Watch closely in the parliamentary debate on Afghanistan this week for how often the speaking MPs remind you of their support for the troops.
For a long time in Australia discussion of military issues has been haunted by the legacies of the Vietnam era. Commentators and politicians alike tread carefully when they critically discuss defence issues, lest they appear to be criticising Australian troops. In our federal parliament this has meant that the military has become a bipartisan issue — largely ignored unless something particularly tragic or scandalous occurs.
In reality bipartisanship has often been a co-word for laziness in Australian military policy. The Defence Department employs over 70,000 Australians and will spend more than $26.8 billion this financial year. That’s the fifth biggest chunk of money in the federal budget and it deserves just as much public and parliamentary scrutiny as spending on health and education.
In the past weeks both the prime minister and opposition leader have shown the military is neither their area of expertise, nor their area of interest. They’ve both gotten away with political squirming on Defence issues that wouldn’t have been allowed in any other portfolio.
For Julia Gillard and Stephen Smith the Chief of the Defence Force, Angus Houston, is their Maginot Line. Watch closely in the parliamentary debate this week just how often the government uses Houston’s advice to buttress their Afghan policy.
We wouldn’t allow the government to hide behind the Secretary of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship on its people smuggling policy in quite the same way. Yet in military matters, we tolerate government MPs who don’t seem to know the difference between a bayonet and a bain-marie, and who think drones are only found in the Senate.
It’s not that long ago that former defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon was storming NATO conferences in Europe demanding our allies offer up more troops for the Afghan war. There was no hiding behind the Chief of Defence Force then, nor should there be now. This is the government’s policy on Afghanistan and they need to own and justify it fully.
The Coalition has struggled much more in articulating a coherent policy on our military involvement in Afghanistan. The decision to lock in a Defence policy based on an anonymous email sent by a soldier was ill considered. David Johnston talks to lots of people in the military, yet his policies often struggle to rise beyond the viewpoint of the private soldier. As a result, there is no strategic opposition policy on military matters — least of all Afghanistan.
Tentative forays by Tony Abbott into Afghanistan policy are now referred to as “considerations” for government, not alternative policy. The Coalition doesn’t offer “considerations” on the NBN, ETS, or BER. It should offer carefully formulated alternative policy on all our military matters — including Afghanistan.
Soldiers both here and abroad are completely comfortable with robust debate on military matters. But they want it to be informed and considered. Our soldiers need to be non-partisan professionals — able to carry out the wishes of the government of the day, whatever its political persuasion.
Our politicians though are bound to contest each other in our Westminster style parliament. From this contest should emerge the best policy ideas, subject to as much public scrutiny as possible. There’s nothing wrong with politicians being partisan on military matters — in fact we require them to be.
All of the parliamentarians who speak on Afghanistan this week will support our soldiers, no matter what they think of our involvement in the war. Let’s hope they enter the debate equipped with a detailed knowledge of both the military and Afghanistan, and a willingness to aggressively seek out the best Defence policy for Australia.
*James Brown served with Special Forces in Afganistan, receiving a commendat, and commanded a cavalry troop in Iraq. He’s currently a military associate with the Lowy Institute’s International Security Program.
Why don’t they just speak the plain truth?
We’re there because we want America to continue its protection of us, if ever we need it.
It is about managing the Alliance; nothing more, nothing less.
The good thing is that America will soon want to quit this war, and when they leave, we can leave, if not a little sooner.
Osama moved to a cave in Pakistan after Dubya bombed the bejesus out of him.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.
Time to declare Victory and Go Home!
Thanks James Brown. A very good article.
Perhaps the Lowy Institute’s International Security Program could look into how three steel-framed towerblocks collapsed in their own footprints at virtual freefall velocity on September 11th 2001.
The US Government’s explanation is that the the giant buildings – WTC-1, WTC- 2 and WTC-7- collapsed as a result of fuel fire. Since this has never happened before or after in human history, it is encountering growing scepticism – including more than 1,300 qualified engineers and architects demanding a credible new investigation.
Given that Frank Lowy and the WTC leaseholder Larry Silverstein were business partners in the 1990s – and Westfield America itself held the lease of the WTC 1 & 2 councourse on September 11th 2001 – the Lowy Institute is exceptionally well placed to come up with cutting edge research into this crucial topic.
After all, 9-11 remains the pretext for Australia’s continuing military occupation of part of Afghanistan…
Why are we there?
What are we trying to achieve?
What does success lool like?
This is no time for rational questions.
Great article James. You and others have made the whole debate far deeper and better informed, and sparing me personally no end of frustration. And thanks to Crikey, the Rethinking Afghanistan has been brilliant.