Lest We Truly Forget...
A sincere look at the ANZACs, their Legacy and how to truly Honour their memory.
The ANZAC spirit is something which permeates
with pride through out our culture. We
look to the past with a degree of admiration, respect and awe as we recall our
ancestors, those none to distant and to those further back in time. Even before
the original ANCACs of the First World War, Australia and New Zealand had
forged a martial pride. Our two young
Nations seemed to brilliantly burn onto the World Stage in its bloodiest
conflicts with a honorable star despite the misery and tragedy of those brave
moments in time.
For what ever reason our bravest went into
battle, whether for King, alliance, solidarity or defence they gave often every
thing that they had. We as a society
claim to respect them, we conduct ceremonies in their honor and often romance
the fallen with a Pagan like ritual worthy of ancient Roman tribute. These gestures however are often self
serving. Respect is about more than simple symbolism. A symbolism which at times is often less
about the fallen and those uniformed warriors but more about those using the
occasion as a mere social moment or as a political power point.
The political elites enjoy our martial devotion.
It allows them a bargaining chip abroad, they can wear our heritage on their
hip with a certain swagger that only a spoilt nephew can who is living in the
shadow of an accomplished uncle. The
legacy of yesterday is being used as a currency for today and is at risk of
being misspent tomorrow. More and more we
celebrate great defeats such as Gallipoli for many of the right reasons, but
ignore the many wrong reasons as to why it failed or even occurred at all. And yet the same leader ship mentality is
ever prevalent now as it was then, those who see our bravest as pieces to be
used upon an Imperial chess board, to be misused in crisis often with little
relevance to our defence as they often continue to miss the relevant teaching
points of history.
A great many Australians and no doubt Kiwis
celebrate our religious holidays for the dead, our National salutes to the
fallen with a certain jingoism which is at first charming but has an underlying
danger to it. Real knowledge of history
and awareness of the bloody realities of its pages is all too lacking, while a
mythic idea of the past has been reinforced by movies and poetic text
books. Such mediums perpetuate a
chivalry that has never been so common place as to replace actual human fear
and misery that was suffered by our bravest.
How can we honour the dead and those living who served ? How can we honour those presently abroad
risking it all in our name ? And how can
we honour those yet unborn who shall no doubt bleed beneath our two flags ?
Nationalist self serving symbolism is not how it
is done. It only often fans the furnace
of the potential for more bloodshed.
This is not advocating for a disbandment of such acts, no far from.
It is however a cautionary warning that one should not simply invest its
remembrance simply in memorials or for moments of silence. Honouring the fallen, the living and the
forgotten is more about such rituals. It
is ultimately about ensuring that their sacrifice was not wasted. That their sacrifices should not need to be
repeated for many of the same mistakes made by the ruling elites and that the
freedom and liberty in which they felt that they were defending should not
recede beneath the blanket of deceit and perceived security.
An appreciation of history, actual history is a
good place to start. Knowing who these brave warriors were while also
understanding the moments and days that lead to conflict. Why were we they
there? And ultimately was it justified to shed such noble blood? If we do not
really understand our own history how can we hope to live a better future
? How can we be sure not to repeat
yesterdays tragic glory with the same fervour and loyalty that cost so much on
both sides of the many wars?
Just as an understanding of history can allow us
to better understand the present, so can an understanding of the present help
to save our future. Often in our
Democracy we are all too eager to go to war, however limited it may be, based
upon the official declarations that it is in our National Interest. Yet despite the courage of our past many of
the Wars that we hold dear were fought for less than noble reasons. And
certainly besides moments in World War Two, they were not done in our National
Defence.
Contemporary politics aside, how can we hope to
be secure in our selves as a nation when we are forever conducting ourselves as
a trusted and obedient international partner?
If we conduct ourselves as a smaller but capable Ally we seem to lead
ourselves further down a path of tragedy.
