What’s the purpose of the parliamentary debate on Afghanistan? Perhaps, from the government’s point of view, its only purpose derives from it being forced on it by the Greens courtesy of a hung parliament. After all, neither Labor nor the Coalition saw fit to have a debate on the conflict throughout the nine years since we joined the first attack on the Taliban regime, despite the great cost in lives, health and money.
For supporters of our continuing involvement in the conflict, it should be an opportunity to try to start reversing a deep-seated community unease with, or outright opposition to, our role in that country. Yesterday’s offerings from the prime minister and leader of the opposition won’t reverse anything.
It was Tony Abbott who came closer to providing a convincing justification for our continuing involvement. His was a much better speech. He seems to understand, or at least understand better than the prime minister, that people can’t just be given an intellectual understanding of what we’re doing there and how it aligns with our strategic priorities. That Afghanistan can’t become a haven for terrorists again, and that we need to stand by the United States, are intellectual arguments, and have been repeated ad nauseum over the years. In a conflict in which “victory” is defined by outcomes like a trained Afghan army, or a reasonably stable governing coalition of crooks and warlords, voters need something concrete to focus on if their support is going to be gotten back. Both leaders correctly connected the conflict and Australians killed in Bali, and on 11 September 2001, and elsewhere by Islamic terrorists, but neither emphasised the point.
Abbott actually worded it much better in his address to the joint party room yesterday than he did in his speech, noting that terrorists who had killed Australians had trained in Afghanistan. That’s an important way to connect this conflict with what’s important to voters, to put some substance on the argument that Afghanistan can’t be allowed to become, in Abbott’s silly phrase, “Terrorism Central”.
Abbott also turned the criticism of neo-imperialism and imposition of western values on its head, saying the Taliban and al-Qaeda were the ones seeking to impose their values, and were the ones engaged in imperialism. He rightly didn’t stray into justifying the war based on the Taliban’s human rights record, but tried to put a more vivid face on the enemy we’re fighting.
He also sought to row back from previous attempts at politicisation. The Coalition’s muddled position on force levels, Senator Johnston’s denigration of the Chief of the Defence Force and his and Abbott’s gleeful joining-in of criticism of the charging of ADF personnel all suddenly became “questions for the government” rather than opportunistic attempts to score points on one of the most important issues facing Australia. It was a shameless rewriting of recent history by Abbott.
Neither Ms Gillard nor Mr Abbott succeeded in offering a compelling case, or anything particular new, except to affirm that we would be involved in one form or another in Afghanistan for many years to come, even if our current force level “transitions” to a lower level.
One word doesn’t make or break a speech, but the prime minister’s use of words like “transition” was of a piece with the dry, cerebral nature of the argument she mounted. That’s not to say she delivered it in a dry or cerebral way by any means, but the content itself lacked anything that would engage voters, particularly that half, or more, of voters who think we should get out now. And neither she nor Abbott engaged with the key issues that will surely be raised by critics of the war like Andrew Wilkie and Adam Bandt: why so many Afghans regard the allies’ presence as the real problem, rather than the insurgency, and how the conflict can be ended and stable, if not democratic or non-corrupt, government achieved without engaging the monstrous (and by Abbott’s lights, imperialistic) Taliban.
The government and the opposition’s only offer on the future was a guarantee of a long, costly involvement by Australia, no matter how quickly any victory, or anything that can be spun as a victory, comes.
If the government is serious about trying to turn around voter sentiment on the conflict, a Parliamentary debate isn’t enough — indeed it’s virtually irrelevant except to the press gallery. The prime minister and Stephen Smith and Kevin Rudd should be out in the community talking about the conflict a lot more, in a concerted effort to explain why we are over there and the conditions under which we expect to come home. If Rooty Hill RSL and the Broncos Leagues Club were good enough for community engagement during the election, they should be good enough now for the government to put its case.
Instead, there’ll be a succession of politicians inside the bubble in Canberra, offering a succession of worthy, and doubtless heartfelt, speeches, ignored by 99% of voters. There’s a very great disconnection between our political class and voters over the war in Afghanistan, and this debate isn’t going to do anything to fix that.
