Archive for World Peace

Sell the armed forces and do something constructive with the money

// June 11th, 2010 // 0 Comments // Other news, World Peace

“I say cut defence. I dont mean nibble at it or slice it. I mean cut it, all £45bn of it. George Osborne yesterday asked the nation “for once in a generation” to think the unthinkable, to offer not just percentage cuts but “whether government needs to provide certain public services at all”.What do we really get from the army, the navy and the air force beyond soldiers dying in distant wars and a tingle when the band marches by? Is the tingle worth £45bn, more than the total spent on schools? Why does Osborne “ringfence” defence when everyone knows its budget is a bankruptcy waiting to happen, when Labour ministers bought the wrong kit for wars that they insisted it fight?”
- Simon Jenkins, of The Guardian, brought to my attention by the easy-care and dry-cleanable Lloyd Shepherd of I’ve Said Too Much.
I know this is a brilliant idea because I had it too.
As far as I know, the only nation to give something like this a try was New Zealand, which back in 2000 decided to bail on upgrading the ageing combat aircraft in its airforce.
It’s been ten years now, and New Zealand hasn’t been invaded by anyone, unless we’re counting international tourists.
New Zealand still retains a small navy and an army that Wikipedia says has 4,500 full-time soldiers. Really, subtract the logistics and management overhead from that 4,500 and you’d be lucky if you could beat back a well-drilled rugby scrum much less an invading islamic fundamentalist horde prepared to sacrifice themselves to secure permanent access to high-quality merino wool, organic cold-climate produce and pristine glacial wilderness.
Instead of showing Johnny Hun a lesson and digging in against Kruschev’s tank regiments, Australia’s armed forces now deliver three apparently crucial needs, so crucial that we must spend more on them than we do on schools or hospitals.
Our Navy provides incredibly expensive and over-equipped border security against the terrifying threat of a few thousand Afghani and Sri Lankan refugees each year, starving in rags on leaky wooden Indonesian fishing boats. They don’t stop them, mind, so much as direct them to the closest refugee processing facility. Like Israel’s anti-peace flotilla, minus the regrettable fatalities.
Like most UN nations, our Airforce stands ready to deliver precisely enough Hercules-loads of urgent food and medical aid to service runway-located  television crews. From there, they are delivered to their ultimate destination: overseas correspondents, who desperately need good background to accompany their grim voice-over work as they drone on about how little aid has so far arrived to address the growing humanitarian crisis now enveloping the isolated, mountainous Werthefuk Province of Collapsedistan.
Meanwhile, on the ground, our Army provides an essential support role to US armed forces wherever religions other than Christianity and Judaism seek to overthrow the carefully greenhoused economies of the third world. We provide training and other human resource functions to newly-undisbanded Henchmeni militias, thereby improving the non-combatant collateral damage and informal-taxation-levying capacity necessary to return their nations to approximately the same state they were in before the international peace-keeping mission invaded was invited to assist.
If Australia disbanded its armed forces, could the West Australian Very Large Hole industry use a few poorly-socialised, strong young lads not fussy about the quality of their sleeping quarters and the industrial safety standards of the workplace? Yes. Would we all be competing for our knowledge industry, service and tourism jobs in the rest of the economy with Afghani and Sri Lankan arrivals with ten times the formal qualifications, none of the English-language communication skills and no idea how to knot a tie properly? Almost certainly.
Bring it on.
Australia and those other island nations, UN member nations and nations with significant natural resources or international economic significance should just retire the whole lot. Collapsedistan will offer us a great price. We can then invest the money in something that might provide a return other than full coffins and empty hearts.

Israel’s indefensible act: censoring Gaza flotilla journalists

// June 3rd, 2010 // 0 Comments // Media, Other news, World Peace

I wasn’t going to write about the tragic incident between Israeli forces and the Gaza relief flotilla — this is usually a blog about my work and the issues facing my profession. And so much of it seemed inevitable from the moment the flotilla was first organised — a motley collection of dodgy vessels carrying people representing a broad spectrum of issues would limp towards the Gaza coast, it would be intercepted by the Israeli military, who would arrest those on board with maximum gusto, jail or deport those on-board, confiscate everything and then claim it’s own investigation would prove that it had done nothing wrong. Initial condemnation of Israel’s action in the West would be limited to strong words, the pro-Israel community would try to explain that the State of Israel was indeed threatened by a few liberals and journalists and a rusty Turkish cruise liner, and then to finish up, we’d see a reaction to that suggesting that the event might not be as black-and-white as “Israel = bad, flotilla = good.”