With every crisis there seems to be a call to arms,it is heard from
certain elements of each side of the political spectrum and embedded within our
culture is a Martial obedience to do as we are told. A symbolic spirit that ensures that we should
step up and take on each and every fight. Even if we are unsure as to why we
truly should be fighting or who it is that we should face.
With a mass of partial ignorance one can often
find the Nation jerking in a direction that leads to a war footing based upon
posturing and sabre rattling. History
has shown all too often that the clash of arms is far from set piece as it has
been celebrated in fiction and history.
The modern insurgencies and asymmetric wars which we should find our
selves in today are a slow bleed and will never be over by Christmas.
Can we hearken back to our past when our warriors
who left our nubile national shores with pride and a sense of optimism and say
with absolute honesty that what they did was a necessity ?
When on the cusp of Federation, Australian
volunteers landed in South Africa to fight the Boers was this because we were
defending our sun burnt land ? Or was this one colony fighting another colony
against its independent will for self determination in the name of Empire? A war of unconventional means which saw our
brave Aussies beating the insurgent Boers in many battles often besting them at
their own Kommando style of warfare. A
war which gave us the controversy of Breaker Morant and illustrated just how
sacrificial then, we as colonists were to the Crown. It was a war that saw the use of concentration
camps by the British which would later inspire World War Two Germany in such a
vile imprisonment of societal misfits and 'trash' as deemed by the regime.
And when King George V declared war on Germany on
Australia and New Zealand's behalf, where was our national defence threat? A war that our Mother Country had stumbled into,
a war so futile that its post conflict unintended consequences still haunt us a
century on. Was it in securing New
Guinea and the German colonies just North of us, that we saved ourselves from
the Kaisers boots? Or was it on the
distant shores of Gallipoli, where alongside the French and English our ANZACs
earned such a heroic reputation against the conscripts of the Ottoman
Empire? As we invaded Turkey and threw
ourselves against men defending their home land, so that a romantic First Lord
of the Admiralty Winston Churchill may etch his name in history in the delusion
that a victory would link the Western Allies up with the crumbling Tsars forces
of Russia. Was the invasion of Turkey to aid Imperial Russia and the French
Empire, in our national self interest?
Was it because we felt sincerely concerned when
neutral Belgian was invaded? This vile Imperial empire which under its then
present Emperor King Albert continued much of the genocidal savagery whose
previous regent Leopold II had begun withe despotic viciousness.
The mass murder and slavery of millions of its African subjects much of
which was being continued in plain silence before the World? Is it in the
defence of such a putrid regime that we should fight the Kaiser in the muddy
death pits of Flanders?
And after this great Victory when the World was
repainted in new spheres of influences, old Kingdoms died as new ones emerged.
Influenza and Bolshevism spread savagely across the lands and took more lives
than the war itself. Fermenting with resentment
and reactionarism Germany and Japan conspired from within and ultimately
together in an effort to regain dignity, vengeance and self pride. Japan an ally had been betrayed in her eyes
after the first War, she was
subsequently dropped by the British Empire as a Pacific partner in
favour of the USA. Brow beaten by the
Washington Naval treaty and other Occidental dominated treaties and
misconducts, Japan's moderates gave way to its radicals and the liberalism of
the Meji and Taisho era began to succumb to the Bushido militancy which would slowly lead
them down a path of war with the West and Australia, or as many in Asia viewed
our land down under as that racist European alien blob located deep in the
Oriental sphere.
Hitlerism and the rise of National Socialism has been well recorded but its emergence and the Worlds fasciantion with Fascism and Socialism in its many forms began to militarise national cultures in many ways. And in a less extreme case, the very reforms that the Kaiser had instituted in the late 19th Century so as to better create a martial culture and to promote a harmony between State, Industry and Labour soon began to take hybrid adaptions in even the most apparently liberal of Western Democracies. Obedient and dependent populations slowly swelled all too easily mustered for the States self interest at time of crisis, real or perceived.
