All posts by Margo Kingston

Japanese hostages: a plea for help

I received this email today from Andrew Gunn:

 

I learnt this morning that one of the current Japanese hostages in Iraq is a friend of a friend – a Japanese peace activist who hosted one of my children during a school trip to Japan.

She’s asking for people to write a couple of emails.

Here’s a quote of background info –

As you may know, 3 Japanese humanitarian and peace activist/journalists are in hostage in Iraq. One of them is dear friend of mine. See below.

They say unless Japanese Self Defence Force withdrow form Iraq within 3 days, they will kill all 3, burn them alive and cut them into pieces. They don’t know who those Japanese are. They are my friends. They are peace activists and humanitarian volunteers who have been really helping Iraqi children who are suffering from DU or/and from the war. Can you send an e-mail to Aljazeera, informing those hostages are against war and occupation and they are in Iraq to make peace, to make SDF back home.

Mr. Noriaki Imai is my dear friend who has been working to stop the use of DU (depleted uranium) and who is against war and occupation. He just graduated from high school and went to Iraq to help Iraqi children who are suffering from the contamination of DU.

Ms. Nahoko Takato is humanitarian volunteer who has been helping street children who lost parents and home in the war. Her work has been really very appreciated by Iraqi people. She moved so many Japanese and her work has woken up many Japanese.

Mr. Soichiro Koriyama is a freelance photographer who is working with Imai. They went to write an article for Asahi Weekly.

The group who took the hostage says that they will kill all 3 unless Japanese Self Defence Force withdraw from Iraq.

In my opinion, this war is wrong from the beginning as Kucinich says, and Japan should not have sent our troops, which is violating our Peace Constitution.

The suggested actions were to:

1. Email Prime Minister Koizumi at koizumi@mmz.kantei.go.jp to ask that the Japanese SDF be withdrawn from Iraq.

2. Contact Aljazeera to tell them that these Japanese hostages are peace activists who are there to help suffering Iraqis and do not support the war. Go to Aljazeera and click on ‘Your Feedback’ in the left column.

Thanks.

Is cut and run the only option in Iraq?

Tonight, great Iraq links, and the beginnings of discussion on where America goes from here. Have a happy Easter.

 

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Scott Burchill recommends Bush and Blair have lit a fire which could consume them, the Iraqi uprising will drive home the forgotten lessons of empire:

Where are they now, the cheerleaders for war on Iraq? Where are the US Republican hawks who predicted the Anglo-American invasion would be a “cakewalk”, greeted by cheering Iraqis? Or the liberal apologists, who hailed a “new dawn” for freedom and democracy in the Arab world as US marines swathed Baghdad in the stars and stripes a year ago? Some, like the Sun newspaper – which yesterday claimed Iraqis recognise that occupation is in their “own long-term good” and are not in “bloody revolt” at all – appear to be in an advanced state of denial.

Scott also recommends Former iraqi enemies unite to fight U.S.

Antony Loewenstein: “I can’t believe Robert Fisk is now in Fallujah. Now, that’s bravery. See Iraq on the brink of anarchy.”

Allen Jay: “Further to Peter Evans’ note in Uniting Iraqis, American style about CNN changing the terminology of `civilian contractors’, Webdiary readers may like to refer to their employer’s website for a reality check and to this backgrounder from Counterpunch. Do you want these guys to bring Freedom and Democracy to a town near you? These guys were all ex special forces and were not there on some peace and good government mission – more likely contract killing – so the fact that there were reprisals should neither surprise nor alarm.”

Max Phillips: “I’ve just found graphic evidence of what our job is in Iraq. Don’t click if you’re queasy. Chest thumping about not “cutting and running” by Howard and Downer makes you sick when you see these Al Jeezera images.”

Brian McKinlayJuan Cole has been a most prescient observer of Iraq. He’s the author of a major work on Shia islam, and predicted the very events now unfolding.

The journos union, the Media Alliance: “Today marks the anniversary of the US shelling of the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad. Two journalists were killed and three wounded when 150 journalists in the hotel came under fire. No satisfactory explanation has been given as to why the attack occurred. Since hostilities in Iraq began in March 2003 seven journalists have been killed in four separate instances of “friendly fire” by US forces. Today media workers and supporters are signing a petition to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. To read and sign the petition, go to ifj.”

Tim Gillin: Check out James Bovard’s book ‘Tyranny and terror’, the best of the post 9-11 crop of books. I have sent him a couple of emails and found him helpful. And see this Bovard interview.

Antony Loewenstein recommends a new book, The Buying of the President 2004: Who’s Really Bankrolling Bush and His Democratic Challengers – and What They Expect in Return, by Charles Lewis.

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MURDOCH WATCH

Murdoch backs Howard one day after moving News Limited offshore (what’s the betting the Foreign Investment Review Board will let him keep Brisbane’s Courier Mail despite the ban on foreigners owning more than 25 percent of a newspaper?) On the same bloody day as Murdoch and Alan Jones have a chat, Daryl Williams says he’ll try real hard to get Howard’s cross media laws through. Wouldn’t you just love a Murdoch owned TV network? Remember when Williams’ predecessor Richard Alston said during the cross media debate last year that Murdoch didn’t care about cross media changes and that the changes were to help the small players? Bullshit. Murdoch wants the changes bad, and said so to Jonesie.

The New York Times has run a piece on Latham, because Murdoch has noticed him! The Yanks know where the power really is, alright. See The Labor Party challenger, Mark Latham, says he’d take the Australians out of Iraq:

A candidate for higher office in Australia, especially one hoping to be prime minister, is rarely taken seriously until the home-born international media magnate Rupert Murdoch shows interest. So when the spirited new leader of the Labor Party, Mark Latham, 43, who is now ahead in the polls against the long serving conservative incumbent John Howard, turned up for supper at the Murdoch ranch, people took notice.’

I wonder if Lachlan asked Latham to make no trouble when Dad turned an Australian owned paper, The Courier Mail, foreign? Labor’s raised no questions.

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SHORTIES

Stephen Cox in Darwin: It’s good to see the sanity of Webdiary back and on the trail of the misguided misfit G. W. Bush and his idiot followers. For those of us who advocated that invading Iraq was wrong, unlawful, and just bloody stupid, we can no longer stand up proudly screaming “WE WERE RIGHT YOU IDIOTS” – because far too many people have been, and continue to be, killed, including those poor American troops who have lost their lives.”

Phil Moffat: The war in Iraq was executed to eliminate Saddam’s WM so said the Coalition of the Willing. We now know Iraq has no WMDs and all the war has achieved is to turn Iraq into a bloody mess. Maybe it is time for Saddam to return to his old job, reinstate his army and get the place under control. After all John Howard made it absolutely clear to us that we would not be involved in the war if it wasn’t for WMDs.

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WHAT NOW? THE BEST NEXT MOVE IN IRAQ

Chris Murphy in Southport, Queensland (and see his information website)

The leader in the New Statesman on April 7, Iraq: how to move on, concludes:

Countries are best left to sort out their affairs and achieve their own liberation, as eastern Europe and South Africa did. Iraq, it is said, would face civil war – but that is the oldest excuse for prolonging colonial occupation. The Americans should leave promptly and completely, and be replaced by the UN – if the Iraqis wish it. Now move on.

The crowd – the same mob who eventually sided with Bush and supported the invasion of Iraq – will scream at the conclusion drawn by the New Statesman. “We can’t go backwards!” they will cry. True, and more’s the pity, but they refuse to admit that the so-called `Coalition of the Willing’ is digging itself deeper and deeper each day.

And the hole they dig will inevitably become a grave, just like Vietnam.

“We must do something!” Oh yeah? What? Persevere with the concept of a democratic Iraq?

Hardly. No one with any knowledge of the history and culture of the country believes that aim is – or ever was – achievable, in any way. Only ignorant numbskulls like Bush and Rumsfeld figured there was some way to unite 24 million people of starkly different backgrounds in a peaceful democracy in the Western tradition. Those who did know but had other agendas, like Chalabi and Wolfowitz, simply fed these numbskulls that simplistic line to get their own covert outcomes.

What else can now be done? Bomb the recalcitrants into submission?

Sure. Moqtada al-Sadr, the revolting leader of a Shi’ite break-away group, currently has a very small following. The moderates, who still control millions of Shi’ites, know very well that government is theirs for the taking in a democracy. Only a civil war could stop them. Until now, the big threat of that was from the Sunni minority.

Enter the Americans. Blasting their way into a Shi’ite mosque and killing those inside, even rebellious fanatics, is certainly no way to foster stability amongst the majority Shi’ites, who will now be forced to choose who is “them” and who is “us”. Bush and Rumsfeld need to learn – fast – that guided weapons and helicopter gunships will never win hearts and minds.

What else? Stay in Iraq, but stand back and hope that people are reasonable? Like the Iraqis are going to resort to reason and peace, when all the invaders have achieved so far has been at the barrel of a gun or bought using a bag of greenbacks. Regrettably, America has lost its ability to lead by example, because its example is ignorance, unilateralism, stubbornness, force, and violence.

This is a no-win situation. Like Vietnam, there is no alternative but to “cut and run”. And just like Vietnam, it will take decades for both Iraq and the United States to recover. So be it. At least next time, the people of America just might stand up to the next generation of ignorant numbskulls when they call for war.

But when that happens, look up. The sky will be filled with pink pigs.

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Peter Funnell in Canberra

What is happening now in Iraq is far more dangerous than the short conventional war that overthrew Saddam’s regime. The place is going off like a firecracker. Coordinated attacks in lots of places. Seems they caught the marines with their pants down around their ankles, which is unusual. Then, we need to remember, the majority of the US troops are now reservists or national guard (not sure if this is true of marines). I really wonder at the quality of the US troops.

There is only one solution available to the US – to escalate the fighting and engage with the Iraqi militias – but that’s not easy with irregular forces who must be enjoying a high level of local support. But the US is likely to see this as the only hope they have to assert control and achieve some form of law and order�. They have nothing else at their disposal and at the moment, they are a risk every minute of every day. Doesn’t exactly make for clear thinking.

If it happens it will be awful. I can’t see Bush agreeing to withdraw, just as the US did not in Vietnam. This is worse than Vietnam.

This is the price of war. An illegal war. A war based on falsehood. A war that has brought a frightening level of slaughter, injury, poverty and radicalism to Iraq. Why shouldn’t we label Bush, Blair and Howard war criminals?

Uniting Iraqis, American style

Iraq, Iraq. Here we go again. But first, Webdiary’s intern Judith Ireland has discovered that the Liberal Party has removed its history from its website. How fitting, since it has dumped liberal philosophy:

 

The `Our History’ page on the Liberal Party’s web site has gone into hiding. The page disappeared from its usual home under the `About the Liberal Party’ section sometime in early to mid March.

The page is still on the server and can be found by going directly to its URL. But because `Our History’ is no longer officially linked on the site, it is now invisible to visitors who don’t know its exact address.

Our History contains a brief run down of the Liberal Party’s formation and development between 1944 and 1949 from the first meeting to its first electoral success. It then provides a four-sentence summary of the Liberal federal governments since that time.

The Liberal Secretariat said it was unaware that the page was missing and suggested that information contained in `Our History’ had probably been divided across other pages on the web site. But whilst the site certainly contains information about the beliefs, achievements and structure of the Liberal Party, details of the party’s formation do not appear any where else except in `Our History’.

The entire Liberal Party web site has been upgraded with a new design and extra information within the last two weeks and the Secretariat also suggested that `Our History’ might not have been transferred from the old site yet. But as `Our History’ has the same design as all other pages on the new site, perhaps its link was lost in the move.

The rest of the site does not appear to be experiencing any other technical difficulties.

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NOTICEBOARD

Scott Burchill:“Could it be that Washington has achieved something neither Saddam or anyone else could achieve – bring the Shia and Sunni together in a united opposition to occupation?” See Muslim Rivals Unite In Baghdad Uprising.

Peter Cook in Brisbane:“David Clark in The Guardian sums it all up rather well: The war on terror misfired. Blame it all on the neo-cons.

Christopher Dunne:“If you haven’t heard any Republicans from Texas deconstruct neo-conservative philosophy and trace its paternity to Machiavelli, then this is for you: We’ve Been “Neo-conned”!

The US government wants to lock out journos and transmit its propaganda direct to the people: U.S. military finds way around the press corps.

John Boase: Who wrote this in 2000? “The president must remember that the military is a special instrument. It is lethal, and it is meant to be. It is not a civilian police force. It is not a political referee. And it is most certainly not designed to build a civilian society.” Condoleezza Rice, Bush’s national security adviser, who’ll give evidence under protest to the S11 inquiry overnight.

Stephen Pirie: “Re Robert Bosler’s piece on political creativity, Why is Latham alarming?, I recently wrote a book called Awkward Truths which more fully explains the art and function of creativity within political, social and gender contexts.

From the spam bank: “Visit arabiaenquiries to find out how to win business deals in the Middle East.”

Peter Botsman: “I am pleased to announce that Australian Prospect is now live. The first edition is `New Provident: Partnerships with Indigenous Australia’.

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Peter Evans

I believe that CNN is shifting its description of the 4 “civilian contractors” killed in Falluja. Today it reports: “U.S. Marines fought skirmishes with Iraqi fighters Monday in and around the restive city of Fallujah, closing off the city in response to the killing and mutilation of four American security guards last week.”

Now that they are being called more like what they were, the new description raises lots of questions: Were they armed? If so, what with? Were they wearing uniforms? If so, what kind? Was their vehicle marked or unmarked? If marked, with what markings? What were they doing where they were? Why were there only two of them, given the dangers in Falluja? What battlefield status did they have? If they were not civilians, what were they? Combatants, spies, or what? Was their presence in a battle zone covered by the Geneva convention? Or could they, in fact, be described by the Americanism “illegal combatants”.

The CNN.com change in terminology, presumably based on more information, is welcome if it helps reach the truth. Unfortunately, it is late in the process. And the truth has already been sacrificed.

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Brian McKinlay in Greensborough, Victoria

Several US sites I’ve been reading are warning about the manipulation and politicisation of the news flowing from the Coalition Forces’ media outlet in Baghdad. The organisation, known as “The Office of Strategic Communication” (Stratcom) operates within the US compound in central Baghdad. Its critics say it’s a part of the Republican Party’s election machinery funded with great dollops of taxpayer money.

The service director is Dan Senor, a graduate of Hebrew University, friend of Pearle and Wolfowitz and other neo-con insiders. Senor has also worked for the Bush family investment and oil-company Carlyle Investments, said to have extensive Saudi links.

Amongst the 58 senior staffers at the Stratcom Office in Baghdad, 21 were long-term Republican Party activists and staff members in the U.S.A, and its Democratic Party critics say it targeted news-release from Iraq to deflect unfavourable news coverage which would have harmed Bush and tried to deflect public interest from Senator Kerry during the Democratic primary elections.

