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Editorial: Greens introduce Private Senator’s Bill – the Defence Amendment (Parliamentary Approval of Overseas Service) Bill 2020.

By Paul Barratt AO, AWPR President

For Australians for War Powers Reform the high point of a very busy year has to be the introduction on 7 December 2020, by Greens Senator Jordon Steele-John, of a Private Senator’s Bill – the Defence Amendment (Parliamentary Approval of Overseas Service) Bill 2020. This has to be the high point because it goes to the very heart of what we have been campaigning for – the relocation from the Executive (effectively the Prime Minister) to the Parliament of the power to deploy members of the Australian Defence Force into international armed conflict, or into situations that could foreseeably lead to hostilities.
 
Our key criteria for appropriate legislation include:

  • It should require a current resolution of both Houses
  • There should be suitable provision for emergency action by the Executive
  • There should be a carve-out for routine military activities that are not likely to lead to hostilities (e.g., secondment to foreign military forces, attachment to an Australian consular or diplomatic mission, on a vessel or aircraft engaged in operations during which hostilities are unlikely to occur, for purposes of education and training, and for purposes related to the procurement of equipment or stores)
  • There should be a requirement for regular reporting back to the Parliament.

 
This draft legislation, which is currently before the Senate, meets these criteria.
 
This Bill was initiated by the Australian Democrats and supported by the Australian Greens, who took carriage of the Bill after 2007. It is the latest iteration of a Bill first introduced into the Senate in 1985. Regrettably, it has never received the respect or attention it deserves. For example, in 2010 the representatives of the major parties on the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee decided it wasn’t worth bothering to have hearings on it, and the Bill was not debated by the Senate. In 2015 the major parties defended leaving the powers where they were because that was the long-standing practice; there was no debate about whether the long-standing practice had served us well.
 
What has happened since that time, however, is that the Australian Labor Party, at its December 2018 National Conference in Adelaide, passed a resolution to the effect that an incoming Labor Government would in the life of the first Parliament conduct an open public parliamentary inquiry into how Australia goes to war. This in our view represented real progress because it would have provided an opportunity for those who would have us believe that a requirement for Parliamentary approval of overseas ADF service is either undesirable or impracticable to present their arguments in public and have them tested in public, under oath. We say that none of the standard arguments hold water (read more), but don’t take our word for it – let’s have an open public examination of the issue based upon the facts.
 
Deploying the Australian Defence Force into international armed conflict is the gravest decision a government can make. It follows that how we make the decision to do so is itself a matter of great consequence. We therefore urge Senators and MPs from all political parties to treat this legislation and the important issues it seeks to address with the seriousness and respect it deserves. If there are shortcomings in the legislation let us identify them on a dispassionate and rational basis, and propose amendments to deal with them.
 
To the ALP in particular we say, “Here is an opportunity to have a dry run at that Parliamentary inquiry that was contemplated in 2018 – an opportunity to weigh up the arguments for and against, and put a future Labor Government in a better position to make informed decisions about it”.
 
To all parties we say, the Australian public is entitled to expect our Parliament to be a place where serious people debate serious issues with courtesy and respect. Do not let us down on this important issue.
 
Read More 

Feature Articles 

2020: Marketing and Mythologies
Jack Worthy

In a year beset by a global pandemic, attendant economic instability, a tumultuous US election, and foundering global diplomacy, reflection inevitably trends to what has been tested, what has been tried, and what is true. For Australians, as with many the world over, 2020 has understandably been defined by the ravages of Covid-19 and the strains it has placed on our democracy, both domestically, and on the global stage.
Read More »
 

Hands off Iran
Dr Alison Broinowski

Iran has been on the US most-hated list for a long time. That shouldn’t make it an enemy of Australia. If either the outgoing or incoming president of the US should attack Iran in the coming weeks or months, Australia will be challenged to live up to Marise Payne’s claim when visiting Washington in July, that our foreign policy is independent, and respond accordingly.
Read More »

Media Bites 

Fifty years of Foreign Affairs: the anaemia problem 
Graeme Dobell,  The Strategist

Effective diplomacy can help us avoid numerous problems including the worst of all, War.

But diplomacy will fail badly if it is systematically starved of funds over several decades.

Journalist Graeme Dobell charts the decline in this article for “The Strategist”.
Read More »
 

How Will Iran React to Another High-Profile Assassination?

Ariane Tabatabai, Foreign Policy
The recent assassination of Iranian nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, has increased instability during the chaotic final days of the Trump administration.

Ariane Tabatabai examines the latest incident in the ongoing hostilities and whether it jeopardises a return to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with a transition to a Biden presidency. 
Read More »

Greens, AWPR resume 35-year-long fight for parliamentary powers over armed conflicts
Chris Woods,  The Mandarin

After their most recent failed attempt in 2014, the Greens have initiated a fresh push to decentralise war powers to broader parliamentary approval. Introduced by Senator Jordon Steele-John, the move seeks to capitalise on strengthened public support for the proposed reforms.

Read More »
 

The Anzac legend has blinded Australia to its war atrocities. It’s time for a reckoning

by Martin Crotty & Carolyn Holbrook, The Conversation

The mythology of the Anzac legend has influenced Australia’s perception for decades. In light of the horrific allegations committed in Afghanistan, this “Conversation” piece details the history of our military conduct and the pathways moving forward.
Read More »

Warrior Culture - Special Forces referred to the Australian Federal police

Julian Morrow,  Radio National

Following the completion and release of the Brereton Report, Julian Morrow discusses the cultural flaws of the Special Forces with AWPR's Paul Barratt AO, David Kilcullen and Samantha Crompvoets.

Read More »
 

Australian Threadbare Diplomacy in Conflict

Dr Tania Miletic & Professor John Langmore, International Affairs

An increasingly complex geopolitical climate requires a robust diplomatic presence to achieve “sustainable peace”. Funding to DFAT and foreign aid must be better prioritised to compliment military spending according to Dr Tania Miletic & Professor John Langmore.
Read More »

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