And it was after much maneuvering and intrigue
that Germany would slowly expand its borders at the expense of its
neigbours. It was not a lone in its
Imperial lust for new territories however.
Japan had already invaded Manchuria and China, while it was secure in
its occupation and exploitation of Korea.
Italy was reforging an illusory new Roman Empire deep into Emperor
Halises Ethiopia. The British were holding
firm their Empire by gassing tribesmen and villages in Central Asia or modern
day Afghanistan. Murdering thousands from the air in a new form of Colonial
control. The promises of an independent India should so many of her children
fight for Empire in the First War had been denied as the great Moslem, Sikh and
Hindi populaces began to swell with discontent beneath the savage rule of the
Anglican Crown, despite Ghandi's patient protests and leadership thousands were
murdered and imprisoned.
The United States had been exercising its
extension of Manifest Destiny in much of South America as it secured its
interests with cronyism and military interventionism. The former Spainish possesions of the
Phillipines and Cuba were now very much American colonies. And yet this period was proclaimed as being a
period of American Isolationism, all the while its influence grew. As it invested privately and publicly in the
tyrannical regimes of Stalins Russia and the Hitler dominated Germany. While at home FDR exercised domestic policy
much akin to the dictators of Europe.
The Native American peoples continued to lose their freedoms all the
more and much like his fellow war time Democrat dictator, Woodrow Wilson, FDR
all but segregated the country with subtle extensions of Jim Crowe. As well as exercised greater executive
control at the expense of civil and economic liberties.
The Soviet Union, was growing and dying. It was
transforming through coercion from a peasant agrarian class into a modern
industrial super power. Much as China would some decades later. The Ukraine suffered a murderous period as it
was starved and purged so that the West could buy grain to help pay for the
industrialisation of the USSR. The smaller Nations around the Soviet Union
slowly became absorbed, while the West, so bent on Hitler ignored such
Imperialism. Japan and Russian would
briefly bump heads in a brief war in Mongolia leading to a short but crucial
pact between the two, buying each time at varying periods during the coming
war.
And now the stage was set. The second great War was upon the World. The
Unnecesary war as Winston Churchill would later go on to call it. And like many wars it truly was. Perhaps more so than the First. And just like the the First, events in Europe
lead to our entry. It was with the
invasion of another neutral nation at the hands of Germany that saw our young
nation enter a global war because it was what a Colony should do in obedient
loyalty with its Monarch. Poland was no
Imperial Belgian but it was also no liberty bearing free society either. And yet we went to war for it. And should the reasons of entry for Britain
and France be in the defence of neutral Poland, why is it when the Soviet Union
invaded the Eastern frontiers of Poland in accordance with its pre invasion
aggrements with Germany, did the West say and do nothing ? Why is it that even after two invasion
attempts of neutral Finland by the Soviet Union the West sat idle and went
after only Hitler?
It seemed that the West was determined to fight another war with Germany,
which unlike the Soviet Union had not yet committed a genocide. Which would go so far as to commit its
genocide with such brutal arrogant assumption in the assurance that it would be
over looked just as the Armenian genocide had been ( and still is over looked
to this day)and just as the recent Holoduma in the Ukraine had been all but
ignored and down played by the West. It
seemed that the West would go on to pick one mass murdering regime and dictator
over the other. It seemed one depsot would become our enemy, while another a
valued friend. Meanwhile millions of
innocence died regardless of our efforts.
And so the ANZACS were deployed to Egypt so that
they could help fight Mussolinis inept though valiant army as it attempted to
secure its own Empire. And it was then
that history would learn of the name Erwin Rommel who with his small force
would wreak so much havoc in North Africa. It was here that the ANZAC legend
would resurface. Earning the Afrika
Corps respect as well as that of the Italians who had a reputation for
cowardice despite fighting some heroic actions with inferior weapons and leader
ship. It was not just in North Africa
but in Greece and Crete that the ANZACs now found themselves forging great
legacies, even fighting a rear guard
against superior numbers just as the Spartans had done against the Persians so
many centuries before. Unlike the
Spartans however our brave ANZACS were far from home.
