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Reactions from Down Under
OBSERVING an international crisis from someone else's country is
always instructive. Other people's assumptions and attitudes are
likely to be different from your own, and this helps to put your
own views in perspective.
By long-standing arrangement I was due to travel to Australia
(for a family wedding) in the middle of September. In the event,
the journey took place two days after the terrorist attacks on
the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in
Washington. I therefore arrived while the shock of the attacks
was still uppermost in everyone's mind but the considered
response was rapidly taking shape.
The first crucial reaction was the expression of unqualified
support by the Australian Federal Government for the actions
contemplated by President George W. Bush. There was widespread
approval of the principle of support, coupled with an abhorrence
of the terrorism and its perpetrators. Rather quickly, however,
there was an ugly development, when a group of people set fire to
a mosque in Brisbane.
That act of vandalism produced an immediate reaction, from the
Government and from members of the public, who were quick to draw
the distinction between terrorists who happened to be Muslims,
and Muslims in general.
The Australian Treasurer (Finance Minister) called for respect
and tolerance for religions, reminding people that the war which
had been launched on terrorism was not a fight against religious
groups but a battle to secure freedom. Letters published in the
main newspapers made the same point, and so did the newspapers
themselves. An editorial in the Courier-Mail, Brisbane, was
typical, asserting: "If they think that by burning down a mosque
they are hitting back at Osama bin Laden, they are wrong. They
are giving him and his terrorists aid and comfort."
As the days have passed, coverage of the attacks on the United
States, and the gathering of international support for a tough
reaction, has continued to dominate the press. It has been
accompanied, however, by an increasingly more cautious approach -
and in particular a more cautious approach to the idea of
unqualified support for American actions. Commentators have
pointed out the implications for Australian teenagers of
unqualified support for military action that might last for
years, drawing them ultimately into extensive military
commitment. Experienced military experts have discussed coolly,
on television and in the newspapers, the need for a balanced
judgment, pointing out that Australia's initial unqualified
support went further than that of the U.S.'s other allies.
In letters to newspapers similar caution has been expressed.
Furthermore, there has also been criticism of U.S. foreign policy
in general. A letter in the Weekend Australian, for example,
declared that whereas it was right and natural to have sympathy
with the American people "to agree with their Government's
foreign policies, which are the prime cause of this terrible
tragedy, is stupid beyond belief". That is one of the more
extreme of the views expressed. More common is the sentiment
found in a letter to the Sunday Mail, in Brisbane, by a
correspondent who deplores derogatory comments about U.S. foreign
policy with the comment that those making them "are either too
young to know, or have forgotten, that the U.S. came to
Australia's aid in World War ll with great loss of life".
Nevertheless, questions have been raised about the effectiveness
of wholesale military action in curbing terrorism, and people
have pointed out, for example, that Saddam Hussein is still in
power in Iraq, where thousands of civilians have suffered. As one
writer of a letter in the Australian put it succinctly: "Let's
not forget there are kids in Kabul."
The over-riding factor which clearly colours official policy and
informed comment here is Australia's geographical position. What
happens in Asia matters because Asia is Australia's neighbour.
Darwin, after all, is closer to Singapore than it is to Sydney.
At the same time Australia is strongly conscious of its role as a
major player in world affairs. The citizens of Brisbane are
reminded of that role by the posters, still to be seen all over
the city as I write this Letter, announcing the Commonwealth
Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) which has been postponed
because of the world crisis.
For an observer of world affairs having the opportunity to watch
the development of reactions to the attacks on the U.S. in
Australia there is an important lesson to be learnt. It is quite
simply that it is all too easy - and all too narrowing - to view
international events from a solely American and European
perspective.
BILL KIRKMAN
The writer is an Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge.
E-mail him at wpk1000@cam.ac.uk
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