What will be the basis in international law for any Australian participation in airstrikes on Islamic State positions in Syria? What evidence will the government provide, beyond rhetoric about the barbarity of IS, that intervention will make Australians safer? Will our intelligence agencies be allowed to provide adequate detail of their assessment of what impact Australia’s participation will have? And, most of all, will our Parliament debate Australia’s role in such an intervention?
Members of Congress in the United States — from both sides — have already demanded that the expansion of the United States mission in relation to IS be debated and authorised by Congress. “We all share concerns about the Islamic State’s brutal tactics and further destabilization of the region,” the group wrote. “But current military operations now underway in Iraq appear to be beyond the scope of these limited purposes, and even greater expansion is under discussion. These are serious matters that require congressional debate and a vote on whether to authorize them.”
Indeed. Parliament must be permitted to discuss any involvement by Australia in attacks on Islamic State militants, and whether they are in Australia’s national interest. At this point, there is no evidence that IS presents a threat to Australia, despite the relentless hype about its barbarity. If the government has evidence otherwise, let’s see it, and Parliament can debate whether it is sufficient to justify committing Australian forces back into the Middle East.
IS’s barbarity is more than just “hype”. Those severed heads and cold blooded executions are real.
So were the WMDs, Mr Calderwood.
ianjohnno, Are you seriously doubting the 10s of thousands of Iraqis, mostly Christians, evacuated from Mosul? I think there’s probably a little more to the evidence than there was for WMD.
totally agree with the points made by Tamas Calderwood and mdsmedia. Crikey’s editorial is total drivel. To label the actions of the Islamic State as rhetoric and relentless hype is an insult. Australia should adopt the same basis in international law that the Islamic State follows. Or is Crikey suggesting that Australia should ignore the IS invasion of Syria in the hope that it will go away. Dream on! Do not insult subscribers or you will find many will become former subscribers.
What I saying is that, on past performance, the US, UK and our own government can not be trusted. There was lots of “plausible” evidence for WMDs and many of us fell for it.
If the reports are correct, then we helped cause it so we must help, but I will require evidence from reputable sources if such entities still exist.