After sanctions and an indirect war in China the
unpleasant back and forth between the two powers lead to the savage Empire of
Japan attacking the US military base of Pearl Harbour in a bold and precise
blow. It was an act of War. Bringing the USA in on the side of the Western
allies after Hitler, in support of Japan declared war. FDR now had his reason to go to war. The War
was now closer to home. And yet it was
not to Australia that our professional soldiers were sent, but to the Imperial
bastion of Singapore. Fodder to the
clever Japanese general Yamashita who with far less numbers managed to defeat
so many British and Australian soldiers, defying the arrogance of their
European supremacy in doing so. Again it
was with the political elites in Canberra and London along with the Old Boys
Club of military leader ship which saw our bravest succumb to another
disaster. Landing them in some of the most hellish of conditions as prisoners
of a Bushido zealot military that viewed individual suffering as a distant
second to ideology. In this case their obedience to their Emperor, a living
God. The brutality suffered by the POWs
was beyond horrific.
No Australian grows up not hearing about the exploits of the diggers along the Kokoda trail. When the Japanese army had been defeated for the first time on land in the war. When a collection of under armed, mostly unpaid, volunteer militia from all over Australia turned back the invading professional modern day Samurai army, it seemed a turning point of the war had been subtly reached. While the arrogant American General McArthur was crawling away from his failure in holding the Phillipines, he mocked our chocolate soldiers, these militia men who did something he was yet to do. Defeat the Japanese. Along with the Naval victory at the battle of Midway, it now seemed the tide was slowly turning in the allied favour.
The one time in our history, when our military was truly defending the nation it would be in the thick jungles of New Guinea, It was being done so by civilian soldiers of the AMF. While our regulars and AIF were chasing the Desert Fox across North Africa, toughing it out in Tobruk or succumbing to terrible abuse in Japanese prison camps, our irregulars fought a pitched battle along the Kokoda trail, despite the fumbling arrogance of their political masters who were safe at home. The Diggers prevailed.
While the union work force on the docks and in
the factories went on strike, public servants did their best to shirk the
sacrifice of rationing on the home front.
These under supplied and brave men fought in unimaginable
conditions. Though tourists would later
frequent the tamer parts of this track
with peacetime intrigue, the conditions and enviornment that the ANZACs
fought a determined enemy in was no tourist attraction. And despite being considered scabs by those
cowards on the docks at home, these brave warriors fought on with courage and a
will seldom matched.
The ANZACs fought alongside the Western Allies
right up to the coast of Japan where by the Empire surrendered, though the
Emperor remained. And after the rubble
of Europe and the charred Jungles of the Pacific had momentarily succumbed to
the brief silence of Peace. The World as
it did after the First World War shifted into new dangers.
For the war in the Pacific which would
symbolically end just after the destruction of two Atomic Bombs over Japanese
cities. The precise strategic attack of
a Naval and Air Base in Pearl Harbour and then the Phillipines by the Japanese
in 1941 was apparently justification enough for the Americans to 'nuke' two
cities while burning down scores more with mass carpet bombing and fire bombing
raids. It seems the ruled under a despot
shall always suffer the most, at the hands of their leaders and their leaders
enemies. While we celebrated the end of
the War thanks to these two bombs, Japanese officials were more concerned with
the Soviet entry into the war. The massive
Japanese army of Northern China was poised on the border with Russia, was
vastly over run by a veteran and powerfully armed modern Soviet force which
after a declaration of war on Japan smashed its way through Korea, Manchuria
and China. The Japanese decided it was
best to surrender now to the allies before the Soviet forces were any
nearer. And history would prove this
decision wise, as they suffered a far less cruel and even in many ways positive
occupation under the Americans when compared to those terriroties occupied by
the Soviet Union.