They may wince now at two recent headlines which appeared on press releases. One read “Beautification Plan for Baghdad Ready to begin ” whilst a second read “The reality is nothing like you see on television “.(Ouch!!) So when you come across a piece of what looks like tailor-made GOOD NEWS FROM IRAQ, remember that it was probably tailored to meet George Bush’s political needs.

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Marie Berghuis

I was interested to learn on the SBS Insight program last night, `Should we withdraw our troops from Iraq’, that we have about 300 personnel serving in Iraq, and that no journalist is allowed to interview them. Basically they are working on the outskirts of Iraq as air traffic controllers.

I don’t know why some get so upset that we would consider withdrawing a mere 300 troops from Iraq, or believe the statement from Howard that if we did we would be giving into terrorism. What a laugh! Our troops are not reconstructing Iraq or helping Iraqis – all they are doing is air traffic control at the airport and a few other administrative jobs due to be taken over by private contractors.

If we wanted to help Iraqi people we should join with a UN peace force to protect them and rebuild essential services. We do have a moral obligation to help fix up the disgraceful mess created by the `trio of the willing’. It’s a pity we couldn’t send messrs Bush, Blair and Howard (the three warlords) over to Iraq for six months! As in all wars it is the young and innocent who are sacrificed.

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Tracy Rice

After watching Insight, what concerns me is that Australian troops, the Iraq war and the War Against Terrorism are being used as political footballs. I hope politicians of all persuasions can put Australia’s safety and welfare above party politics. Questions I have asked myself and which I can not find answers to are:

* What is our goal in Iraq ? What is the timeline of bringing our troops home? What are the other alternatives? What commitments have we already made regarding the War on Terror? How can we assist Iraq in a constructive way?

* Do we know what present US government’s foreign policy plans are for Iraq, Afghanistan and the rest of the world ? Is Australia signed up for a wild ride with USA on foreign affairs not knowing where we are going, who we are fighting and why or for how long and how much it will cost us?

* How are we protecting Australia against terrorism here at home? What is the terrorist threat inside Australia and with our near neighbours? Have we learned any important lessons regarding relying on other nations intelligence to make important decisions to protect Australia or entering into wars?

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Trevor Kerr

On SBS last night, Jenny Brockie brought together a festoon of knowledge, talent and experience to exchange views on the Iraq situation. Only a couple of them were blowing smoke, and one was a twit from the Institute of Public Affairs (Margo: Howard’s favourite `think tank’, funded by big business) He was patriotically waving the Stars ‘n Stripes and rabbiting on about freedom, human rights and democracy. From his tone, the junta in Burma should be worried. But I guess that wasn’t in the script he had been bid to follow.

The bloke from a US think tank (Friedman) was more impressive with his authority and passion for the US system. Which leads me to suppose one of the main differences between us and them is that citizens of the US have an opportunity be involved, from grassroots up, in the election of their head of state. Whereas, over here, the head of state is handpicked by someone who may be despised by half the populace.

We are involved with our democratic system for about ten minutes at the ballot box, where we will be affected by the chosen issues of the day (or hour), such as the current price of petrol.

It’s no wonder Aussies are nonchalant about their democratic rights. My secret hope is that Latham, having been brave enough to pop the Iraq bubble, will run with fixed-terms and head-of-state as campaign issues

Murdoch v the people on Iraq

Rupert Murdoch, already an American citizen, pulls up News Limited’s stumps from Australia to become an American company and the very next day presumes to tell Australians what to think and who to vote for!

Murdoch backs Bush and wants troops to stay reports his decrees on Sydney radio today:

Media baron Rupert Murdoch today backed George Bush to win a second term, said Australian troops should see the job through in Iraq, and said he would push for changes to Australia’s cross-media and foreign media ownership laws, despite shifting News Corporation to the US.

The News Corporation chairman said today the coalition of the willing had largely been successful and Australia needed to maintain its presence.

“We have no alternative – we must see the job through,” Mr Murdoch told 2GB radio.

He also said George W Bush would win a second term at the US presidential election in November because the American people strongly supported the president’s efforts in Iraq and the resurging US economy.

“They’re with him on that, completely. He’s going to walk it (the election) in,” he said. (The interview with, you guessed it, Howard favourite Alan Jones, is at interview.)

So Murdoch and his papers and TV empire back Bush and Howard. Murdoch’s proved a loyal ally to Bush and Howard, in exchange for more power, of course. See Murdoch: Cheap oil the prizeMurdoch’s war: 175 generals on song and Murdoch’s war on truth in war reporting. And see Webdiary’s cross media archive for his attempt to extend his domination of Australian media, courtesy of Howard.

Murdoch and his editors have lots of tricks to mess with your minds. He brought his editors and selected commentators from around the world to Cancun recently and ensured they knew the line. Bush’s national security adviser Condi Rice obeyed her masters voice and addressed the Murdoch crew, as did UK opposition leader Michael Howard. (Last year Murdoch publicly announced that his UK papers would switch their support from Blair to Howard because he didn’t like Blair’s wish to endorse a European constitution. He had the hide to say this would downgrade “our” sovereignty – he must have meant “our” in the Murdoch nation sense.)

Murdoch helps fund the Washington neo-con bible the Weekly Standard. Last year, the magazine falsely claimed it had proof there were links between Saddam and al Qaeda before S11. Murdoch’s New York Postand The Australian dutifully republished it as truth, minus official denials by the US Defense Department (see His lie-master’s apprentices).

And have a look at Tuesday’s Australian, which headlined its Newspoll ‘Latham’s bubble bursts’. It must have given one Stephen Morris the results in advance, because on the opinion page that very day he wrote Latham an open letter condemning his ‘troops home’ policy, citing “today’s Newspoll”!

What can the people do?

For a start, we can expose the hypocrisy of Murdoch and his media mouthpieces. Eddie Davers did it in Overland magazine. In Our Australian? Murdoch’s flagship and shifting US attitudes to Iraq, he examines howThe Australian reported Saddam when the Americans liked him:

“In Australia, one newspaper now stands out for its hawkish tone. ‘The Australian’ (was) the loudest and most persistent in calling for an invasion of Iraq. It never tires of reminding its readers that Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons (sing along) against his own people. It is worth reviewing how ‘The Australian’ covered the atrocities when they actually occurred. Quantitative aspects of the coverage are revealing; today’s profusion is in marked contrast to the paucity of coverage during the 1980s. However, this article focuses on the qualitative aspects: how reports were packaged, what was stressed and what was de-emphasised, and the nature of visual coverage.”

We can also get together and seek real answers to important questions on Iraq from politicians where WE live. The North shore Peace and Democracy Group is leading the way. Last year, it organised a political panel to answer community questions on why we went to war – see Tony Abbott to eyeball North Shore against the War: Truth possibleDon’t let pollies get away with murderLiberal elder to Abbott: Dear friend, make amends on Iraq and The Valder indictment: full text.

Their latest event, called ‘Secrets and lies destroy democracy: a discussion on the impact of decisions behind closed doors on democracy in Australia’ will be held Monday 3 May, 2004 at 7:30pm at Willoughby Town Hall, 409 Victoria Avenue, Chatswood (400m from Chatswood Station). On the panel: Senator Marise Payne (Liberal), Kevin Rudd (Labor), Kerry Nettle (Greens) and Aden Ridgeway (Democrats).

The questions to be asked of each panellist are:

1. We were told the invasion of Iraq was necessary because of Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction. John Howard said on 14 March 2003: “If Iraq had genuinely disarmed, I couldnt justify on its own a military invasion of Iraq to change the regime.” How can we trust future justifications for war in the light of this?

2. There has been little informed democratic debate in Australia about the causes of terrorism, in particular the unresolved Israel-Palestine conflict. The War on Terror cannot succeed by dealing with the symptoms alone. How can Australia work to address the causes?

3. “It wasn’t a time in our history to have a great and historic breach with the United States,” Alexander Downer said recently. Does a request for support from the US automatically and always pre-empt Australian policy and budgets at the expense of education, health and welfare, and if not, how should we decide which requests to refuse?

4. Free trade agreements and decisions that impact on all our lives are negotiated behind closed doors, without the wider participation of the Australian people. How can these decisions be made more democratically?

5. The present rigid control of Australian political parties over its members effectively hijacks much of the decision-making process from open debate in the parliamentary chambers – where it is meant to be – and cloaks it in secrecy behind the closed doors of party rooms. Should this be allowed?

6. Australians are very cynical about the political process, and the extent to which secrecy and falsehood are used to justify policy decisions. How can our faith in the system be restored?

Everyone is welcome to go along. For details of the group’s next venture, go to ademocraticaustralia.com

Howard’s cash for comment: an update

When the government shuts up the information shop, people who want the truth take the long way home. The public got no answers at all on the government’s cash for comment deal revealed by Labor’s communications spokesman Lindsay Tanner two weeks ago – see Whatever it takes: the Howard Government’s cash for comment play and Is the government ethical? No comment – so I’ve put in three Freedom of Information requests.

 

Lindsay has lodged a question on notice to the Minister (see below), and Webdiary reader Reg Boyle emailed the communications minister Daryl Williams. Lo and behold, Williams announced his retirement!

Reg Boyle in Westleigh, Sydney

Margo, I’m sure it was your article on Universal McCann and the Liberal Party that caused me to write to Mr Williams last Saturday. I am more than a little startled to find that he announced his retirement less than 48 hours later. I do hope it wasn’t me. 🙂

*

Dear Mr Williams,

I have just finished reading your maiden speech. I am impressed with its noble tone though I must disagree with you that the Liberal Party has indeed got, in the true terms of the word liberal, the same noble aims.

There is no doubt in my mind after reading your speech, that deceptive and manipulative advertising, such as that involving Universal McCann, and similar deceptions, do not sit well with your moral code. Unfortunately you are associated with a Prime Minister whose moral code reflects badly on all the members of his government. Because of this, I doubt there is much you personally can do to repair this cynically undemocratic practice.

I write merely to let you know I am conscious of the situation and will be doing all in my puny power to ensure that your government has the mantle of trust ripped from its unworthy shoulders.

May you prosper, but not your less worthy associates.

Reg Boyle, Westleigh, another 1950s teenager.

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Lindsay Tanner’s parliamentary question on notice

April 2 2004

Question on Notice to the Hon Daryl Williams Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts and The Hon Peter Costello Minister Representing the Minister for Finance

I refer the Government’s strategy to advertise the state of telecommunications services in regional Australia and in particular the strategy provided by Universal McCann, tabled by me in Parliament on March 24 2003.

Who commissioned the strategy from Universal McCann?

Who made the decision to commission Universal McCann?

Who liaised with Universal McCann on behalf of the Government with respect to completion of the contract?

Is there any Government guideline governing the use of Government advertising to induce favourable editorial comment in a newspaper? If so, what does this guideline state?

When did the Government decide not to proceed with the Universal McCann proposal to obtain favourable editorial comment from regional newspapers in return for additional advertising?

Who made the decision?

When were Universal McCann advised of this decision, and how were they advised prior to March 24, 2004?

Were any newspaper advertisements in this campaign placed?

If so in which newspapers were these advertisements placed?

Was any editorial comment provided on return?

Which organisations were advised of the contents of the Universal McCann strategy?

Has any subsequent advice varying or revoking that strategy been provided to such organisations?

Latham tunes us into Iraq

Webdiarists go for it today on Iraq, our troops, Webdiary’s lack of female contributors and a good old bitch about Robert Bosler’s Why is Latham alarming?

On Bosler, I’d like to exempt our news editor Richard Woolveridge of responsibility for pointing to Robert off the front. This decision was made by a female producer in his absence. I guess our female creative impulses took over. I love Robert’s work, not least because it eschews the standard way of talking politics.

I’ll start with my email of the day, from Russell Dovey in Canberra:

The Shiite uprisings in Iraq provoked by both Moqtada Al-Sadr’s blind hatred of the US and Paul Bremer’s heavy-handed stupidity show Australians exactly why this is no longer our war. To stay and keep the peace under a UN mandate would be morally justifiable. When the US government asks us to stand with them as they create a new Palestine, however, we must have the courage to say no.

The parallels between the occupation of Iraq and the occupation of Palestine have been growing less tenuous by the day. The current episode of attack, retribution and revenge makes it blatantly obvious that the US looks to Israel’s presence in Palestine as an example of how to run a country.

Iraq needs a UN peacekeeping force commanded by a UN authority before it devolves entirely into civil war. If this is not done, Australian troops will not be able to improve the lives of Iraqis and they will merely be there to prop up George Bush’s collapsing credibility.

IRAQ NOTICEBOARD

Scott Burchill recommends On the brink of anarchy in The Guardian and Seymour Hersch on The other war: why Bush’s Afghanistan problem won’t go away in The New Yorker. On Afghanistan, also see Alexander the Great also got in trouble here.

Antony Loewenstein recommends Naomi Klein’s report from Iraq in The battle the US wants to provoke and Robert Fisk’s report Dust off the flak jacket. Lay low. And stay off the streets…

Antony also recommends In Their Skin, where four journos discuss the important job of “entering Iraqi minds to see what they think and feel about the American occupation”.

John Boase recommends this buzzflash interview with Craig Unger, author of ‘House of Bush, House of Saud’. “Now the Saudis are pumping money into Pakistan,” John notes. An extract:

In essence, the Bush Cartel has sold Americans a bill of goods. They have diverted our attention from the major nation state supporting Al-Qaeda because they don’t want to attack their own business partners, including the Saudi who bailed Harken Oil out. He’s the same guy that was deeply involved with BCCI, the corrupt bank that Poppy Bush and many of his cohorts were associated with. There are plenty more like him. Just read Unger’s book.

Carl Cranstone recommends Poisoned? Shocking report reveals local troops may be victims of america’s high-tech weapons. “In light of this article, when is the job done in Iraq? What about the cleanup from the use of Depleted Uranium ammunitions? Is that part of the job?”

I recommend Online Opinion’s analysis of Latham’s latest poll result, Gravity asserts itself.

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IRAQ

Paul McIntosh in Albury, NSW: Lefties and others who do not seem to care about important alliances keep coming up with half baked reasons to pull out of Iraq whilst ignoring the reason why we are there. It’s Terrorism, stupid.

Helen Monaghan: Reading the SMH and Paul MeGeough’s courageous articles it seems increasingly evident that the Iraqis just wish we would go. It surprises and alarms me that Australians are still divided on this matter.

Alan Duffy in Carlingford, NSW: Funny isn’t it. The very day that Mark Latham’s alleged honeymoon with the public goes down the toilet, his fellow ALP comrade delivers a rip-off mini budget in NSW that absolutely, totally, unequivocally guarantees that the Latham prime ministership will forever remain a bridge too far. And here I was, thinking Bob Carr didn’t have the national interest at heart.

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Sharon Burner

A point which hasn’t been mentioned during the recent troops debate relates to engagement. Since Tampa, children overboard etc, columnists have noted that where the electorate disengages from political debate and retreats to the self-focused domain of tax cuts and domestic budgets, conservative parties tend to do far better. Hugh Mackay gave a good example last year in Why we are so disengaged.

