor will they be in future. Successive US governments have most certainly never invaded and permanently occupied another country just to remove one; the preferred methods more usually include equipping and training guerrilla groups, sponsoring coups, a little light heavy bombing.

Iraq aside, the current Administration is no different, and arguably far more fast and loose with concepts like HR than most. (To claim that the Bushies are something ‘new and visionary’, that Rumsfeld and Cheney and Wolfowitz are democratic ‘idealists’, is a jaw-dropping perversion of language.) They can still – thankfully – quite happily ‘chat calmly’ with a bristling North Korea, for example, unquestionably the most terrifying and unstable regime on the planet. They feel no great need to go to war with China. They are ‘relaxed and comfortable’ with dozens of other dictatorships elsewhere which also give rise to equally urgent WMD, terrorist, HR-abuse and ‘anti-West’ threats. Many such dictatorships, in fact, are right next door to Iraq. No; Saddam only matters because of Iraq’s mighty stockpile of dead dinosaurs and dead dinosaur fodder. How anyone can pretend otherwise beggars belief.

In many ways this invasion and occupation would be far easier to swallow if the US Administration was honest about the reason for its inevitability. The same applies to the posturing of the French, German, Russian and Chinese governments, too, whose machinations in all this, while far more ‘idealistic’ than the US grasps, are also heavily influenced by the oil spoils they either stand to retain or lose themselves or simply don’t wish others to get.

And I’m not pretending to be an ‘energy saint’ in this either, just by the way. I use as much oil energy as the next wasteful Western citizen. But this is exactly why what we really need right now is some brutal leadership, right from the very top. We need George W. Bush to come right out and ask us all, straight up, if we support going to war for the sake of our own oil energy future.

And then we would all have to ask ourselves where we truly stand on this invasion. None of us could be in any doubts about what is at stake, and why the post-S11 killing is about to escalate. At the very least, a little brisk openness of this kind from the war leaders would result in far less damage to NATO, to the UN, to the broad Western secular liberal accord. The diplomats could go home, the bleeding hearts and poets could fall silent, and those who were still willing to be part of the ‘coalition of the willing’ could go and slug it out on the sands in honest combat, winner take oil.

Not that this will happen in a million years. All the dead-dinosaur industry dinosaur-leaders are ‘horrified’ at the prospect of war in their name, naturally, and no sane democratic leader is ever likely to be so ruthlessly frank. One mustn’t ever ruffle the self-deluding savoir faire of the dainty East Coast patriarchs and the down-home Texas boys, the clubby Brits and the smooth Europeans, the hard-eyed new breed of Russian corporate mover.

And why yes, I just bet some of these chaps are Masons, and some might even be Jewish. Fancy that. Butan evil global conspiracy? What bloody rubbish. It’s no conspiracy, it’s simply the complicated and interlocking headless beast of international business doing business, doing its ‘accidental conspiracy’ business-machine thing.

Like the men who drove Enron and Worldcom and the IT revolution into the ground, these oil men are not evil, they’re not vicious, they’re not hateful, and they doubtless would indeed be ‘horrified’ if they ever had to see up close and in bloody detail what it will actually require us in the West to do, if we are to make Rupert Murdoch’s charming vision of our economic future come to pass: “I have a pretty optimistic medium and long-term view but things are going to be pretty sticky until we get Iraq behind us,” says Rupert. “But once it’s behind us, the whole world will benefit from cheaper oil which will be a bigger stimulus than anything else.”(See Murdoch: Cheap oil the prize.)

Now Rupert Murdoch is in fact a pretty decent sort of bloke as bastard media tycoons go, and he is about to become a father again soon, too. I wish he and his wife nothing but joy and a safe and easy confinement, but when he can do no more than say prissily, of the coming savagery in Iraq, that it might indeed get ‘pretty sticky’ before the price of oil drops and the global economy soars anew, I cannot comprehend that we are members of the same Human tribe, with the same fears and hopes and fleshy vulnerabilities.

No, it is no ‘conspiracy’ and the casual callousness is not intended. The collective oil industry’s refusal to contemplate the ugly truth is just another human moral self-defence mechanism, not so very different from the head-in-the-sand response of the world’s civilised people to the rise and rise of all the other, the more explicitly totalitarian, dinosaur Big Lies of the last century.

“We only want to do our job,” is what the oil men of the world are saying to each other right now, and we are wrong to blame them for this war for oil because their job is to make our economy function, and if they don’t, then we are the very first ones to complain. It’s no conspiracy, and it’s nobody’s fault; we are all in this together, and none of us are being honest about what ‘this’ really is.

And yet we should know better by now. This is dinosaur stuff, yesterday’s news. We should have learned by now what happens when good and decent people refuse to confront Big Lies, and early, and most of all in ourselves, the small roles we each play in allowing them to grow to dangerous sizes.

It is exactly this – this wilful refusal on our part to learn from Humanity’s recent collective mistakes – that makes following this looming war exactly like watching George Bush’s bad movie rerun: a road accident in slow motion, running on a permanent loop. It makes you want to scream in desperation at what Mankind is in danger of becoming, again; to observe from afar so many intelligent, powerful, privileged, educated men behaving like brain-dead dinosaurs, for dead dinosaurs.

How pathetically twentieth century this all is. How soooo Second Millennium. This charade is from another era, surely, a testosterone-driven age of swung fists, angry bleating, chest-thumping, dirt-pissing. Some woman, I forget who, once wrote that waging war is the only thing men can do to stop women laughing at them.

How true that is; and how deeply embarrassing it is to be a man right now. How pitiful, this masculine squabbling in the desert over someone else’s booty, these little puffed-up egos trying to make grand ‘moral clarity’ excuses for what they will soon choose to do – kill and maim a lot of powerless people to get their hands on the loot.

All while a brutal dictator – another pathetic man – laughs at the fuss everyone is making over him; all while a religious maniac – another pathetic man – whips up an opportunistic storm of perhaps unprecedented fury; all while the powerless people who will suffer the most wait patiently to be bombed by all sides again. The old joke about why the Irish got spuds and the Arabs got oil – the Irish chose first – doesn’t seem funny at all, now.

