"Here's looking at you, kid." But what does Jacinda Ardern see when she looks at the Australian PM, Malcolm Turnbull? A friend and ally? The dissimulating representative of an arrogant and aggressive regional bully? Or, the ruthless commandant of a terrifying collection of fetid tropical concentration camps?
WHAT DOES IT MEAN when otherwise intelligent people look at
something – and don’t see it? How do people train themselves to misperceive –
and therefore misrepresent – the reality before their eyes?
Paul Simon’s song, ‘The Boxer’, explains it like this:
I have squandered my
resistance
For a pocketful of mumbles,
Such are promises. All
lies and jest.
Still, a man hears
what he wants to hear
And disregards the
rest.
Faced with the deepening humanitarian crisis on Manus
Island, why is the New Zealand Government, like the boxer, only seeing what it
wants to see, and disregarding the rest?
What should our new government be seeing?
First and foremost, it should see the Australian
Government’s policy on illegal immigration by sea as an exercise in imposing
immediate cruelty to achieve long-term kindness. Assailed by the victims of
corrupt criminal enterprises: the desperate men, women and children being sent
out in flimsy boats, foundering on the high seas and drowning; successive
Australian Governments have embarked upon a programme of extreme deterrence.
Refugees and economic migrants attempting to circumvent
Australia’s official immigration policies, by sailing there illegally, will be
treated with the utmost harshness. Without the slightest regard for age or
gender, they will be interned in fetid tropical concentration camps; brutally
mistreated; and informed, coldly, that under no circumstances will the
Australian Government ever permit them, or their offspring, to set foot on
Australian soil.
And, it’s worked. The terrifying example presented to
potential “boat people” by the inhabitants of the Manus Island and Nauru
detention centres has had the desired effect. The criminal middle-men have
found fewer and fewer individuals and families willing to pay them the huge
sums of money they had previously been able to demand for a journey to
Australian shores. People smuggling has become uneconomic. The leaky boats have
stopped sailing and their passengers have stopped dying.
When criticised, the Australian Government simply points to
the situation in the Mediterranean. The European Union’s “humanitarian” policy
of rescuing and receiving boat people has resulted in a huge expansion of
people-smuggling. Every week, thousands of refugees and illegal migrants set
sail from North Africa for Spain and Italy. Of those thousands, many hundreds –
men, women and children – drown at sea.
On 17 June 2017, the British e-newspaper, The Independent, reported that: “More
than 2,000 migrants have died attempting treacherous boat crossings to Europe
so far this year”. That number must now be approaching 4,000.
These are the numbers that the Australian Government points
to as justification for the astonishing cruelty of its policies. The so-called
“Pacific Solution” may not be pretty to look at, runs the official argument,
but it saves lives. Mothers’ lives. Children’s lives. “If we gave in to the
demands of our critics,” say the Australian authorities, “we wouldn’t just have
detainees, we’d have blood, on our hands!”
In the authorities’ eyes, the actions of the Australian
navy, in intercepting the people-smugglers’ vessels and towing them back to
their departure points; and the harsh internment regimes subsidised by the
Australian state; are not only the delivery mechanisms for effective policy,
but they are also entirely morally defensible. By their reckoning, it is the
“humanitarian” NGOs; the groups which insist on “saving” the boat people, that
have thousands of drowned human-beings on their consciences – not the
Australian Government. For every boatload of refugees and illegal migrants that
are “saved”: ten, twenty, thirty more overloaded and leaking death-traps are
encouraged to set sail.
Faced with an adamant Australian Government which is utterly
convinced that it is doing the right thing vis-à-vis illegal immigration by
sea, what should the New Zealand Government do?
If we engage the Aussies in a full-scale moral debate on this
issue, can we even be sure of winning it? With the example of the EU’s policy
before us; and with the Australians arguably blocking the people-smuggling
routes to New Zealand as well as to their own country; might we not expose
ourselves to the charge of allowing our kind hearts to get in the way of the
higher moral good of breaking the people-smuggling trade?
Let’s assume, however, that we are capable of refuting the
Australians’ moral arguments (their policies are, after all in breach of
numerous international covenants to which New Zealand remains firmly committed)
what, then, should be our course of action?
Some are arguing that we should negotiate directly with the
government of Papua-New Guinea. But, that really would be evidence of our
diplomatic blindness! The government of Papua-New Guinea is almost entirely in
the thrall of the Australian Government – its former colonial master.
Ostensibly a democracy, the country is, in fact, a corrupt kleptocracy whose
senior ministers are pretty-much the bought-and-paid-for playthings of
Canberra. Were we to ask Port Moresby if it was willing to allow New Zealand to
take 150 detainees off their hands, its officials would simply pick up the
phone and ask Canberra if that would be okay.
Canberra would say “No!” – and that would be that. The same applies to
the supposedly independent state of Nauru – another Pacific regime morally and
politically compromised by the Australians’ Pacific Solution.
All of which should tell us exactly what we are looking at
when we fix our gaze on Australia.