Viewed from this perspective, the ‘Latham effect’ may be to re-engage the mainstream with political issues. If this is so, Latham and the ALP would not be overly concerned with how the “Troops home by Christmas” issue turns out, because what it ultimately means is that the electorate is paying attention again. So when the ALP speaks about those things people REALLY care about (health and education, judging from consistent polling) people will actually hear them.

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Peter R Green in Marrickville

Simon Martin sees the issue clearly enough when he says in Webdiarist’s verdict: troops out, please:

“Bush and his neo-cons are taking the current and future earnings of the country and tipping it into the coffers of the major donors to the Republican Party. This makes Bush a very powerful man and the heads of these companies (and their shareholders) much richer at the expense of Americans who cant afford health insurance, their own home, or even to put food on the table.”

What he misses is the extent to which this is the story of our world. The Robber Barons are breaking free from strictures built up over the past 2000 years. The kings may now go under different titles – as may the local lords, whose stronghold is a corporation rather than a castle. But the game is very much the same as it was in 1200AD.

Today’s Kings pay off barons so that the barons will let them retain their thrones. Barons hire and fire from among the peasantry without much concern for justice or fairness and run their own affairs with minimal interference from those who pay lip service to the doctrine of separation of the religion of Mammon from the business of the State.

Simon is describing the resurgence of feudalism, and what I can’t understand is that the homeless, starving, uninsured masses are so prone to applaud those who are doing it to them.

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Damien Hogan

Professor Ramesh Thakur says in Latham’s pullout plan breaches international law: academic that “By invading Iraq, Australia had

confiscated its sovereignty, and became legally, politically and morally responsible for security, services, welfare and all other responsibilities of government until sovereignty was returned to the Iraqi people.”

This does not immediately imply that a military presence is the best way to achieve this end.

In fact, one could argue that our legal obligations require withdrawing our troops, if this can be shown to be the best way to further “security, services, welfare and all other responsibilities of government”.

It would be foolish to think that assault rifles are the best, let alone the only way to help the Iraqis.

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John Boase

A few points in response to Noel Hadjimichael’s column Heh lefties, wind down the propaganda war! Iraq is about as central to the ‘war on terror’ as I am. It is a sideshow, a massively expensive distraction from the main game.

As Dick Clarke says: bin Laden must have been WILLING Bush ‘Invade Iraq, invade Iraq!’ (See Kerryn Higgs’ excellent summary of Clarke’s testimony in Bush on the ropes: his awful deeds post S11.) Bin Laden could not have hoped for a better result. The invasion has galvanised anti-US opinion, dissipating much of the sympathy post-9/11; it has stretched the resources of the US army, involving unprecedented numbers of reservists; it is providing work experience for terrorists; it continues to inflict enormous damage on the US economy.

I refer Noel to the writings of Jessica Stern of Harvard, in particular her articles on al Qaeda and on Pakistan. Stern is a highly-regarded expert on international terrorism. See theproteanenemy and Pakistan. Read together, these articles provide a chilling account of the real nature of international terrorism and identify Pakistan as the main game.

Forget Iraq, comrades, and keep your eyes on events in Pakistan, ironically now a ‘major ally’ of the US. Colin Powell’s recent whitewashing of the infamous Dr Khan, who actually HAD WMD and flogged nuclear technology to nasty regimes, was breathtaking considering what he had said about Iraq at the UN.

A challenge, Noel: read the two Stern articles then write us a piece on Pakistan. Stern’s work is authoritative and sobering. It gets the brain in gear and prevents foaming at the mouth.

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Jason Eyre

The frustrating thing about Mr. Latham’s recent hammering by the Government and large slabs of the media on the issue of troop withdrawal from Iraq is that the ALP seems content to wear the charge that they are advocating a policy of ‘Cut and Run’. This pithy little phrase – first aired by Mr. Howard in Parliament – was taken up uncritically by the press as a shorthand way of summing up Labor’s position. Unfortunately for Mr. Latham and the ALP, the phrase has stuck.

It doesn’t matter that when you read over the transcripts of Labour’s policy position the notion of troop withdrawal invariably comes with caveats such as “as soon as possible” or “once our obligations have been discharged”. It is too late to point all this out now that the distinction has been drawn. It is Christmas or nothing.

To think that ALP policy has effectively been set in stone by Mike Carlton is irritating. Poor show.

Prescription: Labour should now emphasise their own caveats, their own ifs, buts and maybes: that they want to withdraw our forces as soon as possible, yes, but only when the ‘job’ is done; if this means withdrawing troops by Christmas then wouldn’t that be great? But if the ‘job’ is not done, then they will have to stay. Reluctantly, but out of a sense of duty.

They will be accused of back-tracking, of capitulating to Howard’s pressure, but the ALP should wear it. Besides, the records show that this has been their position all along. There is no backflip to speak of, it’s just a matter of emphasis and spin. The storm won’t last long.

All of this will provide the ALP with the opportunity to seize back the initiative on the Iraq debate (or bury it altogether). As recent contributors to Webdiary have pointed out, the question of what the “job” actually is has not been identified by the Government. Tricky questions have yet to be asked.

This is where Labor can claim the upper hand: they have advanced an exit strategy. Mr. Howard and the Liberals – who appear to have an open-ended commitment subject to White House approval – have not.

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Matt Southon

I’ve been a keen follower of Mr Latham for many years and am glad to see that faith rewarded with a new freshness in what was becoming a very stale affair. I’ve read with interest the discussion surrounding Latham’s troops decision, and I wonder if he is up to something bigger.

Initially, Latham beat Howard to the punch by setting the agenda on domestic political issues, leaving Howard in a spin (pardon the pun) and without a hard target. This early agenda reflected a community keen to respond to issues of family and role models, with Howard continually flummoxed by Latham’s enthusiasm and announcements worlds away from the PM’s agenda. I wondered if Howard may hold off on an election until he saw a point of attack. The longer he waited, the more opportunities for Latham to stuff up, so to speak.

With Latham suddenly turning debate back to national security, Howard has found himself back on comfortable ground, and Latham has arguably had his first ‘trip up’. If Latham continues to stare back at Johnny on this point, the PM may feel he has an angle on which to launch the election debate agenda and set a date (my bet is last weekend of August).

It is a classic trap. Latham has seen that Howard is weak in his ability to connect with punters and bereft of ideas in relation to real domestic issues. Once Howard sets a date, Latham can again shift the agenda back to domestic issues (This is a strength, as people want to hear Latham and he can therefore trigger debates where Crean could not and Beazley would not.

The worsening situation in Iraq see more horrific stories aired, and the public will realise that they do not want to see five Australians burnt and dragged behind vehicles. This will strengthen Latham’s call to get troops home as soon as practicable.

Therefore, the recent troops home call may be seen as a ‘red rag to a bull’. The hope is that the bull will not see behind the rag to the sword of domestic issues upon which he will be finally impaled .

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Peter Funnell in Canberra

Robert Bosler’s article on Latham/Howard was very good. Today’s opinion poll result (how good are these polls??) illustrates Bosler’s observations about fear of Latham, as does the troops home by Christmas/intelligence briefing issues.

I read your comment about being angry with Latham and why. What was he supposed to do? I don’t think he has lost a thing, mate. I would not have made the case the way he did, but I do want an end to the Coalition of the Willing and the UN to take over.

I also wanted Howard boiled in oil for deceiving the nation on the reason for going to war, but he seems to have weathered that storm. The notion that we don’t “cut and run” is tosh! We can get out of what’s wrong as soon as we can and make good the damage done as best we can with the UN.

Iraq is busting wide open and it must be nearly impossible to plan tactically on the ground to contain the ever increasing violent civil disorder. There is no law and order in Iraq, there is only a military conqueror, an invader.

We are going down the toilet in Iraq and the US is finding it hard to maintain the commitment, let alone increase it, which is what it needs to do if it is to regain military control. Every conceivable anger, pent up frustration and grievance – the US has killed a lot of Iraqis in two wars and decade of sanctions – is now being directed at the US. They will beat the US, but what will be left will be a shit heap. At least it’s their shit heap. Then what happens? We did this, not Saddam!

I think Latham has scared Howard witless. Howard must be getting close to pulling the early election trigger.

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Max Phillips

I’d like to challenge Webdiary readers who think the troops should stay in Iraq to state what jobs the Australian troops need to do that Iraqis are incapable of doing. To me this “doing the job” thing is the new imperialism’s version of ‘civilising the savages’.

Iraq is the birth place of civilisation. Its culture is deeper and more sophisticated than ours. Iraqis are relatively well educated and modern. Iraqis are not stupid or inferior or incapable of ‘doing the job’ themselves. To imply they need our guidance or American guidance is an insult and rooted in racism. There are Iraqi air traffic controllers who are perfectly capable of “doing the job” of air traffic control at Baghdad airport. The Australian controllers are doing them out of a job – bloody scabs!

Our real employment in Iraq is as a side-kick enforcer for American imperialism. The actual job we are doing is one of oppressing Iraqis and subjugating them to Western power and capital. This is not a job to be proud of and we should cease it now. Persistence in folly is not a virtue.

Of course “doing the job” is the equivalent of 2001’s “queue jumpers”. No decent Aussie wants to support queue jumping or shirking responsibility. Clever politics, but a complete whitewash of the real issue. Whether we fall for the shallow spin and re-elect Howard, or whether we see through it will be interesting. With events in America and Iraq spiralling out of control it seems our political fate could well be decided by external events anyway.

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BAGGING BOSLER’S Why is Latham alarming?

But first, a fan….

Peter Woon

I have just returned from a fortnight in the UK having lived there during the Thatcher era and then in Australia for the last 14 years. It was a reminder that the UK experience brings no comfort to those who cower in the shadows of the Tory creed of visionless rearrangement and the atrophication of a nation’s creative spirit. For at the end of Tory rule in the UK, the community was perfused with creative release, a celebration enfusing Brit Pop, Cool Britannia and renewed exploration of the human spirit.

When Howard is discarded at the next election it will be by tsunamic flood as the nation enjoys a seismic shift away from the oppressive politics of fear, uncertainty, doubt and outright deceit which typify an uncreative leader. This is what happened in the UK. And Australia can look forward to a celebration of our creative and community spirit.

There is no comfort either to those who excuse leadership fuelled by voters’ greed and ignorance by arguments of economic mastery. In Australia, Howard inherited the good economic work done by Paul Keating – and yes, his mistake was to celebrate his vision without converting the punter to stakeholder. In the UK, the most enduring period of economic stability has, horror of horrors, been achieved by the New Labour government!

Tory apologists also conveniently forget that Thatcher’s economic record was fiddled through the gift of black gold from North Sea Oil, an influx of foreign currency from reprocessing other nations’ nuclear waste and the selling of any national asset which could be put on the national shop shelf.

The question comes down to what sort of leadership we value. Is it one sustained through the inspiration of the nation’s creative and compassionate spirit or one suckled on self interest and deceit?

Do we really want to live in a country where people with brains and education are denigrated with a label of elite? Are we really to become a nation which does not care when we are lied to by our government? Or are we ready to believe in the promise of a new order, one in which we can dare to value a diversity of humanity rather than transient personal materialism? Are are we prepared to champion the enduring and wholesome for our individual and collective good in such a new order?

This change is about what we value. If we value a creative nation then change is our mandate. If we value open, honest government and constructive debate then we should kick and scream until we get it. And if we know that the way forward is based on a mutual and coherent core of values and things we collectively value, then we should vote for the leadership which will govern in the directions which such values dictate, and not on short term number crunching by unremarkable people hiding in shadowy political burrows.

Don’t confuse the intermittent Howard government morality-based furphy with a coherent approach to take the nation forward which enmeshes a value set. Even leading edge corporations have worked this out and have moved beyond economic rationalism to values-based management.

Our choice is indeed stark. Do we suffer petrification through continued stasis and inertia or do we trust our inner, creative, inspirational, communal selves and take on the challenge of change?

Then, in our new creative community, we can look back at Howard and see him for what he was as surely as looking at the internal organs of those sliced animals in formaldehyde created by Damien Hirst as part of the Cool Britannia uprising of our British cousins.

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Noel Hall: I was astonished to read this meaningless drivel, and alarmed that the Herald would have any interest in publishing it- to the point of placing it on the main page. I applaud your attempt to provide a forum of opinion, but please raise the bar for content.

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Harry Heidelberg

Those Bosler pieces are amazing. I hope he keeps turning them in. I rarely agree with anything in them but they are fun to read. The first line on Howard says he’s “a solicitor”. Yeah, right. So why not call Latham “an economist” in HIS first line?

Bosler tries to make Latham sound like some kind of romantic Australian poet laureate driven by creative urges. He is no such thing. He is a bull in a china shop. He crashes through roaring here, roaring there and breaking lots of china. People like that are great to have as mates, because they are always entertaining and make you laugh. It’s the unpredictability and the twists and turns that make it so much fun.

I don’t want a mate as a prime minister, though. When Latham broke the cab drivers arm, was that the male or female side of his creativity? A form of creative destruction perhaps? I think there are only two interpretations of Latham: (1) Bull in a china shop and (2) Typical NSW ALP Mate/Thug.

Then again, judging personalities – and art for that matter – is purely subjective! Right now I am struggling to see Latham other than as he appears.

PS: If anyone is creative……..it is John Howard! Look at the stories he weaves – they take imagination and creativity! John Howard is the most radical PM we have ever had (except perhaps Whitlam). His style is more Machiavellian rather than bull in a china shop. Creativity takes many forms.

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Helen Darville

I don’t like to pour cold water on people (having had it done to me plenty of times), but Robert Bosler’s Mark Missives are full of the same twee rhetoric that floated around Keating and no doubt contributed to Labor’s devastating electoral defeat. For the record:

1. There is nothing special about artists.

2. Artists have no particular vision, and are neither more capable nor more sensitive than the rest of us.

3. Every job is important. If you don’t believe me, try living in a city where the plumbers or garbage collectors have gone on strike.

I have slowly come round to the view that Australians are right to distrust intellectuals (by which I mean cultural poseurs, not the simply clever). Many intellectuals are extraordinarily narrow, having decided that they have the answer and that the rest of us are far too insensitive to understand the answer.

I lost count of the number of times during my brief run on the ‘literary circuit’ that I had Henry Moore [sculptor] quoted at me: “Artists are the eyes for other people.” Well, no, they bloody well are not; people have their own eyes with which to see the world. They don’t need some literary twit full of his own importance to tell them ‘You’re too common to describe the world for yourself; better let me do it for you.”

Mark Latham is an interesting leader; like Howard, he is essentially conservative and populist. He wants to dismantle ATSIC and bring the troops home – both popular ideas in the blue-collar fringes where Labor has lost ground.

Unlike Howard, Latham is personally aggressive and highly intelligent. He could combust before the election; he may well combust after it. Either way, it’ll be interesting to watch.