So you really don’t think this is about dead dinosaurs, huh?

Well, it should not be necessary to explain by now just how thoroughly the West’s continuing economic hegemony and ‘way of life’, as we have arranged things, depends on the smooth flow of masses of it. It should not be necessary to point to the steady increase in US imports from the Middle East, nor the rising oil-energy requirement projections in most Western societies, but especially in America. It shouldn’t be necessary to remind the world of what happened in 1973, and the far-reaching implications that many now-powerful figures recognised clearly, even back then. It shouldn’t be necessary to point out the various reports, writings, and investigations into the looming US energy crisis, many of them written well before September 11. All this is no great big secret, no ‘conspiracy’, either.

It’s hardly any sort of grand revelation to point out that America’s oil energy requirements have increased by a third since 1973, and that the rate of the increase of Middle-East imports (since 1995) is itself increasing. It’s not controversial to point to the serious problems in the US refinery industry, and the fact that no-one wants to invest in it there because the profit margins in crude refinement are, in fact, hardly worth it, especially in a Western labour/environmental standards domestic marketplace (the new big capacity refineries will certainly all be in the new West-friendly Iraq; billion-dollar infrastructure contracts + cheap local labor + no pesky Greenies = Western economy heaven!).

It’s not controversial to point to the shortage of heating oil in this harsh US winter; it’s no crime to point out the sudden, marked reversal, around 1995, in the to-then growing popularity of fuel-efficient vehicles in the States; it’s not being anti-American to point out that the excessive US energy consumption per person in comparison with other countries has since S11 increasingly become not a matter of individual citizenly concern, but a swaggering point of patriotic pride.

It is, I’ll concede, a cheapish shot to point out the overwhelming interfusion of the US energy industry and the Bush Administration, and the recent dropping, in despair, of the lawsuit requiring identity disclosure of the government’s energy task force ‘advisors’. A cheapish ‘conspiracy’ shot, sure, but one simply has to ask: if the Bush Administration insists it’s not about oil, why such reticence? Not about oil? Then prove it, George and Co: Dump all your personal energy industry investments. Come clean about the Halliburton fiddles at last, Dick Cheney. You could knock all these silly oil conspiracy theories for six in one go, guys, with a full and frank disclosure of every oily backroom detail. No-one’s holding their breath.

None of this stuff is rocket science. Neither is it brain surgery to note that the non-ME sources of oil energy have dwindled or are not yet competitive with ME oil, and in fact simply never can be, no matter how much of Alaska is turned into a sump. It’s not quantum physics to point out that Venezuela, America’s fourth-largest oil provider, is hardly a paragon of political stability and ‘economically-rational’ globalisation, these days. Nor is it genetic engineering to see that the once manageable political-diplomatic nexus between the West and OPEC took a dramatic, and fatal, turn for the worse just after nine o’clock on September 11, 2001.

On current economic trends the West will need more and more and more oil in the next decade, and it will have to come from the Middle East. At the same time, on current political-theological trends, the Middle Eastern countries will grow less and less and less inclined or able to provide it via a peaceful market transaction, of their own accord.

You only have to note that Saudi Arabia has indicated that they will ask American troops to leave their country once Iraq is secured to grasp what sort of dramatic geo-political changes are underway right now. Have a look in an Atlas, and you will see that by this time next year, a small American beachhead will have been secured in the midst of what only a moron could pretend will be an increasingly friendly region.

There it will stand, a lone Judeo-Christian, charging capitalist dinosaur ‘state’ bang in the middle of a close scrum of mad Muslim, dying socialist dinosaur states, cheekily sucking out the natural wealth prize for the far-away benefit of the West. At best, the new Iraq will be a vaguely democratic beachhead, at worst a bristling GI-guarded oil tit perpetually under siege, an unstable arrangement far, far worse than the awful isolation the oil industry pointmen have endured to now in the friendly Saudi Arabian expatriate compounds.

And next door Saudi Arabia, with their highly-developed Western technologies, will have no reason not to become fully anti-Western ‘hot’, for the West will have destroyed their oil market dominance forever. There’s an awful lot of pent-up resentment between the US and Saudi Arabia, an awful lot of blood waiting to be let.

I do not think that the American population has remotely grasped what it is their leaders are about to embark upon here. It is pure colonisation; outright economic Empire-building from less than scratch in the most virulently anti-American region on the planet. Without the massive oil lure, no sane US Administration would remotely contemplate this kind of permanent geographical presence. What possible American interest is served by removing Saddam in this, the hardest and costliest of all ways, if not the energy pay-off? The answer is none, which is why this invasion and occupation is about oil, and why I continue to oppose it ferociously.

And I oppose it for America and the civilised West’s long-term sake, most of all. For God’s sake, I oppose it for the purest of self-interested, pro-American reasons.

This invasion and occupation will ultimately hurt America grievously, and America is the global superpower basket in which all of Australia’s security eggs, for better or worse, now rest. If America becomes entangled in a protracted northern hemisphere fiasco, or worse, withdraws into a new isolationism, stung by an Iraqi disaster and with her global credibility and force-projection greatly reduced, then Australian is in some trouble.

In my view, both outcomes are not merely likely, in neat turn, they are practically guaranteed. A simple perusal of the colonial history of the region – and it goes back a long, long way – should be enough.

Do the American people truly have the endurance for this? Do they have any idea of where it might, where it must, lead? Despite what a Daniel Pipes might argue about the grim necessity for an all-or-nothing ‘blood-letting’ in the Middle East as an ugly but requisite precursor to any serious, lasting Arab-Jewish accord, Israelis in particular should feel deeply anxious about what might transpire over the next few years. It will come down to a matter of American staying power, and democratic governments and mainstream public opinion can change with alarming swiftness.

But clearly now, Western Energy Inc. considers that the time is right and the risks are worth it. In a way, on the oil-energy question, the US is now damned if she does and damned if she doesn’t; inextricably locked as she is in a terrible energy impasse.