Poland, that nation which the British and French
Empires had gone to war over was still occupied. Along with half of Europe and much of
Mongolia, the Soviet Union occupied and ruled with direct savagery or through
proxy's with an iron hammer and sickle over its subjugated possessions. In the East soon after the Japanese had been
defeated, Chinas long running civil war had been lost by Fascist forces of
Chiang Kai-Shek and his War lords as they fled to the Island of Formosa from
the Peasant army of Mao Tse Tung, soon to be the bloodiest dictator in
history. Formosa becoming Taiwan and
China now becoming a new emerging totalitarian Communist regime. It seemed that Europe and Asia had replaced
one bloody and tyranial regime for another.
The War that was supposedly about freedom and liberation had ended with
a compromise of oppression and new totalitarian regimes.
The Cold War had began and a new and bloody peace
would emerge,fortunately this time no inevitable show down between the super
powers and no Third World War inside the same Century would occur. After a brief peace for the ANZACS the
extreme communist regime of North Korea, invaded the military dictatorship of
South Korea. Like most anti communist dictatorships, this one was pro American
and thus an ally of the Western nations.
Supplied and supported by both the Soviet Union and the Peoples Republic
of China, North Korea all but over ran the South before a large United Nations
force landed and fought a bloody and vicious war up the Korean peninsula. In a war that saw both dog fighting jets high
above the battlefield to the large scale use of helicopters it also saw the
more ancient throw backs of warfare such as the mass human wave attacks of
hundreds of thousands of men.
Australians armed with experience and the same shoulder arm used in both
World Wars faced an ideological fuelled mass army with seemingly endless
numbers. Fighting bravely and
gloriously, our ANZACS would go home after three years with the war never
ending. And even to this day it remains
an ongoing simmering point. Millions
still suffering under the despotic rule in the North.
The Cold War would bring about new challenges as
would the end of Empire. Indonesia and Malaysia would slowly leave their
respective Imperial rulers, the Dutch struggled to hold its East Indies while
the many peoples of Malaysia sought independence from the Crown. It was with both that Australia found itself
again sending its forces, though on a lesser scale. In a precursor for our deployment to
Vietnam, the Australian forces fought a
low intensity struggle against Guerilla elements. Doing so quite successfully and pioneering
many minor infantry tactics and jungle borne methods which would become a
staple of modern warfare. Such methods
as roping down from a helicopter to the hearts and mind relationships with the
isolated villagers. And yet it was as a
member of the anti communist pact that our bravest found themselves protecting
Empire or the new Imperialism of American Hegemony.
Vietnam was a crucial point for many of the Democratic
nations, it was a war of reluctance on many levels. It began under false
pretenses at the Gulf of Tonkin in 1964
and could have been avoided from the very start. The Viet Minh, former anti
Japanese allies of the Americans sought independence as nearly every colonial
nation did. It was with the drafting of a constitution based upon the one
apparently used in United States that the Vietnamese felt assured that they
could find American sponsorship for independence from France. Certainly like many revolutionaries and
independence movements of the time the Viet Minh found some resonation with
communism. It was however with the
American support of the French that the Viet Minh further secured ties with
both great Communist empires. Including
the Vietnamese traditional enemies, China.
After the defeat of the French, Vietnam had been
divided into North and South. The Americans again supported and propped up a
corrupt and vile regime in the South under President Diem. He was the apparent free counter balance to
the Communist North. Again, North and
South would be opposed in an Asian nation separated by the politics of Cold
War. Despite historical differences between culture, peoples and national
interests the elites in Washington and other Western capitals followed a
simplistic play book based upon conclusions drawn from 19th Century socialist revolutionary theory that suggested
that Communism would spread from nation to nation, this socialist miasma was
now threatening to consume Asia. A domino theory as such it was suggested. This Internationalism of Communism had yet to
be truly realised, instead Communism like other ideologies had been very
nationalistic and culturally specific.