But please, no paeans to the new man. He’s a politician, for God’s sake. The sort of person who only wins glory in retrospect.

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WEBDIARY’S GENDER PROBLEM

Harry Heidelberg

Susan Metcalfe is clearly a gender junkie (see What’s the job and when is it done?). She is unable to look at anything in the world other than through the prism of gender. Given that Susan thinks such matters are so critical to debate, my recommendation is that you have a pop up form for each Webdiary contributor. They would need to disclose the following characteristics which would clearly be central to any contribution they might make:

1. Gender 2. Religion 3. Race 4. Sexual Preference 5. Disability Status 6. Incomes in Bands of AUD 10,000 7. Proof of identity (birth certificate extract sufficient) 8. Criminal record 9. Credit record 10. Body Mass Index.

Of course there are many more deeply personal things that would impact the perspective of the contributors. Why stop with gender? It is arguable, totally arguable, that any one of the ten items above may be MORE influential on a person’s life and views compared with gender.

For Susan the central issue is gender and she expects it to be that way for the rest of us. Well for many it is not! For some that is the least of their problems or concerns. She says: “What is so wrong with wanting to hear a bit less from men and more from some of the great women out there instead?”

Precisely. And I will help her along by being the first man she’ll be hearing a lot less of.

What’s the job and when is it done?

Hiya. Iraq is at flashpoint and Latham’s crash through policy to withdraw our troops from Iraq is starting to look very well timed. The troops out plan and the extraordinary revelations of the US September 11 inquiry have reignited Webdiarist discussion on the reasons for the war and how it will end. Tonight the Webdiary gender debate and lots of information and comment on the war, the troops, and the way forward.

NOTICEBOARD

Scott Burchill recommends Protests Unleashed by Cleric Mark a New Front in War and Bush and Blair made secret pact for Iraq war in The Guardian, where a former British ambassador reveals that “President George Bush first asked Tony Blair to support the removal of Saddam Hussein from power at a private White House dinner nine days after the terror attacks of 11 September, 2001”.

Scott also recommends Musharraf left counting the cost, on the civil war in Pakistan encouraged by the United States.

Chris Murphy recommends a New York Times piece at http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/04/international/asia/04NAUR.html on Australia’s lock-up of boat people (subscription required). Julian Burnside QC is quoted: “[Nauru] is indistinguishable from the detention of people in Guantanamo Bay but for this difference: the people being held in Guantanamo Bay are suspected of serious offenses.”

For more on the alleged intervention of the CIA in Australian poltcis in 1995 see Ray Martin’s interview with ex-CIA officer Christopher Boyce.

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WEBIARY AND WOMEN

Maggie Churchward

Yes, women are not well represented on Webdiary. My gut feeling is that many women read it but don’t respond. I suspect that women think and express themselves differently from men.They also have different needs, requirements and demands from men. What matters to men may not matter to women.

One only needs to check out Iraqi blogs to see that difference. Most of the blogs are by men with freedom to move as they choose. Yet Riverbend, a woman, talks about the US invasion of Iraq in very negative terms (see her today for the latest on the uprising in Iraq). She talks about abductions, rape and attacks on women who are not wearing a head scarf. She is denounced by most of the comments from Americans as a Baathist who has lost out since Hussein was ousted. Yet all the male bloggers give only positive statements on what is happening in Iraq and all of their respondents are in support of the Iraq invasion.

PS: I now have a much clearer understanding of why women’s contributions are so limited on Webdiary. Before I emailed you I put on the vegetables to cook. After emailing you I found that I had destroyed the vegetables and two sauce pans. Our house is on the market for sale and all you can smell is burnt something. Is it any wonder that women don’t sent in responses! The men who respond are probably doing it from their offices or somewhere else that allows them to comment without other responsibilities intruding. How many women are in that position???

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Susan Metcalfe

Harry Heidelberg’s comments in Webdiarist’s verdict: troops out, please point to a number of the elements which continue to marginalise women. Harry says, “Didn’t we go through that debate on Webdiary in 2001 and say it didnt matter?”

Harry, who is included in this ‘we’ and who decided it didn’t matter? And why should the subject be closed now because some people had a debate about it in August 2001?

In recent months there’s been a noticeable decline in women’s presence on Webdiary. I dont understand why these men have a problem with my drawing attention to that. It’s like saying that because we had the debate about refugees arriving on boats in 2001 we should all shut up about it now. Never mind that many of those refugees are still despairing in the Topside Detention Camp on Nauru more than 2 years later.

Harry also says, “Gender is relevant when we speak of gender specific topics but otherwise, I don’t get the relevance of gender and Webdiary contributions.”

What exactly is a gender specific topic? As a woman, I am much more than the sum of my biology if that is what you mean by gender specific topics. And in our society my lived experience is gender specific – the way other people deal with me is often coloured very much by my identity as a woman. Considering that this is a political forum, my gender is perhaps even more specific.

Harry says, ‘I never think about what sex the contributors are’.

If you are a man Harry then it is likely that you have not had to think very much about your gender – men (in general terms) have not been denied a voice and a presence in our society. On the contrary, women have long been marginalised and silenced. If you are a woman Harry, then I think you may have bought into a view that doesn’t serve you very well.

And if gender doesnt matter then why aren’t there more women in politics? Although numbers of women in positions of power have grown in recent years, these changes are extremely slow. In 2003, statistics on women in parliaments put Australia at number 25 in the world with a female representation of 25.3%, just behind Rwanda with 25.7%. Sweden had the highest representation of women at 45.3%, whilst women worldwide represented just 15.3% of the total number of parliamentarians.

In matters of war, conflict and securing the peace, women in Australia are largely excluded from decision-making processes. When the talk turns to these issues we see the images and hear the rhetoric of the men who have the power to decide our fates. George Bush, Tony Blair and John Howard all dominated our media last year, leading us into wars against other men – the Taliban, Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. At a human rights conference last year Betty McClellan said:

Whenever the leaders of nations (who are usually men) are considering war, women are deliberately pushed aside, ignored, alienated. No male leader considering involving his country in war ever stops to seek women’s opinion. Women were almost totally left out of decision-making about the war on Iraq and the previous war on Afghanistan. It’s like war is mens business and women are not permitted to give an opinion.

This is not to say that women are not also the perpetrators and supporters of conflicts. But when it comes to war, it is overwhelmingly the women and children who suffer the greatest consequences – the same women and children who are excluded from the decision-making processes which determine their lives.

At the peace tables and at war talks women are silenced and left to, literally, pick up the pieces of their families and communities. Bosnian women for example were excluded from the Dayton talks even though during the conflict 40 womens associations remained organised and active across ethnic lines. In March 2000, of 34 UN Special Representatives or Special Envoys appointed to regions of conflict, none were women. At the Bonn peace talks on Afghanistan in November 2001, only three women were included compared to sixty male delegates, and only after intense international pressure had demanded female representation. Each of the three women were exiles currently living outside Afghanistan; the women who were currently experiencing life in Afghanistan were given no representation and no voice. The men in these situations might also have said that gender doesn’t matter.

Harry says, ‘I get the feeling that Susan would like to contribute more often but feels so alienated by the men so she can’t. Susan, relax.’

Relax Harry, I can speak for myself about how I feel, I don’t need an interpreter. Mostly I don’t have time to contribute more than I have. But I do try to read Webdiary when I can and I would like to hear more women’s voices and opinions.

If we were all meeting in person instead of online, I would not want to be sitting in a group of only men hearing only their views. My preference would be to listen to the opinions of both men and women. For me, the fact that people are writing on a web page doesn’t change that.

I dont have all the answers on this issue. I am simply asking questions and presenting my personal point of view. Some of the issues may not be gender related at all but may be due instead to entrenched ideas of left/right divisions and ways of debating that exclude anything that falls in between.

And what is so wrong with wanting to hear a bit less from men and more from some of the great women out there instead? Women have written some wonderful pieces on Webdiary and I would like to read more. If men find that ‘bizarre’ there is more of a problem here than I had imagined.

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Paul Walter in Adelaide

My initial reaction to Susan Metcalf and Marilyn Shepherd was that Marilyn is hardly a shrinking violet and has been coming forward to contribute to debates for years: I’d like a dollar for every time I have seen her comments published in different places and good on her, although I don’t always agree with what she says. So, maybe another couple would-be rad feminists on an anti-bloke kick, I thought.

Then Harry Heidelberg expressed the sort of world-weary sympathy and sentiments I was feeling in Webdiarist’s verdict: troops out, please.

But I reread Webdiary’s gender debate in 2001 and the comments, in particular, of Elen Seymour and Paul Zikking concerning stereotyping of women and prejudging the value of any prospective contribution to a given discussion made by women.

I was provoked enough to reread Susan’s and Marilyn’s pieces. What REALLY emerges on second glance is not so much contempt of debate but intense disappointment that so little often emerges FROM all this earnest debating. I am depressed enough myself at the slowness of social change in a world of suffering people to admit the identification is very keen, here, after all!

I am so glad that the many women who contribute here do so. I hope they will not get too discouraged with an intractable political system and “cop out”, as I am tempted to do, in despair. I also re-read Polly Bushfrom that debate a few years ago, because if enough people “turn off” we DO become a “banana republic”, with all the horrors that might entail.

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LATHAM’S TROOPS PULLOUT

Chris Dickinson

I have been following the discussion on Webdiary since your piece Latham’s Iraq indiscretion ends honeymoon. While I agree overall with your take on it, I disagree with your comment that the real issue is when the troops’ job will be done. Perhaps this SHOULD be the issue, but it isn’t what either side of politics were arguing about last week. Latham, as you correctly said, has made a silly statement and refused to back down from it.

His comment was that the troops would be back at Christmas if a Labor government were elected in November . That qualification changed everything – from “Back by Christmas” to “Back within weeks of the election of a Labor government, whenever that might be”. This is a major change of policy, apparently taken on the spur of the moment, and highly irresponsible in the immediate post-Spanish bombing climate.

Although he clearly didn’t intend to, Latham gave Al Qaeda a side to support in the coming election, and that can’t be good. He effectively said that he was hoping for a re-run of Spain. In politics, context is everything, as Latham must learn. Naturally, the government has attacked this as irresponsible. Any government would, even one less desperate for a political lifeline than ours.

To make matters even worse, Latham responded by charging that the PM wanted to bring the troops back in the election campaign. He was probably right, but the unfortunate side-effect is that the troops might NOT now be returned before the election, because if Howard did so it would make a nonsense of his attack! So our troops may end up spending longer in Iraq than they would have otherwise done, with all the risks that entails, because of some unthinking words on Mark Latham’s part. That is not a good outcome. In war, loose statements by politicians can endanger lives. Latham has to realise this (even if it is too late to expect John Howard to).

I consider myself to be on the center-left politically. Before the war I considered the Iraq invasion unjustified for the stated reasons – and imminent WMD threat) but probably justified on humanitarian grounds. My opinion has not changed.

Nonetheless, for its domestic policies alone I am eager to get rid of the Howard government as soon as possible. But Latham has yet to convince me that he has what it takes to be Prime Minister, sadly. I hope he will continue to mature, and that come November (or whenever) I will be able to vote for him in good conscience, instead of having to comfort myself with voting “Greens” or “Informal”.

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James Davis

The job is done is in Iraq when it is safe enough for Australian diplomats and staff to perform their tasks under the protection of a civlian security service. The current troop deployment should not be confused with SAS involvement in the preliminary stages of the war, which had a different task. All those troops have now returned to Australia.

I support what Shaun O’Brien says in Media don’t get it on Latham and Iraq – if Mark Latham wants to bring the troops home he needs to examine the issue in the context of Australia’s security partnership with the US (obviously a much wider issue than just Iraq) and the Government’s non-military involvement in Iraq.

Latham’s contention regarding the Iraq based troops’ contribution to homeland security is flawed. The ADF fights conventional military threats to Australia and Australian interests. It can be used to defeat other threats (terrorism) but only when requested to by the civil authorities and approved by the government. The forces currently in Iraq would not be used to defeat terrorist threats in Australia..

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Simon Neldner

I’ve been thinking about the intensity of the Howard-Latham debate on the future of Australia’s Iraqi deployment, and realised that no-one has put forward the proposition that our own intelligence agencies probably know next-to-nothing about Iraq, its problems or where it all might end. They probably know about as much as your more informed readers can discern from a variety of newspapers, current affairs programs and expert analyses on the public record. Let’s consider the garbage we were spoon-fed from the over-paid, over-educated and easily manipulated intelligence agencies from the start of this sorry affair.

I enter into evidence the following: (1) those elusive weapons of mass destruction (not found and likely never to have existed since the early 1990s); (2) the unprecedented levels of post-war instability (not anticipated or planned for); (3) the level of funding needed to improve the antiquated and dilapidated state of Iraqi infrastructure and utility services (massively under-estimated); (4) the reliance on Iraqi oil production to bankroll everything and lower world oil prices (totally unrealistic given point [3]); (5) the role of Iraqi irregular forces and foreign fighters (not recognised until unprotected supply columns were ambushed, making it clear too few troops had been deployed to provide security – a problem that continues to this very day); and (6) having decided on invasion without the necessary post-war planning, the troops on the ground – and ordinary Iraqi’s caught in the crossfire – are reaping the whirlwind (claims of “mission accomplished” were completely premature).

All in all, a massive and continuing intelligence failure, and given the chaos reported daily by such fine journalists as Paul McGeough (Age-SMH) and John Burns (New York Times), it doesn’t look like improving anytime soon.

On these counts alone Howard deserves to be thrown-out of office at the earliest opportunity, not because the Iraqi adventure has turned out so badly, but because Howard could be so easily manipulated by a foreign power and a leadership cadre that is clearly unhinged. We should demand and expect a higher level of competence from our leaders. And … despite everything that has happened, it compounds a sorry situation when Howard won’t admit that he was completely and utterly wrong.

Nothing is his fault, there is always someone else to blame. At least David Kay could admit this basic fact. But Webdiary readers don’t need to be reminded of this Government’s abysmal record of ministerial accountability, where time-honoured parliamentary standards are seen as optional extras. To think we believed Keating was arrogant!

I don’t really care what Latham was told, by whom or where and when a meeting supposedly took place. What I found surprising is that Latham could claim to have been ‘informed’ by anyone remotely connected to or working for Australian intelligence and defence agencies. That’s the real problem, in that we are tied to American intelligence agencies and the strategic thinking which guides its information gathering activities – our own capabilities (particularly under-valued human intelligence) would be severely limited in this area. As a result, by having to rely on foreign intelligence agencies for information, we are compromised by their own political imperatives which demand adherence to the “official” line – i.e. everything in Iraq is going to plan.

It is only through people like Andrew Wilkie, Richard Clarke and a growing band of US State Department employees (who have resigned in protest) that we know how badly the intelligence was mis-used and how the public was manipulated. It’s the biggest case of political spin and deliberate subterfuge imaginable, and shows no sign of abating. Everything we’ve been told about Iraq has been a lie from day one, and the adequacy of the post-war planning severely compromised because of it.