But it’s a tragic one too, because the vicious assaults of September 11 could have and should have marked a major turning pointing in the Western world’s energy vision for the future. Had we been intellectually tough and smart enough not to shout down completely, as ‘self-blaming’ and ‘anti-Western’ those who pointed out that the core source – yes, the ‘root cause’ – of the attacks was the unhappy historical confluence of brutal Middle Eastern dictatorships (and their ‘necessary’ tolerance of extremist religious clerics), and short-sighted, even if well-meaning, international oil companies, then the last eighteen months might have presented Humanity with an excellent opportunity to step firmly off the fossil fuel treadmill forever.

September 11, 2001: the day the world really did change, and the dinosaurs became finally extinct. Has a ring to it, even if only a bittersweet one, now.

Because all over the non-US Western world, and in many, many constituencies of the US population, too, the Global Green movement is gathering momentum. Energy habits are changing on a generational scale, treaties are being signed, sustainable business and industry is emerging as a major force, billionaires like Bill Gates are pumping enormous amounts of cash into private research, new technologies are emerging – startling, bold, breathtaking, far-reaching ones.

Ideas are being thrown up everywhere, even from cheeky speechwriters to a half-hearted oilman like George W. Bush. A nuclear powered spaceship to get us to Mars. A hydrogen powered car to get us to work. Roll-your-own cigarettes and flushless dunnies. Green politicians, too, are lining up in droves to pull power away from the old left-right divides, away from the fossil-burning fossils. (The German green revolution is no silly passing fad; it’s now deeply ingrained in that country’s political consciousness, a permanent feature of the legislative-power landscape.)

We’re hovering right on the brink of a major social transformation, and all that is really needed is a big healthy nudge from our global leaders, seriously big bucks, a degree of collective will, and just a little more time.

Except for the dead dinosaur men, and their dead dinosaur obsessions. Here we are, all itching to turn Green, and yet here our leaders are, on the point of committing us all unwillingly to decades of bitter fighting over more Black Gold. We grown-ups are about to start scrabbling violently (again) for a ‘prize’ that our kids just don’t want. To start with, anyway. To start with, this new Middle Eastern war will be over those few puddles of inefficient, go-nowhere-fast, dead dinosaur juice; before too long, it will have blossomed into an even more pathetic dinosaur fight: a clash of civilisations that will be wholly uncivilised, a Holy War in which none but a few scarifying zealots on either side believe in their ‘god’.

Yet another bestial jungle fight to the death, the reasons for which, at that death, no-one will remember anyway. Behaving like animals again, when ninety-nine percent of the world’s six billion are desperate to evolve forwards, and not backwards.

It’s hardly being anti-American or anti-capitalist or anti-energy to point all this out. ‘Nobody wants a war’. That’s what everyone (save a few idiots) says before every big war, and it’s what everyone (save a few idiots) is saying, now. So let’s do something different, this time: let’s not have one. It is up to us, after all. We have Free Will. Let’s all get naked, well-pissed, and drunk on love, too, instead. Being scared is a bloody bore, frankly.

This war is about oil, and oil is about our ‘Western way of life’, and since S11, our Western way of life is in danger of coming to mean little more than our capacity to protect ourselves and those we love by keeping the barbarian hordes at a distance, and by force.

To point out that this coming confrontation in Iraq is driven mostly by our frightened instinct to maintain the West’s protective inequalities, to shrink back behind our security fences rather than step boldly beyond them with our arms extended, is not being a Western self-loather. It’s being truly Western.

It’s in the traditions of intellectual rigour, secular reason, individual responsibility, Free Will, the sentient transcending of all external gods and gurus, of all ‘absolute abstract truths’ but the two that are inexplicable and irreducible: Love and Death. The only other truths Humanity can ever know are the things that we did yesterday, and yesterday, and yesterday.

Unless we are determined to doom ourselves to eternal dinosaur-hood, we cannot go on killing every one of those fellow Human Beings who happen to scare us. Most of our enemies are every bit as scared of us as we of them, and they do not have brute-force Tomahawk cruise missiles. But more and more of them every day are turning to their rat-cunning weapons, and they are rat-cunning weapons that our brute force ones cannot possibly guard against. The only way to defeat the dangerous among those fellow Human Being who scare us – those who our true enemies – is to use our brains, not just our muscle.

The people of Iraq, and even in many ways Saddam Hussein himself, are not our truly dangerous enemies. Yet they very soon will be, unless we use our brains.

So it may be harsh. It may be simplistic. It’s certainly a slogan, and it’s definitely a most unsophisticated reduction. It is also highly intimidating to us all, in the West. But it’s true. We are going to invade and occupy Iraq not to defend the essence of our ‘Western Way of Life’, but merely to secure more of the dead dinosaurs that give us the pretty clothes to dress it up in. It’s an invasion and occupation to secure Iraq’s oil for the West. Remove it, or better still remove our need for it, and there would simply be no invasion, and no ‘War Against Terror’. There would still only be what, in reality, we have to now been engaged in: a co-ordinated global campaign to reduce, and perhaps even eradicate, the nihilist crime of Islamic Fundamentalist terrorism, a fight that is far, far easier for the Civilised West to win.

Personally, I think it’s mystifying that our leaders are so intent on locking our future economy into an energy source that is so old, so messy, so inefficient and so passe. (And so not ours to take.) Petroleum oil is ugly, sticky, smelly and slow. Plutonium. Hydrogen. Wind. The Sea. The Sun. Now these are sexy fuels. These are the fuels of tomorrow, the fuels America’s industrial and technical and economic might – the greatest innovative powerhouse in world history – should really be seeking to secure for the West. For us all.

I’d like very much to get a little bit closer to the stars before I die. Oil will never, ever, ever, ever pull it off. It’s a dead monster of a fuel. It’s yesterday’s fossil.

I say let’s leave Iraq’s buried in the ground, along with all the other redundant dinosaurs of ancient Human history.