The arrogant mindset was that Communism would
potentially spread all the way to Australia should Vietnam fall. Despite the Fabian socialism already at work
in both Australia and the UK, social democracy was already softly spreading the
revolutionary ideals of Marx and Engels.
While the more violent Lennin-Stallinist and Maoist thought was being
labelled as the Communist threat. It
seemed Communism was bad, so long as it was in the more extreme cases found
abroad. But it was ok if exercised at
home by our political elites, academics and big labour.
This paranoia of 'communism' spread and served to
confuse many principles and institutions, damaging the idealsf the rule of law
but ultimately harming liberty. Much as the war on terror would later go on
later to furtger damage. Australia would
again introduce conscription and war time measures, many of the hallmarks of
communism and fascism . Again liberty
would be sacrificed at home so that it our soldiers would go abroad to a
distant nation to stop the apparent destruction of freedom. From 1966 to 1972, ANZACS fought an inevitably
unpopular war only to go home disgraced and ostracised by the public and many
smug student elites. These conscripts
and volunteers had no control in their deployment and despite a degree of
reluctance by many served with valour and honor, as best as they could. Only to come home and find themselves in a
political mess created by many of the same leaders who now claimed to champion
'peace'. Even the often empty symbolism
so reserved for our fallen and returning service men was over looked for the many
veterans of the Vietnam War.
This generation of warriors was on the wrong side
of histroy. The ANZACS as instruments of
national policy were now being blamed and punished in perhaps the worse way
while many of those who so easily dance on the war drums were now throwing eggs
at marching soldiers. Returning Vets were welcomed home proudly in some areas
while some RSL clubs went so far as to
deny the Vietnam war vets entry and membership. Vietnam and its horrors were no different to
any other war, the myth had gone from one extreme to the other however. Now instead of being held as gallant
knights on some crusade as was the case for the returning in previous wars,
many condemned the returning ANZACS from Vietnam as being baby killing
and rapists. Perhaps this was because it
was a war against Communism and many in influence had a certain affection for
this political disease.
After Vietnam came the International emergenices of the United Nations, our soldiers wearing blue helmets were now going abroad in an effort to fix and deter famine and genocide. Despite this Internationalism of blue helmets, famine and genocide was sadly every present. The band aid of UN deployments seemed to be of little effect when greater issues were a foot that needed to be addressed. With great frustration and benevolence our warriors did their best despite half hearted policy makers and again symbolic gestures by the governing bureaucrats.
Then came the Invasion of Kuwait. Saddam Hussein the Baathist dictator of Iraq
was fresh from his bloody and victoryless war against Iran. The decade long struggle had claimed millions
and was fueled by the USA in an effort to punish and provide a strong counter
balance to the recently Islamic revolutionary republic of Iran. Iraq felt that it had assurances from its
'friends' that it could nationalise the Gulf State of Kuwaits oil so as to help
pay for the long war with Iran. Iraq had
felt that it was fighting for all of the Arab states against the Persian
threat, something that many of the Arab nations had eluded to during much of
the struggle. It seemed now however that
these Arab allies would not be present when the authortarian regime of Iraq
needed its reparations.
And so built on lies of violent Iraqi occupation, the Western nations again went to war in the defence of a distant neutral nation. Australia joined in this large coalition. All to eager to play its hand in modern post Cold War internationalism. It was a brief and unfulfilling war. The status quo being retained and though many died, the putrid dictator remained the same in Iraq. This time however the USA kept forces in Saudi Arabia, the kingdom which holds the holiest of sites for the Islamic World. Infidels defending the holy land from Saddams Iraq was a bad enough insult to many Islamic followers, but occupying parts of the Kingdom indefinitely had so offended many of the varying radicals of Islam that the modern day Saraceans need emerge to avenge this presence of a Crusader army. One such Saracen was Osama Bin laden.
