Well, if you’re going to announce futile military adventures I guess the morning of April 25 is the time to do it. On the day that we remember the thousands of lives thrown away in an effort to make Turkey British, Department of Home Affairs head Mike Pezzullo announced we might soon be going again. This time to get between China and Taiwan apparently. Or, to put it more exactly, China and another bit of China.
Pezzullo took the opportunity for portentous quotation, intoning that, “in a world of perpetual tension and dread, the drums of war beat — sometimes faintly and distantly, and at other times more loudly and ever closer”.
And he warned that, “we must search always for the chance for peace amidst the curse of war, until we are faced with the only prudent, if sorrowful, course — to send off, yet again, our warriors to fight the nation’s wars”.
Well, another chance for Australians to lose their lives in an Asian war to suck up to the US. It’s good to include something for the Vietnam vets. The drums of war are beating because people are beating them. It is idiotic to have to say so, but apparently necessary.
For what purpose? The first would appear to be, as always, domestic politics. With a big-spending budget coming, the Morrison government is pivoting away from the right-wing brand of “responsible” budgeting and austerity to one of economic nationalism. To do that requires an enemy outside, and what better way to help us forget about debt and deficit than a threat from the Asian north?
Then there is the abruptness of the announcement by Pezzullo, a defence public service lifer, over at Home Affairs. Doubtless he has nothing but Australia’s best interests on his mind, but if you needed a strong leader as permanent head in times of war, well you’d want someone who called it…
This playing of unexpected tunes on the war drums goes deeper into the jungle than… I might jump off this metaphor now. We are having to once again play to the illusion that we would be some sort of force multiplier alongside US forces in the region, when our role would simply be to legitimise US aggression in someone’s domestic waters, as a global act against a rogue state.
Pezzullo’s sabre-rattling has coincided with Morrison’s announcement of the US Darwin base and its vital role in defending freedom, etc etc. This is hilarious. This must be the fifth or sixth time this base, miniscule in the scheme of things, has been “announced”, by four different governments. It’s like we’re marching the same soldiers through the city gates round and round to give an impression of power. Talk about force multiplier — we’re the potoroo that roared.
In all of this palaver almost none of the commentators here or in the rest of the foreign policy establishment have bothered to note the very basic fact that Taiwan is part of China. It’s as if it’s an inconvenient detail in moving the ships around the map. It may be loaded with US weapons and drawn tightly into an alliance with an imperial power, but so what? It’s as if the Chinese had de facto occupied Tasmania after premier Jim Bacon had declared independence and were now treating Bass Strait as international waters.
Taiwan may have once been a colony (Han Chinese began arriving in the 1600s as workforce for the Dutch) but it’s been part of China since 1662. If its small remaining indigenous population rebel, we’ll side with them. In the meantime it is clearly Chinese, and a political takeover by Chiang Kai-Shek in 1949 does not independence make.
That this has barely been mentioned in the mainstream coverage — which simply, uncritically, takes the “realist” point of view of the think tanks and front groups like the ASPI — shows the degree to which questions of China are still considered within an imperialist mindset.
To what degree is that steering our response? It’s always an easy get to think of these establishment figures as dim-witted and unreflective given other motives — such as Taiwan’s near-total control of complex microchip production, on which militaries and global companies rely. Trouble is, the establishment is dim-witted and unreflective, as the farcical stupidity around the Iraq war demonstrated.
China has always been going to retake Taiwan, and no doubt it will not be a happy event when it does. Drawing us into it as a loyal deputy is not about a real contribution, it’s about building a coalition for the war beyond that, which sorts out the world order going into the future and would surely be a nuclear affair (in which we would have a strong chance of being major collateral damage).
If nothing else it serves as a reminder of what Anzac Day is for — not to commemorate our ancestors in past death, but to enrol our children in the death to come.