Looking for John Curtin

Principles and premises

 

This best course of national action is based upon the following principles and premises:

1. Australia’s global and regional interests are both best served by a strong and effective United Nations implicitly underpinned by benign superpower military force, but aims to overstride and where necessary fine-tune, as a desirable state of world affairs, an international community of messy interlocking and counter-balancing sovereign state interests.

It would pursue this aim through established government, trade, military, diplomatic, legal and Non Government Organisation mechanisms. The UN must actively foster a multilateral and apposite dispersion of global power across many nations and blocs, rather than allow any excessive unilateral concentration of global power in one nation or bloc. The former global state is predictable and stable; the latter is neither, regardless of where the power is allowed to concentrate.

The current crisis demonstrates this. America, a hitherto benign superpower, is now destabilising, not stabilising, the world.

2. As a low-middle power, if Australia is ever forced to choose between increasing the long-term strategic influence, power and global credibility of the UN at the expense of that of any superpower, or the reverse case, then it must always choose the first option.

3. America intends to invade and occupy Iraq in early 2003. A UN Security Council decision to either a) sanction such an action, or b) not sanction such an action, will now have an equally damaging effect on the long-term strategic influence, power and credibility of the UN.

4. The resolution of this crisis that can best avoid serious net damage to Australia’s short, mid and long-term security interests is the removal of Saddam Hussein prior to the commencement of any American-led invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq.

Australian action

As soon as possible:

1. The Australian government should advise the US Ambassador, and then publicly announce, that Australia will continue the deployment of her committed military assets in preparation for American-led military activities, but that Australia will not participate in any invasion of Iraq without a new and rigidly-limiting UNSC resolution authorising this as a collective UN action.

Australia should simultaneously, with this public announcement, thank the US President for his recent praise of Australia’s loyalty and commitment to ANZUS in agreeing to deploy our forces, and announce that Australia is seeking a joint meeting with the German and French governments, to propose an alternative approach to Iraq.

Australia’s current internationally acknowledged status as one of only three countries publicly to commit her forces to American pre-invasion preparations will ensure a) good international exposure of this clarification of Australian policy; and b) increase Australia’s chances of securing quickly a meeting with the French and German governments.

2. The Australian government should present to the French and German governments, as the basis for their own subsequent adoption of an alternative approach within the UNSC, the following broad arguments:

A. Iraq now poses a WMD threat to global security. More accurately, Saddam Hussein is now perceived by the world as posing such a threat. True or not, America is now irrevocably committed to disarming him. US disarmament of Saddam Hussein means removing him from office. America currently intends to invade and occupy Iraq to achieve this.

B. North Korea now poses a serious confirmed WMD threat. America is the only country with the military capability and geographic and diplomatic reach required to deal effectively with this genuine ‘rogue nation’ threat, and in a way acceptable to the broad international community.

C. It is now in the interests of the United Nations and the international community, including America, to achieve disarmament of Saddam Hussein without necessitating and/or allowing a full-scale American invasion and subsequent unilateral occupation of Iraq to occur. This latter development would represent a serious global threat over-reaction which will force upon America unpredictable military-strategic, diplomatic-alliance and political-economic changes, of a magnitude likely to hinder at least her short-term capacity to deal properly with the immediate, serious WMD threat posed by North Korea. It will also increase the threat to global security posed by violent expressions of Islamic Fundamentalism through intensified anti-Western terrorism, increasing internal instability in large Muslim countries (some possessing WMD), and greater international co-ordination, co-operation and coalescence of many diverse extremist groups. This is particularly the case in Australia’s immediate region.

D. Australia now has a very strong interest in urging the international community to remove Saddam Hussein from power prior to an American invasion and occupation of Iraq.

3. The Australian government should press upon the French and German governments, in an attempt to influence their posture within the UNSC, Australia’s preferred approach to achieving this end. The following hypothetical progression of events from now is how I would present it to them:

1. UNSC passes a new resolution authorising US invasion and occupation of Iraq under one circumstance only (see below). The current UN weapons inspection process continues, with extensions of time as requested. The full provision of all remaining American WMD intelligence to these teams occurs. American U2 and other reconnaissance overflights of Iraq are authorised, without limitation. A UN protection force is assembled, possibly consisting of lightly-armed French and German troops and multilateral police personnel, possibly commanded by a New Zealander; this supplements the inspection teams as soon as possible. The new UNSC resolution authorises immediate freedom of all US military activity, including unilateral invasion and occupation of Iraq, only if this protection force is refused access to Iraq and/or subsequently hindered in its inspection movements and/or threatened and/or attacked. Military commanders and inspection team leaders to jointly manage an increasingly aggressive pursuit of WMD inspection teams aims, using on-ground discretion.

2. US conduct of surveillance, reconnaissance, intelligence, and invasion preparations continues at a mid-term sustainable level. UNSC new resolution also authorises limited US-coalition Special Force and target-specific aerial bombing operations against any identified Al-Qaeda-derivative terrorist enclaves in northern Iraq, and suspected attempts to move WMD beyond Iraq’s borders while inspections progress. Following any such operation, the US to brief the UNSC, which in turn formally ‘advises’ Iraq (within normal operational security limitations), re-iterating each time the strict limitations of the new UNSC resolution (that is, blocking ‘sanctioned’ US invasion and occupation in all but the one circumstance).

3. UNSC directs a UN committee represented by Britain, France, Germany, Israel, Canada, the Gulf Security States and Iran, to prepare a plan for a post-Saddam UN transitional administration. Canada to assemble and deploy the command-and-control skeleton of a peace-keeping force to support the administration, with major assets and personnel to be cherry-picked from US invasion forces already in AO Iraq. UNSC requests humanitarian agencies to launch humanitarian operations in Iraq as extensive as logistics and security will allow. UNSC directs the ICC to begin preparing CAH cases against Saddam Hussein and identified senior regime figures. These charges, and the UN plan for transitional administration, to be formally presented to the Iraq Ambassador. (UNSC continually to re-assure Iraq’s UN Ambassador that invasion and occupation of Iraq by America will not be sanctioned, except in the one circumstance of aggression against the inspection teams.) The UN accepts on behalf of the international community in principle responsibility for the cost of the on-going US military deployment in AO Iraq, provided the US continues to abide by the terms of the UNSC new resolution; UN begins negotiating a reparation scale and schedule with all UN member states.