So where to now?

Howard needs to be asked this question: How will we know when the job is done? A popular uprising against an unrepresentative, US backed Iraqi installed Government? These are scary days, and one look at the catalogue of death and injury appearing daily at lunaville makes the rosy predictions of a stable and secure Iraq look the stuff of fairy-tales.

And while there is some merit in Howard’s claim to “hold our nerve” until the “job is done”, the Australian public is asked to sign a blank cheque and trust a government whose judgment is questionable and its decision-making capacity compromised by the Howard-Bush relationship. I don’t think Howard has a clue about when our Iraqi commitment will end.

What are the options? I guess they come down to escalation (remember Vietnam?), keeping our current level of commitment or pulling our troops out completely (Latham’s way).

If Howard had the courage of his convictions we’d be deploying thousands of troops into Baghdad and beyond to secure the peace, but Latham is right – the current commitment is tokenistic at best. We comprise less then one half of one percent of total coalition forces deployed. That is, we’re not serious.

Howard claims that leaving by Christmas would give aid and comfort to the terrorists, but what happens if the attacks on coalition troops and civilian contractors are the work of Iraqis opposing the occupation? The American’s claim that it’s all the work of foreign terrorists, but where is the evidence? Have you seen one proven case, where a non-Iraqi has been detained, incriminating documents found or smuggled weapons seized?

The capture of Saddam was meant to break the will of disgruntled Baathists, but instead March has been the second worst month for US casualties. Every declared security ‘victory’ is met by something worse, a never-ending catalogue of death and destruction. If this is how we define victory, I’d hate to see us taste defeat.

The danger is that it’s become a low-level insurgency, where there is no organized resistance or coordinating figure (in terms of conventional warfare doctrines): most of the Saddam loyalists on the ‘deck-of-cards’ have turned out to be a pathetic bunch, incapable of doing the dirty and dangerous work themselves. So if it’s not them, then who? One answer could be that we’re on the long, slippery slope of having to fight those born and bred Iraqi’s opposed to the occupation, and then we will (eventually) find ourselves on the wrong side of the liberation equation.

We haven’t reached this point and it won’t happen overnight, but if the security situation doesn’t improve, then the majority of Iraqi’s are going to be looking for someone else to provide the answer to the myriad of problems that confront them (from a lack of jobs to mob rule).

Will we still be liberators when tear gas or rubber bullets have to be used to break-up ever larger demonstrations? More worryingly, what happens if the attacks aren’t coordinated at all, but the work of local groups or even individuals acting independently of one another (and for a host of reasons) all aimed at undermining the legitimacy of the occupation. The farmer who had his crops bulldozed, the father who loses a child in the crossfire, the cousin who gets detained for no reason …. and on it goes. In other words, a quagmire that cannot be resolved militarily, where almost every action to maintain order brings its own unpredictable dynamic. On a strategic level, Chalmers Johnson saw this as the “blowback” effect, but in Iraq it seems to be a street-level, community centred issue that cannot be so neatly categorised.

Yes, we helped overthrow a despotic and evil regime. Is the world a safer place? Maybe, maybe not – it may be years, possibly a decade before we know how things will play out – hardly the clear-cut promises made before the invasion. Heaven knows what types of “blowback” we’ve let ourselves in for, and this is what makes the whole situation extremely volatile and problematic.

Building an independent and capable intelligence capacity is now a priority – the least we can do is start making some informed choices. Because if the current trend of politicisation and interference in our security and defense services continue, we will be dangerously exposed, as fearless, dispassionate advice will be hard to come by and lives will be lost as a result. That may be the most terrible and unconscionable legacy of the Howard years.

In the meantime, I guess we’ll arm ourselves to the teeth and spend billions more on security and defence programs, while the foreign aid programs we actually need to take the recruitment heat out of the terrorism problem (by providing people with a future through fairer trade, cleaner drinking water, better health care and enough food to eat) will be grossly under funded. A recipe to screw all of our futures. Welcome to Howard’s way.

In an ironic twist, the only Iraqi we’ve managed to safely house and feed is Saddam Hussein and the other cronies in US custody. The rest of the population are at the mercy of armed gangs, a 15000 strong unregulated (read mercenary) security force and an increasingly trigger-happy occupation force. Unemployment is rampant, petrol is in short supply and basic services are problematic.

Latham got one thing right. It’s been a fiasco from start to finish, whenever that might be. But what really upset me was seeing the closing minutes of the News Hour with Jim Lehrer (SBS) and the faces, ages and hometowns of those American soldiers killed in Iraq: 603 and counting.

We’re not allowed to see the flag-draped caskets, we rarely see the terrible injuries of those maimed for life, but one can’t forget those who have been asked to make the ultimate sacrifice in a conflict in search of a reason. Now we’ve been left with an insoluble problem, to leave or stay, and no clear idea which of these choices will make things worse.

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Sue Bushell and Terry Embling

The question the media disingenuously skirted last week – and which should and must become the essence of the entire debate is: what is “the job” and when will it be done? Is it when enough Iraqi “insurgents/freedom-fighters/resisters/guerillas/”terrorists”, not to mention the innocent civilians unlucky enough to get in the way, have been killed or captured?

Is it when the toll of American and Coalition of the Willing soldiers, contractors and mercenaries gets too great for the American populace to bear? Is it when Howard wins the next election? Is it when “democracy” is “granted” to the Iraqis? (a dubious proposition, as anyone who have been watching the machinations of Paul Bremer and the Iraqi Governing Council as they work to hamstring any future Iraqi government will understand). For another take on why Australia should withdraw military as soon as possible read Dennis Rahkonen’s piece ‘Fallujah: Graveyard of the Bush presidency’.

Perhaps the job will be done when Haliburton’s profits start to peak? Or when foreign corporations have seized control of the Iraqi economy?

Naomi Klein makes clear just how little control a sovereign Iraqi government will have over the future of the nation under the Bushite’s vision for its future.

We highly recommend TomDispatch, where if you subscribe you have delivered into your mailbox, free, five days a week, some of the most thoughtful, incisive, germane commentary on the Bush Administration, US Imperialism, the US Occupation in Iraq and the war on terror to be found.

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WHAT THIS WAR’S REALLY ABOUT

Chris Mardon

The story goes back much further than Kerryn Higgs suggests in Bush on the ropes: his awful deeds post S11, and the oil industry was influencing the US government long before Bush Jr. came along. The bookBlowback! by Chalmers Johnson points out that the imperious behaviour of the US is generating many future problems for itself, including terrorism.

The War on Afghanistan and the War on Terror have been portrayed in the media as responses to September 11, but the reality is different. The US was negotiating with the Taliban up to a few weeks prior to that event to secure their cooperation with neighbouring states in the construction and operation of oil and gas pipelines through Afghanistan. The Taliban refused to cooperate on the terms demanded by the US, so the Americans threatened to destroy them. They have done just that!

As in Vietnam, they have replaced the government with one of their own choosing. The new president of Afghanistan and one of his colleagues in the new government are both former employees of Unocal, the US company that wants to build the pipelines. Moreover, while opium production had virtually ceased under the Taliban, it has taken off again, and armed struggles between members of the Northern Alliance have resumed, sometimes with unwitting US involvement.

The following 2001 report comes from an oil industry web site via Asia Times Online. The Brisard book was originally published in French, but has since been published in English. It refers to secret negotiations between the US and the Taliban that continued until August 2001, and were broken off when the US issued an ultimatum to the Taliban. The “carpet of gold” statement is crucial to the whole argument about what really happened and why we went to war in Afghanistan.

What most people do not seem to realise is that 9/11 was a response to that ultimatum! It did not come out of the blue, and the US knew that it was coming yet they did nothing to stop it. Why? It has provided a credible pretext for the War on Terror, the attacks on civil liberties, and the attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq that they intended to carry out anyway if the governments concerned did not play ball. The US knows that world oil production is likely to reach a peak within the next few years, so they want to gain control of as much of the remaining oil reserves as they can by then.

The US has built a string of bases around Afghanistan to take effective control of the Central Asian region and prevent the Russians or the Chinese from exerting control there. They already had control of the Middle East, so they now control the area where about 70% of remaining oil reserves are located.

It is good to see some of the truth about 9/11 coming out, but I can assure you that there is still heaps to come! Incidentally, the Asian Development Bank is funding feasibility studies for the pipelines right now.

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US policy on Taliban influenced by oil, 20-11-01

Under the influence of United States oil companies, the government of President George W Bush initially blocked intelligence agencies’ investigations on terrorism while it bargained with the Taliban on the delivery of Osama bin Laden in exchange for political recognition and economic aid, two French intelligence analysts claim.

In the book Bin Laden, la verite interdite (Bin Laden, the forbidden truth), that was released recently, the authors, Jean-Charles Brisard and Guillaume Dasquie, reveal that the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) deputy director John O’Neill resigned in July in protest over the obstruction.

The authors claim that O’Neill told them that “the main obstacles to investigate Islamic terrorism were US oil corporate interests and the role played by Saudi Arabia in it”. The two claim that the US government’s main objective in Afghanistan was to consolidate the position of the Taliban regime to obtain access to the oil and gas reserves in Central Asia.

They affirm that until August, the US government saw the Taliban regime “as a source of stability in Central Asia that would enable the construction of an oil pipeline across Central Asia” from the rich oilfields in Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan, through Afghanistan and Pakistan, to the Indian Ocean. Until now, says the book, “the oil and gas reserves of Central Asia have been controlled by Russia. The Bush government wanted to change all that.”

But, confronted with Taliban’s refusal to accept US conditions, “this rationale of energy security changed into a military one”, the authors claim. “At one moment during the negotiations, the US representatives told the Taliban, ‘either you accept our offer of a carpet of gold, or we bury you under a carpet of bombs,'” Brisard said in Paris.

According to the book, the Bush administration began to negotiate with the Taliban immediately after coming into power in February. US and Taliban diplomatic representatives met several times in Washington, Berlin and Islamabad.

To polish their image in the United States, the Taliban even employed a US expert on public relations, Laila Helms. The authors claim that Helms is also an expert in the works of US intelligence organizations, for her uncle, Richard Helms, is a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

The last meeting between US and Taliban representatives took place in August, five weeks before the attacks on New York and Washington, the analysts maintain. On that occasion, Christina Rocca, in charge of Central Asian affairs for the US government, met the Taliban ambassador to Pakistan in Islamabad.

Brisard and Dasquie have long experience in intelligence analysis. Brisard was until the late 1990s director of economic analysis and strategy for Vivendi, a French company. He also worked for French secret services, and wrote for them in 1997 a report on the now famous Al-Qaeda network, headed by bin Laden.

Dasquie is an investigative journalist and publisher of Intelligence Online, a respected newsletter on diplomacy, economic analysis and strategy, available through the Internet. Brisard and Dasquie draw a portrait of the closest aides to Bush, linking them to the oil business. Bush’s family has a strong oil background, as do some of his top aides. >From Vice President Dick Cheney, through the director of the National Security Council Condoleezza Rice, to the ministers of commerce and energy, Donald Evans and Stanley Abraham, all have for long worked for US oil companies.

Cheney was until the end of last year president of Halliburton, a company that provides services for oil industry; Rice was between 1991 and 2000 manager for Chevron; Evans and Abraham worked for Tom Brown, another oil giant.

Besides the secret negotiations held between Washington and Kabul and the importance of the oil industry, the book takes issue with the role played by Saudi Arabia in fostering Islamic fundamentalism, in the personality of bin Laden, and with the networks that the Saudi dissident built to finance his activities.

Brisard and Dasquie contend that the US government’s claim that it had been prosecuting bin Laden since 1998. “Actually,” Dasquie says, “the first state to officially prosecute bin Laden was Libya, on the charges of terrorism.” “Bin Laden wanted to settle in Libya in the early 1990s, but was hindered by the government of Muammar Gaddafi,” Dasquie claims. “Enraged by Libya’s refusal, bin Laden organized attacks inside Libya, including assassination attempts against Gaddafi.”

Dasquie singles out one group, the Islamic Fighting Group (IFG), reputedly the most powerful Libyan dissident organization, based in London, and directly linked with bin Laden. “Gaddafi even demanded Western police institutions, such as Interpol, to pursue the IFG and bin Laden, but never obtained cooperation,” Dasquie says. “Until today, members of IFG openly live in London.”

The book confirms earlier reports that the US government worked closely with the United Nations during the negotiations with the Taliban. “Several meetings took place this year, under the arbitration of Francesc Vendrell, personal representative of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, to discuss the situation in Afghanistan,” says the book. “Representatives of the US government and Russia, and the six countries that border with Afghanistan were present at these meetings,” it says. “Sometimes, representatives of the Taliban also sat around the table.”

These meetings, also called Six plus 2, because of the number of states (six neighbours plus the US and Russia) involved, have been confirmed by Naif Naik, former Pakistani minister for foreign affairs. In a French television news program, Naik said that during a Six plus 2 meeting in Berlin in July, the discussions turned around “the formation of a government of national unity. If the Taliban had accepted this coalition, they would have immediately received international economic aid. And the pipelines from Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan would have come,” he added.

Naik also claimed that Tom Simons, the US representative at these meetings, openly threatened the Taliban and Pakistan. “Simons said, ‘either the Taliban behave as they ought to, or Pakistan convinces them to do so, or we will use another option’. The words Simons used were ‘a military operation’,” Naik claimed.

When exactly is ‘the job’ done in Iraq?

This piece was first published in the Sun Herald today.

 

G’day. Whatever you think of the merits of Mark Latham’s decision to pull our soldiers out of Iraq by Christmas, it sure has Australians focused on the war and whether John Howard should have ordered an Australian invasion of Iraq without the support of the Australian people.

Webdiary readers were split on Latham’s policy and on whether it would hurt or enhance Labor’s cause. I’m angry with Latham for making Labor the story instead of nailing Howard on his appalling judgement in sending us to war and his unforgivable deceit of the Australian people about why. Still, Latham has created a political flashpoint.

David Redfearn in Melbourne wrote: “Howard is a high roller and now, for the first time, he is up against another one. I met Mark Latham and am enormously impressed. This is a very high stakes game and the only way to play it is to take some risks; something the ALP failed to do last time. My team is up six points at half-time but there are still another two quarters to go. It’s going to be a bloody long year.”

Susan Metcalfe in Byron Bay thought we should ignore the politics and concentrate on the substance. “It is bleeding obvious that Iraq is a fiasco and we shouldn’t have been there in the first place. Whether a few hundred men stay or go is hardly going to help or hinder the reconstruction of the country.”

Guido Tresoldi noted my fear that Latham’s momentum against Howard had stalled since his “troops out” stand, “but this is the risk you get with Latham”.

“His positive energy placed the Howard Government under pressure, but the flip side is that making statements on the run can bite him back. That is in his character, and it’s likely to happen again.”