Because it’s not just big Papua-New Guinea, and tiny Nauru,
who find themselves in no position to do anything other than obey without
question the dictates of Canberra. Australia may not have purchased our
politicians, the way it has in other parts of the Pacific, but that’s only
because they don’t need to. Our Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade is quite
capable of assessing this country’s strategic economic, military and diplomatic
interests without the need for Canberra to spell them out for us.
What Jacinda saw when she arrived at Kiribili House on
Sunday was what she wanted to see. Our good friend and ally, the Australian
prime minister. She comported herself accordingly: joshing and joking; and
reporting (politely) on her Government’s response to Australia’s latest policy
decisions.
Had she seen anything else: a nation able to break the New
Zealand economy at will, for example, or, a regime prepared to be almost
unbelievably ruthless and brutal in the pursuit of its national objectives. Had
she registered a nation arming itself to the teeth in preparation for
projecting “Five Eyes” power north, into the Indonesian archipelago, east, into
the Pacific, and west, into the strategically vital Indian ocean, and which
looks upon its “little mate”, New Zealand, as a lucrative source of economic
tribute, a handy supplier of skilled labour, a cheap holiday destination, and,
at need, an “unsinkable aircraft carrier” fortuitously positioned to defend
Australia’s eastern flank; then what, realistically, could she have done?
Other than josh, and joke, and hope like hell that Australia
never decides to treat Kiwis the way it treats the detainees on Manus Island
and Nauru.
Oh, wait a minute …
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Tuesday, 7 November 2017.
Australians being Australians, for ever.
ReplyDelete'Had she registered a nation arming itself to the teeth in preparation for projecting “Five Eyes” power north, into the Indonesian archipelago, east, into the Pacific, and west, into the strategically vital Indian ocean"
ReplyDeleteAustralia's current defence budget is 1.9% of GDP and projected to rise to 2% in 2020.It seems a little over the top to describe them as arming themselves to the teeth.
It hurts to think dispassionately when it destroys a long-held comfortable illusion. But I don't see Australia changing. The country has settled into a line of thought and behaviour that denigrates NZ and have better things to do than reflect on their faults.
ReplyDeleteRationalise is their main system of handling their country's poor behaviour. We are advancing along this path also as shown by the still strong vote for National. Maori are increasingly showing up here as the true NZs, the people who have carried forward their indigenous culture, while we adopted that of the rapacious west and paid lip service to Christianity. But we couldn't wait to abandon our controls that enhanced and supported the settled, basically good society we said we wanted.
Now Australia has infiltrated the little that we had left, and we are watching them abuse NZs and like sly criminals, smile to the faces of our politicians and useful, amoral businesspeople, while they knife us in the back.
In Australia there is much greater awareness of the real strategic risks and vulnerability of Australia and NZ. Not only was Darwin bombed the threat of invasion of Australia and probably New Zealand was quite highway. The stopping of the Japanese advance South at Midway in 1942 was largely a matter of luck and the naval actions 2000 miles north of us through Guadacanal was were the US suffered their most major ship losses with a lot of cruisers being lost to fast long range Japanese torpedoes which were in many respects far superior even for surface ship strikes to anything the US or UK began to develop before the 1970s. I would presume the US Forces encamped and training along the West Coast of the North Island partiuclarly on the Kapiti coast from Plimmerton to Otaki from 1942 to 1944 pretty precisely corresponded to the level of threat perceived for the antipodes in Washington and to me the logical way to attack NZ and other than by a coup or gradual political intrusion and subversion is to attack straight into the harbours of Auckland and Wellington or the surounding beach landings to seize the major airstrips at Whenuapai, Mangare, Ohakea and Palmerston North. To attack around Wellignton would be something of a diversion
ReplyDeleteThe Japanese never intended to invade New Zealand, or for that matter I suspect Australia. All they had were plans to cut us off from our allies. The Japanese were never going to win World War II either. It wasn't so much a war of long-range torpedoes, as a war of production. At which America was supreme. There's a lot of bullshit talked about the Japanese and Australia and New Zealand in some circles, but that's all it is – bullshit.
ReplyDeleteI would think that Japan in WW2 might have considered a base in the Marlborough Sounds to be useful, and that would give them proximity to Antarctica, which was possibly a future treasure trove. They keep on with the whales I think just to assert themselves, and show they aren't lapdogs to the west. Just some thoughts, I don't have some learned reference.
ReplyDeleteI am confused. You seem to support their policy and recognise it saves 1000s of lives. It does so it is the right policy. Jucinda risks a huge amount interfering. Lives. Yet you clearly think they are bastards too, as many of us do. I think they are a bunch or shits, yes.
ReplyDeleteYet their policy in this narrow field on boat people is entirely the right one. It should be copied all around the world, to save lives and more. To save all of us.
But we all, everywhere could do a lot more to help people in situ. Help them stay home and prosper. That is the right place for all. Home.
Same applies to the war torn Arab world. We should not take these people as the West cannot absorb all these Muslims without destroying itself. But we should do a great deal more to help them survive and return and rebuild. Perhaps they will then become more like the liberal free and humane societies we enjoy in the West.
Above all we must preserve ourselves and our civilisation or all is lost.