And so built on lies of violent Iraqi occupation, the Western nations again went to war in the defence of a distant neutral nation. Australia joined in this large coalition. All to eager to play its hand in modern post Cold War internationalism. It was a brief and unfulfilling war. The status quo being retained and though many died, the putrid dictator remained the same in Iraq. This time however the USA kept forces in Saudi Arabia, the kingdom which holds the holiest of sites for the Islamic World. Infidels defending the holy land from Saddams Iraq was a bad enough insult to many Islamic followers, but occupying parts of the Kingdom indefinitely had so offended many of the varying radicals of Islam that the modern day Saraceans need emerge to avenge this presence of a Crusader army. One such Saracen was Osama Bin laden.
So after fighting one Gulf War for no gain other
than to punish the Iraqi people through sanctions and starvation. The embargoes and airborne sorties
ultimately rallied many of the people
around Hussein while the Western powers starved hundreds of thousands to death
through this arrogant policy. According
to US Secretary of State Albright 'one needs to break some eggs in order to
make an omelet' in this case half a million were broken. No democracy came to Iraq, just further
suffering from the outside and within.
A new form
of terrorism lashed out at the heart of the United States. Reacting with concern for our 'friend' we
felt compelled to leap into war and 'smoke out' this enemy. Though we had not
been targeted. We felt an apparent 'solidarity' with our American friends. Afghanistan would be the first place that the
Coalition of the Willing deployed to in an effort to bring to justice this new
face of terror. Australia was an
obedient ally as the war now spread to Iraq.
The public and political ignorance of Islam and the varying factions of
it was lost in an eagerness to link Iraq's despot to the master minds of the
terror attacks that had occured on that September morning. Clumsily the Americans lead the charge and
again the Crusaders returned to the Islamic East. Only serving to ferment hatred and further
expand the war on every front.
The Australians as always stood head and shoulder
above their allies in professionalism, conduct and efficiency. The controversies and repugnant disregard to
the very rules of War supposedly safeguarded by these Western nations, were not
caused by any Australians. Only our
closest ally. The political elites ignorant of the lessons of the past had no
respect for the culture and geography of Afghanistan. The realisation that this country had
consumed and destroyed the British Lion and Soviet Bear in years past was
ignored or unknown and with a swagger that was both costly and degrading to our
bravest on the ground, the war still flickers on to this day. A decade plus after the fact.
Iraq, that ancient land yet such a new and
artificial state, created in the years after World War One tore itself apart
thanks to the calamity caused by the invasion.
The very terror group, Al Qaeda which was the apparent principle enemy
in this new war, had never existed in Iraq up until the invasion. Now it found a new battlefield to fight
and it recruited from an ever growing
legion of supporters. With every dead
civilian at the ends of the Coalition so did expand the 'terrorists' ranks. The Hearrts and Mind campaigns that the
Australians had so mastered in Malaysia and Vietnam would never hope to match
the culturally insensitive war machine that tore apart this country. And despite all of those photos shown before
the World and the assurances that they existed, no strategic weapons of mass
destruction could be found nor where there any evidence that any had
existed. The one nation to have used
such devices on heavily populated cities twice, had begun this this pre emptive
war under the fictional illusion of such a threat. The ANZACs found themselves deployed in a coalition
based on deceit and yet the mission still went on.
The noble intentions and efforts of our military
and the sincere benevolence of its members, the missions objective was never
fully satisfied whether that happened to be liberating Iraq or ending the
Taliban influence in Afghanistan. How does one occupy, divide, destroy and
imprison a nation and call this liberation.
Iraq is still a place devoid of stability and despite falling from the
main stream headlines, because 'we' are no longer there, the violent daily
tragedy continues. While Afghanistan is
still a hot zone full of factions and violent struggle.
This new war like that one of the past generation
which was fought against Communism is being waged against an apparent
ideology. A non physical entity or an
idea which like a gas or a smell can not be grasped though it lingers. Its numbers are unknown and its home land is
non existent. Yet we only feed into its growth
with our widening wars and conduct. So
long as we chase after this elusive ideal and trample innocence both at home
and abroad, so shall it grow and seek to spread with its pungent violence.