Tony Dummett in Beecroft agreed: “Latham is setting the agenda, not letting Howard continually spook him from behind in the race. Most importantly, Latham is refusing to blink. Few on either side of politics have stared back at Howard lately, and it’s about time somebody did.”

Ben McDuff said Latham had deliciously wedged Howard on a security issue “and ensured Howard can’t pull a swiftie just before the election and welcome home our troops. Heaven forbid, the odds must be relatively high that this year there’ll be either deaths to Australian troops in Iraq or some kind of terrorist strike here in Australia. If the former occurs, where does that leave Howard? He can’t bring them home because that would show we’ve been ‘cowed by terrorists’?”

But Wesley Folitarik thinks Latham’s made a big mistake. “Even right-wing Australians now realise we were duped into Iraq by the US on weapons of mass destruction. But Australians collectively have a strong sense of taking responsibility for their actions; hence, most Australians support the Liberals in staying put and helping clean up the mess. Latham put security and terrorism back on the agenda then handed the microphone to Howard! Political suicide.”

Shaun O’Brien agreed: “Latham has taken a stance on the troops, and giving excuses such as the defence of Australia is not much different to the Coalition saying: ‘We are going to invade Iraq because of WMD’. Both were lies covering the real reason for their actions. Howard lied to keep the US on side and the alliance intact. Latham is doing it to keep the polls in his favour and get the ALP into government.”

Andrew Prentice was frustrated that The Sydney Morning Herald pollsters found that 61 per cent of Australians believed our soldiers should stay ‘until the job is done’.

“What exactly is ‘the job’? Capturing Saddam? We got him. Finding WMD? You can’t find what was never there. Preventing terrorism? Exactly how will occupying Iraq do that?”

Max Phillips thought the poll was seriously flawed. “A fair poll would have asked: ‘Should Australian troops continue their deployment in Iraq?’

“Asking an emotive, loaded question like should they stay until the job is done makes the answer meaningless. I’m surprised only 61 per cent said yes. If the SMH had asked, ‘Should Australian troops be cannon fodder for American imperial conquest?’ you’d get an equally meaningless answer.”

Max is right. The dispute of substance between Howard and Latham is about WHEN the job is done. Is our job done when the US gives us the nod, as usual? When Iraq is secure? After the Iraqi people elect their representatives? Stay tuned.

Webdiarist’s verdict: troops out, please

What a week! Whatever else Latham did, he sure dragged the Iraq war onto centre stage in politics and lit a fire under it. There�s fire in the bellies of Webdiarists, too – with the added spice of a gender angle in our Iraq debate. Over to you, and have a good weekend.

 

The ten most read Webdiary entries in March were:

1. Why won’t Howard let us trust anyone? March 17

2. The American elections, the future of alliances and the lessons of Spain, March 15

3. Spain and Australia: the parallelsMarch 18

4. A rotten lousy disgrace, March 22

5. Whatever it takes: the Howard Government’s cash for comment play, March 24

6. Howard at end of credibility line on Iraq, March 16

7. Latham’s Iraq indiscretion ends honeymoon, March 30

8. Beware the leaky official, March 1

9. Anglo-democracy on trial, March 2

10. Is the government ethical? No comment, March 25

The top five referring web sites were antiwarmichaelmoorespleenvilleinformationclearinghouse and roadtosurfdom.

What are Australia�s international obligations in Iraq? Don�t expect Howard to tell you � he didn�t give a shit about that when he illegally invaded. And don�t expect Labor to tell you either � it supported international law before the war, but seems to have trashed it in deciding to bring our soldiers home by Christmas regardless. John Littler writes that �Professor Thakur is technically wrong in Latham’s pullout plan breaches international law: academic�.

�For some reason no one seems to have explained, Australia is not on the UN list of invading powers in Iraq, hence even though morally we should uphold our ethical obligations under international law. Legally speaking, if the UN hasn’t named us we are not technically required to uphold the obligations of occupying powers, ie legally we can pull out any time we like and US and UK can’t. Not that legality bothered them going in, of course.�

Peter Green in Marrickville, Sydney responds to Tamas Calderwood�s outrage at my statement in Latham’s Iraq indiscretion ends honeymoon that �according to some, the CIA played a part in ousting Gough Whitlam”.

It would be outrageous to assert absolutely that the CIA played a part in the end of the Whitlam era, but that was not said. Rumours of CIA involvement have circulated almost since the day of the Dismissal and that one version of the story holds that the CIA began campaigning against the Whitlam Government well before the end. The theory was that it was the threat to US activities at Pine Gap, which triggered active US efforts to remove Whitlam.

I was finishing an undergraduate degree at Sydney University in 1975, and heard many theories as the academic year drew to a close.

US President Ford had a reputation as decent and rather inept, and the rumours had the CIA acting without close presidential supervision. However, it did appear that there was considerable unease among senior US officials and politicians over the perceived turn of the Australian Government in a “Communist” direction. One reason for the rumours was the US’s penchant for interfering in political processes worldwide – more often by clandestine methods than by direct action, which is why the CIA mostly acted without direct Presidential mandate. It made subsequent official denials more plausible.

And what would the American public have done, if their government had tried to interfere with an Australian election? If they disbelieved the denials, surely a little extra pink paint tipped on Gough would have brought the American public to their feet to cheer another victory for US democracy against the forces of world communism. Because, after all, the Americans are a deeply democratic people.

Personally, I doubt that the CIA had a great deal to do with the 1975 dismissal and the subsequent 1976 election because I doubt that they could have done anything effective and remained a hidden force. At most, they may have provided advice, encouragement and, indirectly, limited funds for the Coalition campaign.

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NOTICEBOARD

For updates on Iraq, James Quest recommends Laura Flanders� radio show ‘Your call’ (see Naomi Klein ‘live from Baghdad’ on March 31) and democracy now, especially Robert Fisk�s �Most people dying in Iraq are Iraqis”.

AFP reports that 71 percent of Portuguese voters want Portugal�s 128 national guards in Iraq withdrawn, including a slim majority of ruling centre-right Social Democrats voters. Portugal sent troops to Iraq in November, where they operate in southern Iraq under British command.

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WOMEN AND WEBDIARY

Harry Heidelberg

What is Susan Metcalfe on about? I never understand this whole gender thing. Didn’t we go through that debate on Webdiary in 2001 and say it didn�t matter? (See Webdiary women.)

I never think about what sex the contributors are. To me they are just people carrying on about stuff. What difference does it make if the contributor�s name is Paul or Pauline? How bizarre!

The only people who have a right to feel alienated from Webdiary are those to the right of centre because of the overwhelming left wing slant of the forum. Even those people shouldn’t feel alienated because I know you will give them a run if they have a coherent point to make.

People assume I am a man because my name is Harry but I could be a woman. My real name could be Harriette. Gender is relevant when we speak of gender specific topics but otherwise, I don’t get the relevance of gender and Webdiary contributions.

I get the feeling that Susan would like to contribute more often but feels so alienated by the men so she can’t. Susan, relax. I’d like to contribute LESS often but can’t tear myself away from it because I am over-engaged in it. I don’t care about anyone else; I just want to have my say. Is that a bloke thing?

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Peter Whitford

I read Webdiary nearly every day and am used to the constant animosity between the sexes when gender related topics are discussed. But what on earth are these two women raving on about?

Susan Metcalfe: �After trying to read Latham’s troops recall: your say I�m feeling disconnected, alienated and unable to contribute to Webdiary within the parameters of this and many of your recent debates. I�m not entirely sure why, but I suspect the reasons are also connected to Webdiary having fewer contributions from women.�

Marilyn Shepherd: �Has Webdiary become an exclusive boy’s club debating the war in Iraq and missing the real story?�

Their arguments relevant to the topic show them to be intelligent, articulate people. Better bring back the entertaining, provocative, gender related topics, because these two are obviously in withdrawal.

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Nick Garben in Narrabundah, ACT

Just a thought on why women aren’t participating in the commentary on Latham v Howard. Isn’t sport predominantly followed by men?

For a long time, politics has been primarily about winning a race. The most successful teams are the ones that have more people barracking for them.

I’m not blaming Latham. The biggest mistake Beazley made last series was not playing the ball. I thought then that the only way Labor could have won the Sept 11/ Tampa election would have been to have opposing policies.

Latham is right to recall the troops. Labor had a poor image on security anyway, so he won�t lose anything. At worst he’ll be seen as a bit of a goer. (I’m picturing a lumpy front-row forward barging up the middle of the ruck, and all the punters going “oouwh” as he cops an elbow in the head � or in Howard�s case, maybe a knee in the groin.)

Howard�s also doing the right thing by his team – pulling out the old “unAustralian if you don’t stick it out” move, sure to get the viewers heads nodding in appreciation (even if it doesn�t get their brains whirring with critical analysis � God forbid!)

This is mere sideline commentary as important to the real interests of the people in our nation as a call by Ray Warren. But that�s politics.

Or at least that�s part of politics. The other part is that these policies our present or future governments develop for mainly polemic purposes sometimes actually get implemented!

Here’s where Latham’s right for the right reasons. Australia should never have joined an unprovoked attack on another nation, even though it, like many others, was ruled by a despot. And we shouldn’t stick around there like shrapnel in a festering wound. (Repairing the devastation we’ve been party to by sending medical, engineering and financial aid is another matter.)

To our shame, Howard’s “I’m with America” policy resulted in Australia’s first and only offensive war. From the beginning the War stank of American imperialism and was always going to lead to an increased risk of terrorism.

One of the greatest crimes Howard has committed � along with his latent encouragement of racism and division in our society � has been sending of Australians to this war, and not only because of the wrongness of the war, the death and chaos it brought to innocent Iraqis, or the risk of our soldiers dying needlessly. He sent his fellow Australian to kill people, both the guilty and the innocent.

The effect on a person of having to do the deeds of war is well understood by those who fought in last century�s wars. At least in some of those a soldier had the conviction that what he did was for a worthy and unavoidable cause.

Even though it’s only a game here, politics in some places is deadly serious. So I�m barracking for Latham.

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THE POLITICS OF OUR TROOPS

Sharon Burner

After June 30, with a sovereign Iraqi administration in place, the game will be very different. If Iraq is looking safer at the end of the year, the troop withdrawal will seem logical and Latham will get kudos. If Iraq has become a basket case, Latham�s criticisms will also seem justified.

Once an Iraqi administration is in place, Latham could go to Iraq and meet them regarding requests for our troops to stay, and could amend the ALP’s troop position by acting the statesman.

The single most important thing is for Latham not to back down or revert to crudity. In the back of my mind Tampa has been reverberating – Beazley attempted to ‘look tough’ by aping Howard, but in the electorate ‘toughness’ doesn’t turn upon substantive policy but presentation. If Latham backs down he’ll look like Beazley.

I think it’s possible that if Kim had said ‘no’ to Howard on Tampa he would have copped heat in the media (just as Latham is now over the troops) but the message ‘I stick to my guns’ would have been set in the voters minds. What did people remember? ‘Flip flop’ and ‘no ticker’.

Latham’s foreign policy address this month will demonstrate that the ALP is going to run an Australia first foreign policy – ‘WE decide where our troops go, and the terms in which they go’. Ring any bells?

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Antonio Yegles

Your stand on the issue of the week took me a bit by surprise. Et tu Margo?

I thought the press was again reacting all too predictably to the drumming up of a sideshow by Howard on the qualified comments by Latham on the troop pullout of Iraq. The Canberra Press Gallery hacks are desperate to get the kudos to be the first to call the end of Latham’s honeymoon. They went all out. They went big. They missed the bigger story.

Howard’s agenda was to attack Latham on foreign affairs by alleging he cannot be trusted to lead the country as he makes policy on the run without briefings and consultation. Yet the issue is straightforward. If you look at what the two sides have in common you realise that:

1. Both want the troops home as soon as practicable.

2. Both have made or are making references to time lines.

3. Both agree that the troop withdrawal should not happen before the hand over of sovereignty.

The differences are under what circumstances this should happen. Howard says when the job is done, whatever that means. Latham says when Australia’s obligations have been fulfilled, hopefully by Christmas.

Howard saw his best chance to nail Latham. With the polls behind him, he went all out and yet again totally overplayed his hand.

Surely Latham is allowed to state his position on Iraq as Opposition Leader without being attacked like this. It a ludicrous argument to say that Latham’s position plays into the hands of the terrorists. What, more than actually taking our country into an illegal war under false pretences to curry favour with the US? This is desperate politics from a desperate man.

There is an interesting pattern emerging here. The Howard Government has frequently used emotive labels such as terrorists to smear their opponents. Remember the Reith/Howard links between refugees and terrorists after 9/11? (See The end of multiculturalism?)And the anti-war is pro-Saddam line? Now the Iraq pullout is pro al Qaeda. I suppose in Howard’s world being called U.S. deputy sheriff brings him not ridicule and hatred but kudos in our region.

In Howard’s World the war on Iraq made the world safer, brought democracy to the Middle East, fixed the Israel/Palestinian issue and brought us a lucrative Free Trade Agreement with the U.S. and lucrative contracts in Iraq. What an idyllic world Howard lives in. Is he bordering on dementia? No wonder the bombings in Madrid upset this beautifully constructed world. Politically the most damaging line was from Keelty, that the Iraq war increased the risk to this country.

The contrast to last year could not be greater. Howard was the man of steel, Teflon man, untouchable and unbeatable. A master politician at the top of his power. He was above politics and above the Governor-General. Within a few months of Latham�s election, Howard�s World has fallen apart. He is panicking.

This was best illustrated by this weeks� shenanigans in Parliament. The all conquering all-powerful Howard threw everything he had at Latham and failed even to land a serious blow. On the contrary, he was wrong on Labor Party policy and wrong on the nature and substance of Intelligence briefings by the Opposition Leader. Howard, the master politician, took on apprentice Latham and Latham trounced him.

Latham�s first big test, his baptism of fire, has shown a man who fights best with his back to the wall. He turned disadvantage into advantage by his logic, arguments and charisma. Latham is a true leader who can withstand serious pressure.

If Latham actually planned what eventuated this week by pre-empting Howard on Iraq, ATSIC and Baby bonus, he is on the way to becoming a master politician. He is more than a match to Howard. And that is an achievement. The honeymoon is over because the gloves are off. Bring it on!

*

Tony Kevin

“As Mr Howard insisted the troops must stay, he said an Australian Army officer would play a key role in coordinating the fight against Iraqi insurgents. Major-General Jim Molan will take up a position later this month as deputy for operations for the multinational force coalition. He will be the most senior Australian officer in Iraq, responsible for planning missions to find and destroy terrorist cells, patrol areas from which anti-aircraft missiles may be fired and provide protection to the Iraqi and coalition community.” Today’s Canberra Times.

So the little chap, helped by his obliging Washington buddies, is up to his old tricks again. In his obsessive lust to hang onto Australia�s prime ministership at any cost, our little mate is again trying to rack up the national testosterone level and lead with OUR chins.

