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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Carragher who wrote (103133)6/27/2003 6:46:47 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 281500
 
Australia tells the UN to "Bugger Off!" Gee, I wonder if we could hire some of their Foreign Office types for our State Department?

Australia Outlines New Foreign Policy
By PETER O'CONNOR - NEWSDAY
Associated Press Writer

June 26, 2003, 4:08 PM EDT

CANBERRA, Australia -- The Australian government on Thursday branded multilateral forums such as the United Nations "ineffective and unfocused" and said its foreign policy will increasingly rely on "coalitions of the willing" like the one that waged war in Iraq.

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer also said that in Canberra's view, other nations' sovereignty was "not absolute."

The assertive new doctrine outlined by Downer came a day after Australia announced it would lead an international force of troops and police to restore order to the violence-wracked Solomon Islands in the southwest Pacific.

Downer's speech reflected comments late last year by Prime Minister John Howard that Australia would be prepared to launch pre-emptive strikes against terror targets in Asia -- words that sparked outrage in Asia.

Downer's doctrine is likely to cause further unease among Australia's Asian neighbors. For example, Mahathir Mohamad, prime minister of Malaysia, a predominantly Muslim nation and longtime critic of Australia, has accused Howard of acting like a deputy sheriff to President Bush.

The impact of international terrorism was brought home to Australia on Oct. 12 when 88 of its citizens were among 202 people killed in the bombings on the Indonesian resort island of Bali.

Australia's decision to send 2,000 troops to support the U.S.-lead war in Iraq without U.N. sanction "has signaled that we are prepared to take the hard decisions to enhance our security," Downer said in a nationally televised address to the National Press Club.

"Some multilateral institutions will remain important to our interests," he said. "But increasingly multilateralism is a synonym for an ineffective and unfocused policy involving internationalism of the lowest common denominator."

He added: "We are prepared to join coalitions of the willing that can bring focus and purpose to addressing the urgent security and other challenges we face. ... Sovereignty in our view is not absolute. Acting for the benefit of humanity is more important."

Howard and Downer announced Wednesday that Australia stood ready to send troops and police to the Solomon Islands if New Zealand and other Pacific nations joined the peacekeeping force. The proposed force follows a request for help from Solomons Prime Minister Alan Kemakeza.

The Solomons have been torn by ethnic violence since 1998, and the government has little control outside of the capital, Honiara.

Howard said the Solomon Islands was in danger of becoming a failed state that could be exploited "international drug dealers, money launderers, international terrorism."

Australia would "pay dearly" if it did not act, he said.

Copyright © 2003, The Associated Press
newsday.com