Andrew Günsberg’s post, “Reading Then Thinking Speaking Then Listening” is a great example of the latter. He discloses his conflict of interest up front and encourages his readers to think twice, that it might not be all black-and-white and good-versus-evil. He encourages them to read a book about the background to the occupation of Gaza and talks about how the Israeli population isn’t always in favour of the way its government and its military behaves.

It’s all good, reasonable stuff, but it misses a crucial question: what was the only action committed by the Israeli forces during this incident for which there’s no justification? Firing shock grenades and tasers at the occupants of a foreign-registered vessel while in international waters? Use of high-velocity paintball rounds and live ammunition at close quarters against non-combatants? Taking foreign nationals from outside Israel’s borders and detaining them indefinitely or deporting without access to legal representation or appeal?

No. The only indefensible act of the state of Israel in this matter was the effective and almost total censorship of all communication arising from the incident so that the only significant record of events will be that provided by Israeli military video crews.

Flotilla activists interviewed immediately prior to the attack

Flotilla activists interviewed by a journalist immediately prior to the attack (AP Photo/IHH)

According to eyewitness accounts, journalists were the first target of the Israeli action, including blocking cellphone and satellite communications from well prior to the incident to well after it had concluded, to prevent video, audio and text evidence being broadcast from the scene. Two Australian ABC reporters were immediately detained, with one, photographer Kate Geraghty reportedly tasered as she tried to upload images via satellite.

These Australian journalists aren’t Hamas apologists, anti-Israeli propagandists or easily-duped greenhorn reporters. They are both seasoned, professionally unbiased reporters working for an international broadcaster with an unblemished and rigidly enforced code of non-bias and independence. Israeli forces had been informed they were on the vessel, they identified themselves to the commandos storming the vessel, but they were nevertheless assaulted and had their equipment not just confiscated but methodically destroyed, even to the point of tearing up the notebook journalist Paul McGeough had been writing his reports into once satellite and cellphone communication had been blocked.

So far, Israel’s government has refused widespread calls for an inquiry into the incident from many UN nations including Australia, so maybe an inquiry will never happen. But if there ever is an inquiry by the Israeli military or anyone else, the only significant body of evidence will be eyewitness accounts and the video footage recorded by the Israeli military’s own video teams. You can easily discount the evidence of the flotilla’s eyewitnesses as being the rantings of terrorist sympathisers, as Israeli military inquiries habitually do. Which leaves the only version of events those recorded by the Israeli military itself.

Sorry, but I’ve got a degree in journalism and media studies, and I know how easy it is to influence opinion by selective editing, or just by pointing the camera one way and not another. The only hope we ever had of knowing the truth of the flotilla incident would be to compare and contrast the Israeli military’s own footage with that supplied by the independent professional media accompanying the flotilla. Now that there’s only one source of video footage, there’s no hope of knowing what really happened.

I’m as prepared as the next realist to remain open to the idea that Israeli forces may have done their best to minimise casualties and separate combatants from non-combatants on-board the flotilla vessels. That injuries and deaths on board happened accidentally and without intent in the heat of the moment. That some of the flotilla’s occupants were aggressors and initiated some of the violence that occurred. Perhaps even that Israel would have delivered the cargo of aid intact and in a timely fashion as they’d offered to do if the flotilla diverted to the Israeli port of Ashdod.

But — and it’s a huge but — there’s only one motivation I know of for blocking independent news coverage of the incident, and that is to hide the truth of what really occurred from the world community, from the international Jewish community and the citizens of Israel.

If you feel like being realist about this incident, by all means reserve judgement until ‘we know more about what happened’ but ask yourself who’s made sure you’ll never really know for sure, and what their motivation could possibly be.

Paul McGeough on the rise of Hamas, while remaining independent, unbiased and unassaulted. (ABC Fora)