Australians don�t see through Howard. We don�t see the simple truth of what Whitlam helped us to understand 40 years ago, after so much blood had already been spilled in Vietnam, that persistence in folly is no virtue. A new generation of Australians needs to relearn that truth.

We don�t want to see what Howard is doing in his national security politics – making all of us his hostages and making some of us his victims. We have all the facts available to us, but we don�t want to register them.

We know Howard�s senior ministers ignored three well-founded security alerts and issued no warnings to our Bali holiday-makers.

We know that Howard instructed the ADF to help plan the US invasion, many months before he told us. We know he secretly ordered our SAS in to fight in Iraq, only 12 hours into a declared 48 hour ultimatum period, contrary to all the laws of war, and that he hid this fact from us for 10 months afterwards.

We know that he set up early high-risk combat roles for our ADF so that it would not have to take part in the messy post-invasion phase but could honourably rest on its combat laurels and go home.

We know that as the US occupation came under increasing military pressure, he has gradually totally reversed that position over the past 12 months, to the point that we are now to play a key role in coordinating the fight against Iraqi insurgents.

We know all those things, yet we encourage our media to continue to trivialise and misrepresent the important issues: that Australian soldiers should not be in Iraq, that we have no right in international law to have occupying troops there, and that the time to leave is now, before any of our people die in battle with Iraqi insurgents seeking to liberate their country from American occupation.

We courteously continue to give this man the benefit of our doubts. We let him pontificate about our national values and we fondly pretend that there is a “real issues” debate going on now between Howard and Latham on the Iraq War. Some of us comment that Howard might be “holding his own” in this debate, or even “starting to win back a bit of ground”.

We get lost in the detail of who said what to whom, and we let the issue be falsely framed for us again.

***

WHAT IS IN AUSTRALIA’S INTERESTS?

David Eastwood in Sydney

There appear to be two main arguments as to whether we withdraw our troops from Iraq or not:

1. We have a moral responsibility to �get the job done� because we went in there in the first place.

2. We should stop supporting an illegal invasion and cut and run before Iraq becomes a quagmire.

The first argument is attractive; it speaks to a nation�s need to take responsibility for its actions. �Sure, we shouldn�t have gone in, but we did, and now that we�ve made a mess we should clean it up.�

This argument doesn�t stack up. Our force in Iraq is a token force, as it was in the war. Our troops are not in the front line, they are precious few in number and they perform duties best described as �back office�. This is not to denigrate their contribution � no doubt they are carrying out their assignments peerlessly.

We�re �half pregnant� � there, kinda sorta, but not really – because our troops are there as political pawns. Politicised again. Their practical contribution has to be trivial, their numbers and roles ensure that.

No, their presence allows the US government to claim that Australia, promoted in the field to a significant sovereign state, is with them in this campaign, thus helping justify the whole episode. But, if we really were serious about this, surely our troops would be far more numerous and far more substantially engaged, like in the first Gulf war, like Afghanistan.

It suits our government to be half pregnant. It would not take many body bags to have voters clamouring for withdrawal. The government needs our troops protected as it knows their role is domestically contentious, so it�s part of the quid pro-quo.

Cut to just before the war, and the crucial phone call: �John, if you send in a contingent we can point to we�ll guarantee to keep �em safe, and as icing on the cake, we�ll throw in a free trade agreement you can point to as proof of the benefit of the US alliance. But wait, there�s more, you get to strut the world stage as part of the Coalition of the Willing.�

Let�s swallow that argument. What we need to do is get pregnant. Let�s make a real contribution. Troops, battalions of them. Planes, ships, tanks, Eddie Maguire, the whole catastrophe. If we are going to clean the mess up we surely have a moral duty to make a real and substantive contribution. Mr Howard, over to you.

The moral stream of the second argument is pointless. We did support the war, and now are enmeshed, albeit minimally, in the mess left behind. It�s already a quagmire. More troops have dies since the war �finished� than during it, surely the Key Performance Metric. If there are kooks out there looking for an excuse to finger Australia as an enemy of Islam and a terrorist target for overturning Saddam�s secular regime, they�re on a winner.

Surely also it�s only a matter of time until an Australian is killed in Iraq, then another, then another. What�s the point? What practical difference will it make to the end game and the welfare of the Iraqi people if we pull out? Surely too the risk of �collateral terrorism� just mounts as we stay there?

*

Phil Webb in Miranda, NSW

A year ago we were told that the “job” was to eliminate the weapons of mass distraction in our “war on terror”, despite the absence of links between Iraq and September 11 – the event which instigated the Western version of “jihad”.

We can’t find the weapons, and senior officials have all but admitted they are not going to find them. So the job IS done.

The restructuring of Iraq was never part of the original Australian brief for a non UN sanctioned invasion, so what “job” is it that Australian taxpayers are meant to continue funding and Australian soldiers are meant to be putting their lives on the line for? The installation of Western style democracy in a land that has just been smashed to pieces by Western forces?

We weren’t told that in the beginning. It became the “task du jour” as soon as it became apparent that the lack of WMD would cause some red faces on both sides of the pond. Whilst political pinball is played with ordinary Australian people, these facts remain:

* We haven’t found what we originally went in there for

*We haven’t found Osama bin Laden in Iraq (or anywhere else)

* We have killed more than 9,000 Iraqis who had nothing to do with 9/11

* We have lost more than 400 coalition lives * We will be asked to put our hands in our pockets and chip in for the rebuilding by US appointed contractors of US destroyed Iraqi infrastructure The whole thing is a Monty Python sketch with an evil makeover. Meanwhile, Latham and Howard furiously debate over whether “home by Christmas” means home by Christmas full stop or home by when the undefined “job” is done. Not on the basis of whether it’s in the best interests of Australia and the Australian people (or the Iraqi people), but on the basis of political jockeying as to who presents the best “holier than thou” image in the run up to an election. And we let them get away with it time and time again. As the saying goes, “History has to keep repeating itself because we just don’t listen”.

***

THE BIG PICTURE

Simon Martin

I read Webdiary every day and am amused, angered, touched, incensed, pleased or annoyed by it. It is always topical with points of view that get left behind in the mainstream media. I�ve been reading all the pieces recently regarding Iraq, troop withdrawal and WMDs, and they�ve got me thinking of the bigger picture.

Who are the people benefiting from the War on Terror, and from the policy of the Bush Administration? The answer depends on the lens through which you view this conflict.

History is littered with leaders who raped their country’s wealth to sustain their own and their cronies� wealth and life style at the expense of their citizens. We need look no further than Saddam, for evidence of this. We all know the familiar story of people who amass riches through pillaging a country’s economy and resources.

Is the current policy of the Bush Administration any different, in its ends, to the policies of such leaders? We see a U.S. budget deficit of something like $700 billion, and for what? So that Dick Cheney’s mates at Halliburton can gain contracts in Iraq worth $22 Billion? So that there will be massive amounts of spending on research and development of new battle field weapons and that Bush’s major campaign donors from McDonnell-Douglas and Boeing will have huge amounts of government money pouring into their armaments accounts?

Who is paying for all this? American taxpayers are footing the bill, and the children of America will be paying off the massive interest bills on government loans to fund the difference between tax receipts and government spending.

Bush and his neo-cons are taking the current and future earnings of the country and tipping it into the coffers of the major donors to the Republican Party. This makes Bush a very powerful man and the heads of these companies (and their shareholders) much richer at the expense of Americans who can�t afford health insurance, their own home, or even to put food on the table.

***

MEDIA BIAS?

Phil Kendall

What we need is a “bias recognition kit”. We heard Peter Thompson on ABC Radio National today start a question with “How embarrassing is it…?”

This encapsulates the assumption that something was embarrassing, an assumption Thompson should *not* be making (the ABC is powered by *our* dough and it’s gotta be impartial).

Thompson’s “embarrassing” statement is logically equivalent to “Have you stopped beating your wife?”

Thompson is a shameless & continuous serial offender. But you know as well as I that there are LOTS of his ilk! We need to start naming and shaming

Media don’t get it on Latham and Iraq

Debate on Iraq is seriously rocking Canberra. Is Latham�s high-risk confrontation on the troops a winning card or a losing hand? Has Howard come a cropper by leaning on public servants to improperly finger Latham?

 

Webdiarist Max Phillips points out that the SMH poll question was seriously flawed. The question, Should our troops stay in Iraq �until the job is done�, begs the question in dispute: When is the job done?

Max writes:

�I don’t know what the agenda of the Herald editors is exactly, but that poll they commissioned was rubbish, bordering on push-polling. A fair poll would have asked “Should Australian troops continue their deployment in Iraq?”. Asking an emotive and loaded question like “should they stay until the job is done” makes the answer meaningless. I’m surprised only 65% answered yes to that question. If the Herald had asked, “Should Australian troops be cannon fodder for American imperial conquest?”, you’d get an equally predictable answer that would tell you very little about people’s real attitudes.�

I�m surprised that neither Latham nor the media has yet pressured Howard to define what he sees as �the job� to be done. After an election in Iraq? When Iraq is secure? When the Yanks give permission for our troops to come home?

Good stuff from Webdiarists today, including complaints that Webdiary is off the rails and overrun by men, and some big hits on my opposition to pulling out our soldiers when transitional �sovereignty� is transferred to U.S. appointed Iraqi �representatives� on June 30.

My favourite email so far is from David Redfearn: in Northcote, Victoria:

Howard is a high roller and now, for the first time, he is up against another one. I have now met Mark Latham and I am enormously impressed. This is a very high stakes game and the only way to play it is to take some risks; something, for better or for worse, the ALP failed to do last time. To use a footy metaphor, my team is up six points at half time but there are still another two quarters to go. It’s going to be a bloody long year.

And here’s a request for info from Tamas Calderwood in London:

You have written another provocative piece, which I much enjoyed reading, however, there is a point which I must take you up on. You say: “And remember 1975, when, according to some, the CIA played a part in ousting Gough Whitlam?”

That is an outrageous comment. What evidence do you have to support this claim? Do you suggest President Ford ordered this or was the CIA acting alone (under the leadership of George HW Bush)? Are you saying the 1975 election did not represent the will of the Australian people? And what would the consequences have been if America was found to be interfering with a key democratic ally in the midst of the Cold War?

I lived in America for over three years and found it a wonderful, deeply democratic society. An imperfect one, to be sure. But I know Americans would have been just as outraged as Australians if their government had tried to interfere with an Australian election. Do you really think the government of the most democratic country in the world is so out of control – and has been for so long?

***

NOTICEBOARD

John Boase writes: �I have just encountered the work of Jessica Stern of Harvard University � brilliant. See her articles on al Qaeda and Pakistan at The protean enemy and Pakistan’s Jihad Culture. Anyone reading them will see that Iraq is a sideshow and that ‘Whack and thump’ won�t work. Her message is not the one the Bushies or John Howard don�t want to hear, more’s the pity.�

I recommend Globalisation and terror by Helena Norberg-Hodge, a director of a fabulous NGO called the International Society for Ecology and Culture. She writes:

�To really understand the rise in religious fundamentalism and ethnic conflict we need to look at the deep impacts of what might be described as the jihad of the global consumer culture against the diversity of living cultures on the planet. Doing so not only allows us to better understand the September 11 tragedy, but to see a way forward that lessens violence on all sides.�

Tony Kevin has reviewed the play on the unthrown children inquiry at See this play. It�s on in Sydney at the Performance Space, 199 Cleveland Street, Redfern, until April 11. Bookings 02 9698 7235, inquiries 0411 330 654.

***

WHAT�S WITH YOU BLOKES?

Susan Metcalfe

After trying to read Latham’s troops recall: your say I�m feeling disconnected, alienated and unable to contribute to Webdiary within the parameters of this and many of your recent debates.

I�m not entirely sure why, but I suspect the reasons are also connected to Webdiary having fewer contributions from women.

Why we are having this debate at all? It is bleeding obvious that Iraq is a fiasco and we shouldn’t have been there in the first place. Whether a few hundred men stay or go is hardly going to help or hinder the reconstruction of the country.

Where are our priorities? The creation of a more peaceful Iraq does not hinge on Australia’s continuing military presence or absence. And correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think anyone noticed us pulling out of Afghanistan.

Why are the contributions from our media and on forums like this one so reductive and reactionary? It�s such a waste of time for the media and politicians to engage in endless debate and opinion pieces on the subject, elevating such crap to a level of such �importance�. Thousands of words take us further into the mire of superficial political manoeuvring.

Whatever happened to calling a spade a spade? When the politicians shout we don’t always have to jump. Where is the vision?

Why do we need a military presence in Iraq? What is the issue here? If we are genuinely concerned for Iraq to get back on its feet, then our contribution and our responsibility to Iraq is surely not measured by the numbers or presence of our military. Peace building and reconstruction have a far wider scope than the employment of military resources.

I’ll keep checking Webdiary, but I�d really like to hear from other women on why they are not contributing.

***

Marilyn Shepherd

Has Webdiary become an exclusive boy’s club debating the war in Iraq and missing the real story?

One of the boys got the point – just one. Latham has done Howard on this and the behaviour of the government gets more and more despicable.

Howard�s endless abuse of the public service and defence forces and of the spooks – still under investigation – sums up his attitude. The short chap thinks he is king and we his mere subjects.

Last night in Iraq dead people were hauled through the streets, hung and beaten by Iraqis who don’t want the U.S. stealing their land, their oil and their sovereignty. How long before enraged Iraqis raid the pretty palace next to the airport who discover that Australia locks up Iraqi refugees?

Think about it – for the last 12 years we have been shoulder to shoulder with the US and Brits while genocide has been committed on the Iraqi people. Why would they thank us? Why would they want us in Iraq?

Could someone answer this simple question: If 850 troops coming home won’t make us safer why does keeping them in Iraq make them or us safer? Some of your correspondents sound like they are in kindergarten playground.

Each day our soldiers are in Iraq they are exposed to the deadly affects of depleted uranium used by the US. Will Howard help them when they are ill? Considering this nation�s disgraceful treatment of the kids who were forced to go to Vietnam and were bombed with Agent Orange, I don�t think so.

They face cluster bombs in almost every suburb – are they cleaning them up so the kids of Iraq don’t have their limbs blown off? No, they are protecting diplomats while they negotiate blood soaked trade deals.

For 12 years the mission was closed and for 7 of those years any Iraqi nationals who needed help from us was denied diplomatic assistance and forced to run for their lives, to be treated like criminals for “jumping the queue” we closed.

Realistically there are plenty of soldiers in Iraq and they don’t need ours. They need millions in food, water supply repairs, jobs, electricity – they need the money to do it themselves.

We are treating the educated and intelligent Iraqis like peasants from the mountains of Afghanistan, which has fallen into total disaster.

Grow up Australia’s boys, we had no bloody right to act as judge, jury and executioners in Iraq and we have helped to murder over 1 million people already. Enough is enough.

***

ON THE FENCE

Guido Tresoldi in Brunswick, Melbourne, ALP member

One thing that I really like about Webdiary and your columns is that sometimes I am surprised at your ideas and opinions.