You can see what Abbott and Johnston are doing with the ADF, playing “Opportunity Knocks” politics – so why can’t the “political correspondents trained in journalism” working as salesmen and check-out chicks at the “Limited News Co-op” selling their party to the electorate?
It’s not as though “Defence” is as trivial as “insulation” and those opportune allegations of Garrett’s being culpable of “industrial manslaughter”, under that scheme, is it? That got such a good unimpeded run, there too?
What is the case for war again? Not found in this article, nor in the speeches of our killer political warriors.
Just to make my voting “sentiments” clear.
The war learning block
===
Twenty one soldiers dead are not enough,
for the sacrifice needed by the US good.
Many more are required by Tony the Tough,
his idea of history is bathings in blood.
Speaks the Australian Prime Minister,
with war lies, the people are fed,
might is right, while left is pure sinister,
war is wealth taken from the dead.
Not enough natives have been slaughtered.
Never counting for them, not even bulk flesh.
Would the war stop if the Taliban were dead,
when the US terror cause is always kept fresh?
Politicians hawk old terror around as new.
War is always felt as terror, with no choice.
Its the assassin that rips family life apart.
alien invader that steals the peoples voice.
New terror is multiplied by war,
from the wars the US created so pure.
Extremists are made by serial abuse,
so the war industry always has a future.
Peace brings plenty, plenty breeds with power,
power leads to conflict, conflict lies in war.
Victory and defeat are both appalling,
the means and costs are losses soaring.
After the land is ruined, survivors maimed,
a hollow peace is from horrific shock.
Survivors did not earn their peace.
War is ignorant of its learning block.
What a most gutless performance from Gillard.
We all expected it from that Lover of War, Abbott… so that’s no shock, but somehow we thought there might be just a glimmer of hope that Gillard would stand up and deliver something contrary to this disgraceful pill-box of War mongering bipartisanship.
But it looks like ” Jezebel “Gillard has got no guts at all and is content to go on parroting the international agenda of genocide by stealth against the Pashtuns and all Afghan people.
My God!!! bring on a referendum on this calamity and expose the sham known as Australian politics and show it for what it really is….both houses are just an extension of US Foreign Policy.
How can Jezebel and Abbott ever escape the Fires of Hell?
The Taliban and Al Qaeda are engaged in imperialism? Not by any definition of imperialism I’ve ever heard. Merely trying to impose values on others does not make one imperialist, and the Taliban for one are virulently nationalistic and have stated over and over that they have no interest in international affairs.
As for me, I trust the collective wisdom of ACBAR, who have been in Afghanistan since 1988 and may know a thing or two:
” it may be that the sooner the troops withdraw, the better it will be for the people of Afghanistan”
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/10/20/3043118.htm
Bernard,
You said it yourself – the government doesn’t see any political mileage in this, either for them or the opposition. It’s not a burning political issue, and given (as Crikey’s editorial noted) that the almost certain outcome of everything is that the (in your words) monstrous Taliban will be integrated into whatever government is formed, there is no soaring narrative possible. This is not an issue to try to inspire the public on. Once upon a time, when something positive might have been possible with respect to Afghanistan, before the Iraq invasion, you might have had a point if it came to mobilizing Australian public opinion to prevent a Vietnam style demoralization. Any such time is past, there are only ‘dry cerebral’ reasons for staying the course now. If the public turns against our mission in Afghanistan, we’ll pull out. The situation in Afghanistan will not be markedly changed regardless of what we do.
I was one who thought that Afghanistan was a justifiable war. I had reservations that there was any possibility of a successful outcome from the beginning. Whatever chance we had is gone. All that remains are bad and worse scenarios. I, personally, think we should stick it out in the hope of extracting a slightly better government/army for Afghanistan, but there is so little left to hope for I fail to see how any politician can legitimately gee-up the Australian public, without resorting to lies or exaggeration.