4. International Criminal Court (ICC) formally requests, through the Iraqi Ambassador, Iraq to present for trial Saddam Hussein and names Iraqi ‘Co-conspirators against Humanity’. These first round suspects are targeted with the help of internal sources, so best to skew Saddam’s current regime through selective isolation, and foster opportunistic internal re-positioning and plotting.

5. The United Nations continues the armed inspection – and disarmament – process. The US-coalition continues military operations monitoring for signs of WMD-terrorist movement; to strike hard and precisely where necessary, and withdraw; and to maintain invasion readiness. All regional governments and authorities, and international commercial and NGO organisations, continually urged by the UNSC to exert maximum pressure on, and where possible provide maximum assistance to, anti-Saddam forces within Iraq. The international community to wait for the Iraqi people to decide their fate for themselves.

6. The secular, liberal, democratic West holds our secular, liberal, Western democratic nerve.

7. Saddam is toppled from within Iraq, preferably handed to the ICC alive. The UN-transitional administration, supported by the Canadian-commanded US peace-keeping force, assumes control of Iraq. American invasion plans are shelved. Remaining US-coalition forces disperse and continue the war against terrorism

Could we pull off something like this within three months? Six? I think so, if we really wanted to do it this way. Is it now impossible, given the US military build-up and tempo of events? Almost certainly.

But if Australia is truly an ally of the US, it could and should make an unexpectedly bold use of its temporarily-enhanced – if only marginally – world leverage, in at least some way. We’re small, we’re usually politically insignificant, we’re geographically remote, and we’re probably still a bit naive and unsophisticated when it comes to global realpolitik, but Iraq is our best shot at affecting world history for the better. I think our kids will truly regret our lack of guts if we don’t have a go. It all depends on how hard those who want to avoid a US invasion and occupation of Iraq are prepared to fight for an alternative resolution, and how hard those who positively crave an invasion will fight back.

John Curtin would give it a rip, anyway.

***

The thing that has been troubling Australia lately is that if Iraq is invaded by military force, the people of Iraq will never consider themselves truly free until the invader is repelled by force. President George W. Bush was wrong about ‘freedom’ – hopelessly wrong. Freedom is not ‘God’s gift to Humanity’ either, George. Freedom is every man’s gift to himself. No-one else controls it. Not a God, not a President, not even a brave, bronzed ANZAC with a gun. That simple truth represents the one – the only – bright and eternal light towards which Humanity has spent all of its recorded history stumbling, lunging, and very occasionally soaring.

President Bush seems not to have read our history beyond the Renaissance, at best.

Somehow, you sense that something very precious is at stake for us all here, still smack on the cusp of a brand new millennium. The way the international community, and America in particular, chooses to resolve this crisis will have far-reaching implications, in many ways for Australia more than most countries.

That the world’s only remaining superpower has contrived to be drawn into this wretched impasse by a minor regional thug just when it is facing two real and immediate threats – North Korea, and the rise and rise of Islamic Fundamentalism – is something for American voters to ponder next year, I suppose. I hope.

But in Australia we should be under no illusions. Once the US has invaded and occupied Iraq with our help – my alternative above, or anything like it, now being a forlorn fantasy – our country will have been changed forever, too. Maybe only a bit, but what we’ll lose we’ll never get back.

I oppose an American-coalition invasion and occupation of Iraq, UN-sanctioned or not. We don’t have to do it this way. We have choices. There are alternatives. Mine is above. It might seem a bit fantastical, but it’s far better and safer and more efficient and more honest and more moral than a full-scale pre-emptive invasion, supposedly to remove one evil man – an evil man Donald Rumsfeld today casually said the US might allow to go and live peacefully in exile, anyway.

Improvements or variations on my cunning plan are welcome. Meantime, hope like hell that Saddam is toppled from within soon anyway. It’s now Australia’s best realistic outcome.

White House anti-Americanism, Australian patriotic blackmail

OK, so logic now seems to be going out the window. A brief state-of-play:

A) An American-led coalition will invade Iraq, with or without UN sanction, and mostly, supporters claim, to neutralise Saddam’s WMD threat. If necessary the US-coalition will use its own Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) while doing so. If Saddam’s generals use WMD against US troops, America will try them as war criminals, presumably in American domestic courts. UN forums are apparently irrelevant; the US doesn’t recognise the new-born International Criminal Court, and it’s unlikely The Hague War Crimes Tribunal will make its courts available, either, since…

B) …France and Germany are no longer crucial in the European scheme of things, according to Donald Rumsfeld. NATO has yet to state its position on an invasion. Today’s Australian editorial argues that Germany should support an invasion because they know all about the dangers of ‘aggression’, while France, on the other hand, should support it because they know all about the dangers of ‘appeasement’.

C) According to a grab on SBS News on Thursday night, George W. Bush now wants to call the ‘world’ to account, not just Iraq. A silly, if ugly, slip of the tongue? You’d hope so.

D) Australia’s deployment to the Iraq AO does not mean we are deploying for participation in an invasion. According to today’s Australian editorial, anti-invasion public opinion polls are ‘soft’; on this occasion, the ‘Ordinary Australian’ doesn’t know what he thinks yet. Once Australian soldiers start fighting, he will. Patriotic blackmail; war-by-retrospective-democratic-mandate.

e) Notwithstanding Rumsfeld’s breezy dismissal of one permanent member and the incoming Chair, if the UN Security Council now fails to endorse what America wants it to endorse, then it will be the end of the UN as a credible world body. Moot, because whatever happens now, it’s probably already stuffed. Fail to endorse US-led action, and the White House won’t care much. Endorse it and every other sovereign country opposed to such an undisguised railroading of the world’s governing body will be deeply estranged from it.