One of these was your piece Latham’s Iraq indiscretion ends honeymoon. When someone more progressive than the ALP in many instances castigates Latham because he wants the troops back in Australia I take notice.

I do agree with you on that Latham moving on foreign policy is moving on territory that the conservatives are seen as being better than the ALP, and perhaps forcing Rudd to defend a position he was not comfortable with.

I also agree somewhat that the talk about ‘defending Australia’ was populist, however Latham is fighting a Prime Minister that made populism an art form.

Latham is trying to win on Howard�s turf, and at least Latham�s �scare mongering� as you call it, is about a terrorist threat that does exist (despite Howard denying this and shutting up those bureaucrats who disagree). It is more honest that scare mongering about asylum seekers using latent racism.

My strongest disagreement is with:

�As Howard rightly said speaking to his motion in the House of Representatives today that troops should not be withdrawn before the job is done, that would mean hauling back our troops from East Timor and the Solomons too. Stupid.�

There is a substantial difference between Iraq and the other two examples. The troops in East Timor and the Solomons are there at the invitation of the government of those countries; they are not forces of occupation that have contributed to a war waged using lies. In East Timor our troops are there under the auspices of the United Nations.

You write:

�Is Latham really saying the danger to Australia is so acute that we need 850 troops to join the 51,0000 troops stationed in Australia?�

But you can also argue, �Is Howard really saying the need in Iraq is so acute that we need 850 troops to join the thousands of troops at the USA disposal?�

We are not needed in Iraq because the USA needs extra personnel. We are there to contribute to a charade from the Bush administration that the troops stationed in Iraq are somehow �multinational�.

The position that once the Iraqis have their own government �our job is done� is perfectly acceptable. The United States created this mess and they are now realising the enormity of their folly. Yes, we were an invading force. Yes, we have obligations under the fourth Geneva Convention. But once the Iraqis have their country back we don’t necessarily need soldiers there to help.

The reason why Iraq may need military personnel longer than expected is precisely because the folly of Bush and co has attracted murdering fanatics from everywhere. We should help, but not as part of the ‘Coalition of the Willing’.

Australia should do what the new Spanish government has done � say its troops may remain if US forces to contribute under to UN military force to rebuild Iraq. (MARGO: That�s what I reckon!) This should include Arab countries to undermine al-Qaeda propaganda that western forces occupy a Muslim country.

I detect at the end of your article anger towards Latham that he stuffed up. (MARGO: You�re right there!) You fear that he had momentum against Howard and it may unravel. But this is the risk you get with Latham. His positive energy placed the Howard government under pressure, but the flip side is that making statements on the run can bite him back.

That is in his character, and it is likely that it may happen again. Yes, we have to accept that Latham support in the electorate may evaporate, as it did with Beazley last time.

***

MARGO, YOU�VE LOST IT

Tony Dummett in Beecroft, NSW

In calling for the troops to be brought home by Xmas, Latham is heading for the finish line – election victory – instead of worrying what Howard, behind in the race, will do next. It is the first sign of independence that Labor has shown in a long time and consistent with Labor party policy. Until now, Labor just didn’t have the courage to state it so unequivocally.

A couple of metaphors – one military, one sporting – suggest themselves.

First, the battle of Gettysburg. That too was a decision to join battle made on the fly. Both sides were looking for a fight and, as forces almost accidentally marshalled around the village of Gettysburg, they realised that it was as good a place as any to see who could win.

Second, the 7th America’s Cup race in 1983. Even though Australia II was in the lead after the last buoy, the skipper, John Bertrand, at first let Dennis Connor decide when and where tacking was to take place, almost to the point of becoming fouled-up in the spectator fleet. Connor was leading from behind, dictating the race from a position of weakness, as Howard has been doing for too long, freaking-out Labor with empty threats and a reputation for being “strong on security”. Yet everyone was wondering what the “wily old fox”, Connor, would come up with next. Eventually, Australia II simply refused Connor’s last tacking invitation and headed for the finish line. It was only then that the world saw how much in front our Australia II was.

Like Australia II’s John Bertrand did then, Latham is calling his opponent’s bluff. Like Union cavalry general Buford did at Gettysburg, he has decided it’s time to stand up to his tormentor. Latham is showing us all that the next election will be a genuine race, a real battle. He has kept his nerve and picked a difficult policy area – you could say the most difficult for a modern Labor leader – in which to take on the government. If he can win on this one, Labor could romp in.

On the international law question, it may well be that Australia has a duty to clean up after the mess it made in Iraq. But try telling that to the majority of Iraqis who want foreign troops out of their country and who are killing them daily to emphasise that point.

Iraq is a quagmire where we are not welcome, and any policy that purports to put a time line on withdrawal is better than one that, like Howard’s, has developed into commitment without end. Anyway, what’s to say we can’t discharge any residual duties we may still have in other ways than sending man and women in uniform to be targets of Iraqi insurgents? Do our service people have to be mutilated and hung from bridges to satisfy our consciences?

This area – national security – might not have been the best place for joining battle last week, but battle is joined. It has developed into a handsome chance for Labor to restore its credibility in an area commonly held to be the sole personal province of Howard and his gang. Latham has committed himself well so far and may even be winning. He is chipping away at the edifice of invincibility that Howard’s spin merchants have built up around their master.

Latham is setting the agenda, not letting Howard continually spook him from behind in the race. Most importantly, Latham is refusing to blink. Few on either side of politics have stared back at Howard lately, and it’s about time somebody did.

***

Phil Hewett

The government wallows in hypocrisy and the media just doesn’t get it, as ever colluding with Howard to smear another opposition leader instead of debating the injustice and criminality of Howard’s invasion of Iraq and his contemptuous treatment of the UN.

Margo, why ask the question “Can we trust Latham?” in Latham’s troops recall: your say Who trusts Howard? He’s in power and the mob accept him, so what’s the big point in asking for trust in the Opposition leader all of a sudden? Sounds like another Howard wedge to me. (MARGO: This is my point � why did Latham, soaring on the trust scale with his �new politics� of honesty and openness � allow himself to be trapped by Howard into looking like just another politician?)

It�s clear that since September 11, the US is blind to world opinion and most Australians will not tolerate dissent or difference, instead craving conformism and paternal leadership. When issues get too complex they retreat to prejudice and turn away in contempt.

I�m beginning to think middle Australia bloody well deserves John Howard. They�re captive to his security blanket of middle class conformity saturated in prejudice, fear and self-interest.

For Pete’s sake Margo the question you asked is not relevant. Howard should be howled down and frog marched out of Parliament each and every time he mentions honesty, trust, and integrity. He�s made an art form of deceit, lying and obfuscation and propaganda – why should we wallow in it with him?

***

Ian Patterson in Queanbeyan, NSW

No matter how you look at it, we are in Iraq as an army of occupation following an illegal invasion. Our troops should not have been there in the first place; they should not remain there now. Latham’s policy is correct. Get our troops out.

The UN should be providing assistance to Iraq to redevelop, including peacekeeping forces of which we could be a part. But not as an occupying army. Never again!

***

Michael Ilkehan

Margo, I think you are overestimating PM. I am sure Latham is on strong grounds in his arguments and will emerge the winner on this debate. Facts are on his side. He can’t lose.

Our contribution is only symbolic and won’t make much difference on the ground, except for its political impact on George Bush. The argument that we should finish the job sounds hollow.

***

Ben McDuff, on debut

Latham has wedged Howard – delicious, Labor wedging JWH on a *security issue* – and ensured Howard can’t pull a swifty just before the election and welcome home our troops on the docks.

Further, heaven forbid, the odds must be relatively high that this year there’ll be either deaths to Australian troops in Iraq or some kind of terrorist strike here in Australia.

If the former occurs where does that leave Howard? He can’t bring them home because that would show we’ve been ‘cowed by terrorists’? Latham can bring them home because he’s announced he�ll do just that. Plus, Labor didn’t want to send troops in the first place. If the latter occurs, it proves Latham’s claim that we need our troops here protecting our borders.

A question for you. Is Latham the new Keating or the new Hewson? (Margo: Keating without the pretensions.)

***

James Quest

I love Webdiary but you annoy me sometimes. I find your positions on Latham’s policy to pull out the troops infuriating! The point must be made: the ‘help’ in nation building that the Coalition of the Willing is giving the unfortunate people include:

 killing Iraqi civilians every day and being killed in return every day. The violence is getting worse and the Iraqi people are becoming more and more hostile to their occupiers.

 giving military support to the American led privatisation of Iraq’s economy.

 not providing the basic essential services, fuelling popular support for the resistance forces.

With ‘help’ like this any policy to withdraw the occupation forces is welcome.

***

Tony Kevin

This William Maley essay is the best thing I’ve read on bringing home the troops. It touches all the bases of argument, and neatly answers Ramesh Thakur’s point on international law.

The other point I would make – I’m 61 with a long memory back to Vietnam – is the way Howard exploits all that emotive rhetoric “Australians don’t cut and run”, we “stay the course”, we “stand firm”, we “hang in there”, we “stay till the job is done” because he knows all this stuff plays to such a deeply ingrained almost instinctive Australian value. We learned that stuff from our pioneer days, our survival often depended on fortitude.

Politicians only have to start using that rhetoric and the substance of the argument goes out the window as we all start salivating emotionally. Holt, McMahon, Gorton, etc all used that trick in Vietnam years.

It took Whitlam to have the courage to say – “comrades, this is all bullshit – persistence in folly is no virtue!” That is what Latham is trying to do now.

Here we are a generation later, going around the same mulberry bush again. Iraqis don’t want our armed soldiers there any more than Vietnamese did in the 1960s. Sending civilian aid teams after the politics of Iraq is legitimised by withdrawal of US occupation and a real act of self-determination is another issue altogether, but conflation of the two issues leads to foolish policies.

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James Woodcock, ALP member

I am with Mark on this one. Bring the troops home. We should have never been there in the first place. Once again, the fact that the invasion and occupation of Iraq have nothing to do with fighting terrorism seems to have been lost.

Sure 65% of the population think they should stay there. This support would quickly change if civil war erupts or a truck load of our men and women get blown up.

Mark’s pronouncement that he wants to mirror Government policy and abolish ATSIC is much more disturbing than his stance on Iraq. Aboriginal affairs needs a radical rethink, but from the scant detail he seems to want to take us back to the pre 1967 position where Aboriginal Welfare was the function of state governments.

Colonial and state governments bear a lot of the responsibility for the mess we are in today. They either practiced extreme neglect -as spending money on Aboriginal services is not a vote winner or they brought us the social engineering disasters like taking children away from their mothers and communities in the hope of literally breeding out the Aboriginal genes.

The improvement of health education and housing for Aborignals should be a national endeavour, provided directly by the federal government. That is the only way you can override parochial prejudice and self interest.

I think we all need to be on our guard. After eight years of Howard the last thing we need is another politician who is willing to play populist politics with marginalised groups.

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NOPE, LATHAM�S THE LOSER

Wesley Folitarik

I have read many articles suggesting that Mark Latham’s honeymoon period is over thanks to his poor performance on the ‘”troops out of Iraq” pledge.

Some claim the “honeymoon” period is typical for new fresh faces entering the political arena. I add that Mark Latham is also in the extremely fortunate position of being a “wartime opposition leader”. This should be ensuring him an long and extended honeymoon period. Traditionally governments don’t last these wartime elections. Latham’s failure to convincingly dominate a besieged wartime leadership (Howard’s Liberals) has highlighted the Labor Party’s and Latham’s shortcomings as a serious political threat to the Liberal Government.

It�s the same old problem – the Labor Party lacks real policies, basing their claim to government on opposing Liberal policy. Australians see this.

Labor long beat the drum that security was not an election issue, and tried to put domestic issues back on the agenda. This may have been the best course to run against a besieged wartime government where you have a historical advantage. Now a drastic about face sees Latham talk of “homeland security”. The public is sceptical.

Now Latham is on the offensive vowing to bring our troops home from Iraq to protect Australians. Big mistake. Even right wing Australians now realise (although few will admit it) that we were duped into Iraq by the US on WMD. But Australians collectively have a strong sense of taking responsibility for their actions; hence most Australians support the Liberals in staying put and helping clean up the mess.

So Latham puts security and terrorism back on the agenda then hands the microphone to Howard! Political suicide.

A reeling Latham then launches a pre-emptive strike of his own on ATSIC – back on the domestic front after suffering heavy casualties on Iraq and security. This manoeuvre is backed up by another pledge on cash for kids. Reinforcing the home front.

After a brief foray into international issues, Latham has proven he is not capable of leading the country responsibly on Iraq and security.

It seems Latham and Labor are failing to dominate a besieged wartime government. If Labor can’t achieve that, they won’t fair very well at the polls either when economic policy brings many swingers back the right.

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Shaun O’Brien

Margo, it’s funny seeing the transformation of Latham “the hero” to Latham “the typical pollie” within a week with you. Is the strong vitrol because you see that Howard may remain in office or that Latham is no better (or perhaps worse than Howard) at the end of the day? My money is on the latter.

Latham has taken a stance on the troops, and giving excuses such as the defence of Australia, in my eyes not much different to the Coalition saying “We are going to invade Iraq because of WMD”. Both were lies covering the real reason for their actions. Howard lied to keep the US on side and the alliance intact. Latham is doing it to keep the polls in his favour and get the ALP into government.

So who do we choose between? Howard lied to keep Australia’s long term future safe by keeping the US on side. What benefit do Latham’s lies achieve?

In the short term it does nothing for Australia’s defence, as you rightly pointed out. In the long term it puts the US offside and encourages the terrorists.

If you are a long time suffering ALP supporter, would you be happy to support a side that lies to get ahead even after serving up to the Coalition for their indefensible lies? Willing to do anything for victory perhaps?

I wonder if Kevin Rudd still thinks he is bound by Lathams call to be “honest” in politics. His leader was quick to get rid of that label when the chips were down, but he forgot to tell his troops.

Is it a coincidence that Latham’s abysmal national security gaff occurred when the only ALP member worthy of advancing informed security matters is in Western Australia recovering from a medical problem? The ALP is sorely missing big Kim’s input. Rudd is probably on his knees praying for a quick recovery.

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Andrew Prentice

I’m nonplussed. Most of the rhetoric around Mark Latham’s announcement that he intends to recall Australian troops in Iraq was whether this was a politically expedient move in terms of his election chances. And 65% of Australians disagree with him, saying the troops should stay till the job’s done.

What exactly is “the job”? Capturing Saddam? We got him. Finding WMD? You can’t find what was never there, a fact most from George W. to John W. are reluctantly realising. Preventing terrorism? Exactly how will occupying Iraq do that?

I wonder how many of the 65% might change their minds when/if an Australian service man or woman is killed in Iraq. When did this country become so screwed up that a majority of people would disagree with a proposal that might save lives and distance this country a little from a “superpower” determined to prove that phrase in a military sense, no matter how many enemies they make?

I’m going travelling later in the year, and I’ll be introducing myself as a New Zealander.