So we do have a history to be both proud of an in
many ways one to be wary of. Proud
because no matter the reason, the men and women in uniform forged legends and
exhibited great courage. Proud because
many, if not all, sacrificed and risked because they believed that they were
doing a good job. Wary because all of
that sacrifice, benevolence and intentions was often taken advantage of. A courage which wasMis used and abused by
those lacking such a quality. Disregarded or over looked by men and women who
know nothing of the terrors of war.
Instead our brave warriors were instruments in political self importance
and nationalism which flowed when it did not need to.
And despite having a ravenous appetite for war we
often seek to send our warriors into battle with less than ideal
equiptment. The corruption and politics
of procurement is vile and disgusting. The principle consideration should be
about how effective and efficient an item should perform under the stresses of
conflict. It seems however that this is
a secondary consideration. Instead the first consideration is a political
currency.
The political policy makers are concerned with
abstracts which need not be considered in the procurement of weapons and
material for our war fighters.
Satisfying friends abroad and at home, at the expense of those who put
it all on the line is disgusting. Buying
expensive and over blown American hardware simply because of some less than
transparent deal has been made is both dangerous and costly. As is the ill conceived circus in producing
domestic war ships and boats in the manner of our recent past. Thinking about 'Australian jobs' and the Keynesian
economic mould of large public works at the expense of a efficient and
effective vessels is down right putrid.
The prime consideration should be effectiveness and efficiency for our
sailors first. If you expect men and
women to lay down their lives for policy and defence then the least you can do
is show them the respect by supplying them with the best material. Whether
built here or purchased from abroad it does not matter. What matters is how effective the weapon
system is. The key principle in mind
should be about the best material for the job.
Nothing else matters when it comes to the lives of our ANZACs.
And yet our nation continues its symbolism and
mythic celebration of the fallen and forgotten. It provides and empty lip
service in tribute to these heroes. It
however fails to honour them in action.
It fails to respect them in supply and in policy. And with every wave of the flag or self
serving speach about 'battlers' by a political parasite, a fallen hero rolls in
their grave. No matter how many songs,
poems or tributes are made and how far the romantic illusions spread, One can
not appreciate the very real physical fear and pain that was lived by these
heroic humans. So long as one continues to live in a culture that only ever finds
a romantic myth of war will we continue to subject to pain and fear those very
fallen which we inevitably shall go on to romance post humously.
This ANZAC day please consider most of the above
and appreciate that it is simply not a public day or a National day for
bigotry, nor is it a mere social gathering by which to ride some glory of
others accomplishments so as to call yourself a 'proud Aussie.' Just as it is not a day for public servants
to shirk their apparent duty to the individual or to utilise the memory of the
fallen as a punchline in a speach or as a resounding piece in their sound
byte. The ANZACs are not brands or
products and they are not symbols to project on the World stage as a form of
realpolitik. They are ever present in
living and dead memory, just as they are those men and women who may not have
to give their lives but most certainly sacrifice months and years away from
home in some dirty foreign base or deep in the hull of a warship riding waves
of violent uncertainty.
The true travesty is that the Canberra War
Memorial over looks Parliament, no doubt
every man and woman who walks inside the highest office of law and policy
making in this nation has visited or claimed to have visited this spiritual
heart of our Nation. It clearly shows
however that the message from within this national tomb is lost on such selfish
political animals. For those policy
makers seem all to eager time and time again to add more names up on those
walls of the fallen. With little
consideration or respect for what it means to wear that uniform or to fall for
ones nation. Instead it is with absolute
disregard that they regard those in uniform as expendable. The dead and fallen
only ever seem to matter after war and never before it. So shall these political elites may usher the
words 'lest we forget' for the fallen
yet they never even considered them in the first place.
Kym Robinson
April, 2014