America is now unlikely to back down on an invasion. If that is so, whatever happens in Iraq and beyond, a temporarily-powerful group of hawkish Americans will have engineered, for the country that did more for post-WW2 unity and reconstruction than any other, an unambiguous ascendancy over the UN at last, at the cost of a deep split in the West.

To Americans reading this who think I’m engaging in yet more ‘knee-jerk Yank-bashing’, I’d say this: It’s very hard to imagine a single more anti-American misuse of what is now globally-unmatchable American power than what is transpiring – the final castration of whatever balls the UN might have had.

I think that future leaders and the people of the United States will be grappling with this legacy for a long time. There are more than six billion people in the world. There are under 300,000, 000 Americans. Australia and no doubt much of the West will still support their nation on Iraq. More accurately, we’ll support their soldiers (and ours, and the Brits), probably no matter what rotten mess our leaders end up landing them in.

But the American Administration could at least do us all the courtesy of maintaining a modicum of global perspective. Rumsfeld’s vaudeville act is getting tiresome. Sneering at France and Germany as irrelevant in Europe? How many GIs died at Normandy again, Don? How much dough did America sink into the Marshall Plan? Remember the Cold War, mate?

I don’t know what exactly all this is, but I know for sure that it’s not the ‘American Way’, at least not the one that has proved so globally successful in the past.

***

The Weapons of Mass Destruction Argument

Harry Heidelberg’s intervention in the ‘Human Rights-invasion’ argument (Yes, it really is about getting the weapons) aimed to point out its secondary status to the WMD arguments, and also to respond to my ‘operational’ questions in Time for a question change on Iraq. On the first matter, I’d invoke Scott Burchill’s myth-busting piece Counterspin: Pro-war mythology, because Harry’s reasoning makes many of the simplistic assertions about the nexus between Osama and Saddam that Scott’s piece has already deconstructed; and also Hamish Tweedy’s response to it in Always willing, we’re off to war again, because it challenges and amplifies Scott’s reasoning to good effect.

My position on WMD is that the pro-invasion lobby still has its work cut out to explain why a Saddam threatened by imminent oblivion will be less, not more, inclined to unleash chemical and biological weapons, and/or ‘hand them off’ to any opportunistic takers, under chaotic cover of the fog of invasion, in a final act of defiance. There are three core possibilities with the WMD line of argument:

A) We know accurately enough what Saddam’s got and where he’s hiding it, and it’s extremely scary and a genuine immediate threat. If this is so, presumably we will seek to neutralise at least Saddam’s delivery capacity as a pre-invasion or very early tactical priority – perhaps using special force and/or aerial attacks. If this is the case, why not just do this in isolation – as did Israel against Iraqi nuclear facilities in the eighties – and better avoid the potential by-product of a pan-Islamic, ‘anti-West’ polarisation that might arise from a full-scale invasion?

B) We’re sure he’s got some dangerous capacity but don’t know what or where, and we’re hoping that some time down the track, our invading ground forces will squirrel the WMD out in their own good time. If this is the case, the invasion-as-WMD-threat-reduction becomes tenuous in the extreme, because the longer that time delay, the greater the motive and opportunity exists for Saddam’s last-gasp use/dissemination of them. Since the inspectors haven’t yet found much of what is ‘missing’, I’d very much like Harry or anyone else to explain exactly how the ‘regime change invasion = safe disarmament’ equation actually stands up to practical scrutiny.

C) The WMD threat has been knowingly hyped beyond its true credibility. If this is the case, Bush’s White House is playing very dangerous games with global security, and it should get back to hunting terrorists.

Harry also claims that North Korea is a different case, more akin to a Cold War MAD stand-off. Why? The claim is that Saddam does have (chemical and biological) WMD. However you look at it, the logic is not quite right here; if a doomed Saddam regime is capable of delivering VX (say) into a tactical sphere occupied by invading US-led forces, it very probably will, regardless of Bush’s ‘war crimes’ threat. In such a case, invading forces may be able to minimise their casualties, but the Iraqi population they’re supposedly there to liberate will not. Harry says we shouldn’t consider invading North Korea because of the MAD principle, but that we should invade Iraq despite it. Logic failure.

As with too many of their arguments to date, the pro-invasion lobby starts with the requisite aim of invading Iraq, and then works backwards, trying to fit the WMD arguments to that aim. To me, it seems palpably clear that, for a range of reasons, strategic ‘visionaries’ in the US Administration have judged that now is the time to establish a major, permanent and essentially autonomous presence in the Middle East. WMD, terrorism, Human Rights, oil, a ‘new century’ of Enlightenment Democracy forcibly ushered into the Middle East – the net merit of these and other arguments for this profound global shift is largely moot as it seems pretty clear that the current White House is determined to own Iraq come what may. There’s little Australia can do to sway her from that strategic aim or even demand that she properly articulate its merits if she doesn’t feel any need to. But for our country, even higher strategic interests like ANZUS and/or Australia’s aspirations to a future Free Trade Agreement with the US are an insufficient basis for our unquestioning support. At the very least, I think the US should be more honest with her allies about her true strategic aims. It’s post-S11; we’re all supposed to be grown-ups re Realpolitik.

The Devil in the Details

In addressing my operational questions, Harry generally displays exactly the lack of precision I was attacking. I asked eight practical questions about the invasion; he notes: “Jack asks a heap of questions that no one can easily answer. That’s the nature of it. I don’t know anything more than anyone else knows. I’m just a schmuck with a column in Web Diary.” Sorry, simply not good enough, Harry. You’re using that ‘schmuckish’ column to argue that our soldiers should invade Iraq; every Australian soldier, sailor and airman, and their families, has a right to more from you than ‘I don’t know anything more than anyone else knows’ on the nitty-gritty details. Try a little harder; alternatively, simply stop arguing for an invasion. This is not a time for pick-and-choose intellectual dilettantes, cyberspace or not.