This chap holds a position as an ‘apolitical’ department head. Why is he permitted to make a speech of this nature? Has the politicisation of the Public Service brought us to this – a public servant with no relevant qualifications or responsibilities takes it upon himself to plunge headlong into areas requiring skilful knowledgeable and sober diplomacy? And the government, all the while, blithely unconcerned.
Pezzullo is dangerous.
I would have used the word fascist.
More emotive (see Albright’s book; the commos have been displaced from under the bed) but considerably less accurate.
It would be more instructive to consider how a particular member of the Five eyes and the Quad are insisting that the members act as a bloc compared to independently which was the initial intention.
Pezz worries me, Dutton even more. It was only a few governments ago that even the LNP Foreign Minister, Downer, was advocating that we need not take sides in a war over Taiwan. In fact it was the policy that we would not be drawn into a war where we would lose either way. Downer is now looking savant in comparison with these warmongers.
This is most depressing reading, GR.
It was one of the few times I have ever agreed wholeheartedly with Downer. Unfortunately none of the current sausage fingered drongos in the cabinet have anything like the diplomatic finesse necessary to walk an independent but friendly path between the US and the PRC. I am sure Morrison has stage managed this latest bout of sabre rattling as a way of getting an issue for a pre election reset to get away from the flagrant covid bungling and the rape and bullying allegations that have sunk the daggy dad with the female voters.
The latter part of your post is contradicted by the Trump phenomenon. However, I agree that an anti -PRC theme could work. The ALP out-manoeuvred yet again. Are congratulations to the NLP premature?
This is the same sort of roach (Pezzullo) who said they were going to fight the commies in Vietnam with every drop of my blood.
I do not like this war monger Pezzullo.
Why doesn’t the LIB MP hierarchy forcefully remind Pezzullo that he is only a Public Servant not representing the Australian Government who should SHUT UP?
Because they know that this kind of jingoistic, war mongering crap wins elections for the likes of them.
More flags, please!
Precisely. As the departmental head of the dept of Home Affairs, Pezzullo is just a public servant and as such should definitely not be engaging in public commentary, but especially not in relation to an issue as sensitive as the China relationship has now become. For an him to be giving a running commentary on the likelihood of a war with a major power and trading partner is outrageous and very dangerous. He needs pruning. Can we look forward to him getting the same treatment for talking out of turn as has been meted out to Witness K or Richard Boyle?
Guy, at last some intelligent commentary re China in Crikey. Thank you.
The rhetoric around the ‘Chinese threat’ is now so deafening – and we as a nation are so stupid – that I am really fearful we will soon be embroiled in another mad Asian war beside our failed state ally.
Well, maybe not stupid but really, really desperate to be seen as relevant by others rather than as what we are – a big but insignificant player on the international stage – and keen to believe our own narrative of our strength and importance. The constant bleating about ‘world-leading’ this and ‘world-class’ that betrays this neediness.
Three things
Taiwan seems a bit indifferent to their own defence, military service is only four months.
If its policy of four months compulsory military service for all eligible male citizens means Taiwan is “a bit indifferent” to its own defence, how would you describe Australia’s policy of zero compulsory military service? And the UK? And the USA?
Australia, UK and US are not under any threat. Compare it with the 26 countries that do practice it.
Agreed in the main. Whatever anyone thinks, Taiwan (nice place) is toast. For the PRC there is only ONE China.
“But then we are confused about this – consider our position on the Catalonians wanting separation from Spain.”
Well,you pointed out something here that apparently needs repeating (and many will deny it): The only guiding principle is political expediency. Who cares about what’s right and/or true. What suits us best is what counts. In the case of a small and insignificant country like Australia it’s what suits best our ‘great friend’ the US. Hopefully, otherwise… ops…
Bietan jarrai!
I think Taiwan thinks it is the legitimate ruler of China. Are you willing to support their claim?
Perhaps we should buy our subs on Aliexpress.
Euskadi Ta Askatasuna!