To respond in depth to just one of Harry’s responses to my questions (to me the most important): I asked what the Rules of Engagement (ROE) would be, given that much of the Iraqi civilian population, including women and children, has now been armed and primed for defensive jihad. Harry answered: “I assume we will only find out the ROE afterwards. I am not sure what is meant either by a “formal distinction”. An armed individual who appears threatening to allied forces will be approached as such. I don’t know how else it could work, no matter how painful this reality may seem. Even civilian police forces act this way. Unpalatable but true.”

Not remotely good enough, Harry. I want to know before the first Australian soldier fires a single pre-emptive shot precisely what his ROE are, if for no other reason than to confirm that there are crystal-clear ROE. Rules of Engagement are not simply issued to give soldiers a rock-hard touchstone in combat situations; they play a critical part in stripping ambiguity, at all command levels, from the entire aim of the mission. Harry’s extra comments here about any ‘armed individual who appears threatening to allied forces’, and the glib comparison with policing, thoroughly miss the crucial point, which is that invading forces will not be assuming a tactically-defensive or even neutral role in response to an existing crisis, but pre-emptively initiating a series of aggressive assaults, with the higher aim of over-throwing a sovereign government and gaining control of an entire country by force. In the absence of a rigidly-limiting tactical ROE, that overall mission risks giving, by default, our soldiers carte blanche to regard every Iraqi with a pointy stick and a nasty leer as an ‘armed individual who appears threatening to allied forces’, if they ‘choose’ in the heat of the combat moment.

The urgent broader point here is that unlike any military operation either the US or Australia has conducted post-WW2, and regardless of the invasion lobby’s claims, in military terms this will be an unprovoked invasion. What that means is that the outcome of any subsequent military engagement will be solely the responsibility of the invading force. This is not Bosnia, it’s not East Timor, it’s not Afghanistan, and it’s not even the Falklands or Vietnam, for that matter; all these interventions were preceded by enemy aggression in one form or another (in Afghanistan, the Taliban’s harbouring of the S11 attack grand architects).

This placed our soldiers firmly on the overall moral high ground, at least in the first instance, even in those cases (like Vietnam, or Somalia, or the Iran hostage-rescue mission) where the tactical outcomes were ultimately disastrous. This not-so-subtle distinction underscores the true military impact of the US strategic shift to ‘pre-emption’ (a term Burchill rightly identified as a misnomer), which is this: any action undertaken under its auspices that fails will automatically cast America (and her allies, and their soldiers) in the role of wrong-doer, since the moral justification for pre-emptive action can only come retrospectively, that is, via a successful outcome. In this sense, far from being a secondary issue, improved Human Rights in post-Saddam Iraq are the only measurable indicator of ‘success’. Right now, Saddam isn’t using WMD on the world. He hasn’t yet been shown to have supplied terrorists with them. The only manifest invasion achievement a US-Coalition will be able to present to the world will be better Human Rights there. The other justifications for it will, in the very best case, remain forever genuinely hypothetical.

What if, in achieving that best case outcome on those hypothetical justifications (terrorist/WMD nexus threat elimination), as an unfortunate by-product we cause great human misery in readily measurable terms – let’s say 30,000 Iraqis and 2,000 Coalition soldiers killed, 200,000 people made internal refugees, and 70 % of those who innocent Iraqis know damned well were responsible for gross HR-abuse getting off scot-free in the name of post-Saddam reconciliation. Against this, how can we ever possibly judge whether or not the invasion was truly justified? More pertinently, how can we ever convince the Iraqi population, and neighbouring Arab States, of that? (If, by the way, WMD are also used during the invasion, and by either side, we’ll make a sick mockery of our WMD hypothetical justification anyway).

We must keep in mind not merely that we can’t get half-way into this invasion and then simply say, Whoops, sorry’, if it starts to go wrong, but also that we haven’t remotely thought through what ‘half-way through’ the invasion even means. If Iran becomes involved in even an indirect way, perhaps we’ll eventually have to invade it too? Or if Kurdish terrorist/freedom groups like the PKK aren’t granted their independent State post-Saddam, maybe we’ll end up fighting them? And so on.

Hard-headed answers to this type of strategic/political question are critical, especially in the context of scant public support for invasion already. We shouldn’t be under any liberation delusions here, either: The majority of the populations in Iraq and just about every country bordering her, even some of those from which this invasion will be based, mistrusts and even hates America with a growing religious passion. ‘Friendly’ Turkey and Saudi Arabia are good cases in point. We must examine closely just how fat is the shit sandwich into which we’re about to bite. Correction: Harry and the pro-invasion lobby must do so. As yet, most seem to be content to ‘suck it and see’.

Still, for all the potential future complexities, Harry might still think the risk of ending up on the wrong side of history is one worth taking in view of the potential gains to be made. Again, it’s not good enough just to leave it there and hope for the best; in reality, it’s a risk that US-coalition soldiers, not the non-military pro-invasion lobby, will actually end up taking. Soldiers don’t set ROE; politicians do, or should. Consider this scenario:

Let’s say ten invading LAV-25s roll into an Iraqi town. A twenty-year old Iraqi hothead takes exception to his aged parents being frightened by all these foreign soldiers, and waves his AK-47 around a bit. Who exactly is threatening whom here? What would the young GI in the LAV-25 turret be doing himself if this was occurring in Baton Rouge, with roles reversed? How will that same GI see things five minutes later, if and/or when he is surveying thirty dead men, women and children from his LAV-25, because the ‘stupid’ Iraqi squeezed off a frantic round or two, and the US commander, rightly not wanting to endanger his own troops unnecessarily, had everyone open up, and the situation descended into a one-sided blood-bath? Is this self-defence? Is this a war crime? Is it just bad luck? And is it the Iraqi kid’s own stupid fault, really? What would you do, Harry? Surrender obediently to an invading soldier who has vowed to overthrow your government, however much you might (or might not) hate it yourself? It’s not as if the kid’s got anywhere else to go.

Regardless of the legal niceties, the GI will have to live with his actions forever, and uppermost in his mind will be the knowledge that his actions occurred in the context of a US invasion that even a great big wedge of his own countrymen simply didn’t support, not a ‘peace-keeping mission’, or a ‘defensive insertion’, or a ‘humanitarian aid project’.

Whatever transpires, the pro-invasion theorisers can and will chatter forever about the ‘what ifs’ of the WMD and ‘Axis of Evil’ arguments, but the GI himself may not be able to buy them forever, especially if the ‘quick, clean’ Iraq campaign turns into something larger and messier. Mostly, he’ll remember a village he drove up to in his APC, a stupid hothead who thought he was protecting his grandparents and didn’t wish to be ‘liberated’ by Americans, and the awful moment when it all got out of hand and he had to pull the 25 mil. trigger. These sorts of messy exchanges happen in every war, even during the liberation of Europe. BUT the GI there – and everywhere else since (to date) – was at least reasonably confident that he was on the right side of history. War is always hell, but any war that turns out to have been an unjust one can become a kind of personal moral damnation for every soldier who took part. The invasion of Iraq is not yet within cooee of being sufficiently argued, by our leaders, as being ‘just’. It won’t simply ‘become more just’ of its own accord as we go along, either. The process usually travels the other way as ugly reality bites.

The tactical situation I outline above, if not the outcome, is exactly what our soldiers are now contemplating, and Harry’s casual lack of interest in a critical matter like ROE is not good enough. Forgive me for being unkind, but I can’t help feeling that his not really wanting to discuss such ‘details’ beforehand is at least partly an unconscious way of leaving himself a convenient moral escape route for later, if such outcomes as that outlined above turn out to be more prevalent than the pro-invasion lobby is apparently expecting.

Maybe this is harsh and unfair, but when Harry says blithely, of the brutalities of military engagement, ‘unpalatable, but true’, I picture a young Australian soldier gunning down suicidal Iraqi ten-year-olds, impossibly caught in a militarily-disastrous, deeply-unpopular, extra-UN invasion that has long turned into a war against an entire hostile region, half a globe away from home.

The soldiers of the Israeli Defence Force, after fifty-odd years of corporate experience of walking the excruciating split-second decision line between aggression and restraint, and in exactly the kind of tactical circumstances we will face in Iraq, still get it wrong far more often than they would like. Why we Western novices think Iraq will be a relative walk in the park in terms of differentiating between dangerous military combatants and scared civilian non-combatants is beyond me.

So my questions are anything but ‘hypothetical’, Harry, and if you consider them ‘unanswerable’, then you have no business arguing for invasion. They are not advanced from of position of ‘knee-jerk anti-Americanism’, or ‘terror appeasement’, or ‘unworldly naivety’ (I wish), or bleeding-heart lefty soppiness. They are hard-headed queries about what it is we are about to ask our soldiers to do, and no-one has yet answered them satisfactorily.

The reason I, and others, are urgently posing them now is to try to force the pro-invasion lobbyists – you – to become un-hypothetical and highly answerable (in painstaking detail), rather than simply allowing the debate to jump straight from hypothetical to fait accompli, which this week’s deployment demonstrates is exactly the way we seem determined to head off to the first aggressive war in Australia’s history.

We are being taken for a ride thus far, and I will kick and scratch and scream all the way if I have to. Every Australian from the Prime Minister up owes our soldiers no less.

Yet I doubt now that we’ll see their bravery, professionalism and commitment treated with any such real respect by our leaders. By far the sickest part of all this is that the leading forces in the pro-invasion lobby – caricatures of ‘The Thoughtful Public Commentator’ like Greg Sheridan – are simply ignoring such questions of devilish detail, content in the knowledge that the second the first shot is fired, and no matter what happens next, even the most extreme anti-war activists – and I’m by no means one – in Australia will feel bound to back our soldiers personally to the hilt, anyway.

The grotesque patriotic blackmail that has been going on since September 11 – the repeated accusations of ‘appeasement’, the relentless ‘straw man’ tactics, the lying and misrepresentation from those many opportunists who now seem to regard S11 as the green light on a giggly neo-conservative race to see who can kick their Lefty bete noirs in the teeth most times per column – now threatens to split this country for years to come.

I still oppose Australian participation in a pre-emptive invasion of Iraq on many grounds, but most of all because our leaders refuse to sink their teeth properly into the real, practical problems that such an invasion will rush upon us. No-one has explained adequately yet why, if an invasion of Iraq wasn’t necessary in the early morning of September 11, 2001, it suddenly is now. Simply saying the ‘world has changed’, over and over again, is not good enough. This is especially true here in Australia, since, from long before S11 but now more than ever, our part of the world has had more than enough of its own human misery, terrorism, HR-abuse and instability for our soldiers to going on with – West Papua, East Timor, the Solomons, Indonesia, North Korea, and elsewhere.

Above all else, I’m bewildered at why the West seems so intent on playing into Osama bin Laden’s nasty hands, so naively, so soon, so completely. America appears to have fallen for his almighty ‘jihad con’ without question. As if Al-Qaeda – a gaggle of half-arsed bloody criminals – could ever have strategically ‘threatened’ Western Liberal Democracy on their own.

In truth what bin Laden really set out to do on S11 was polarise the world, and he’s rapidly pulling it off. A US-led invasion into the heart of the Middle East now will, far more likely than intimidating bin Laden’s remaining handful of globally-scattered supporters, have them cheering in satisfied glee, and saying, of what history might eventually come to assess as the mere opening skirmishes of the WTC and Pentagon attacks: “Mission accomplished, Osama. Now, let the real jihad begin at last.”

We need to be intellectually and morally as tough as nails. We need to hold our nerve and use our brains if we are to truly to hold the secular, liberal, democratic, post-Enlightenment Western defensive line. Mostly, we need to think through what could well be this next ‘one-way’ step far more thoroughly, lest we fall into a Clash of Civilisations by default.

Unfortunately, these days I get the distinct feeling that exactly that – all-out confrontation between ‘The West’ and ‘Islam’ – is exactly what too many people now crave. I hope I’m simply jumping at shadows again. No doubt we will soon find out.

Since Harry asked, I’ll outline my alternative to an Iraq invasion, from where we stand right now, next week. Not that there seems to be much point anymore.