Australia Wants to be Major Arms Exporter Why Not Mediator?

When I see this article below, as a peacemaker I can see the Australian military industrial complex are only interested in profiting from war not making peace to end all wars.  This is what greed creates and lack of love sustains.  My heart just sinks as I know 90% of fatalities are civilians.  I see no joy in this path for Australia and I know it makes us a target, a country that was peaceful like New Zealand, we are no longer friendly given our political leaders appear to not be conscious of building bridges rather than blowing them up.

I contemplate the refugee detention centres and the inhumanity we have witnessed towards vulnerable people. There appears an arising culture in political/ business/ governance that thinks nothing of incarceration without trial, not ensuring habius corpus (ASIO Act), IT tracking, profiling and personalisation of data and expanding defence influence in universities, government and corporations.  It would be interesting to know what Australian’s think about this.  They may believe it is to fight terrorism but the very terror that is generated is coming from a war mindset that believes in fighting to overpower rather than collaborating to empower. The terror is in the civilians fearing for their lives. Peace is about empowerment and learning about other cultures and taking joint responsibility for the world we are living in if we are to thrive.  It is about creating a Culture of Peace rather than a Culture of Violence as a solution.

The Australian people are friendly, it is those in power that are flexing their muscles. I see boys with toys.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/defence-industry-minister-christopher-pyne-wants-australia-to-become-major-arms-exporter-20170715-gxbv4m.html

Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne wants Australia to become major arms exporter

Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne says he wants Australia to become a major arms exporter on par with Britain, France and Germany and use exports to cement relationships with countries in volatile regions such as the Middle East.

The ambitious goal, outlined in an interview with Fairfax Media, would mean Australia not only builds but also designs major military hardware such as naval warships and possiblyeven submarines.

US to test anti-ICBM defence systems

US to test anti-ICBM defence systems

US to test anti-ICBM defence systems

The United States plans to carry out a new test of its THAAD missile defence system against an intermediate-range ballistic missile in the coming days, as tensions with North Korea climb.

And he says such exports can be used to bolster military ties with key countries in the Middle East such as the United Arab Emirates, with whom Australia shares interests such as the fight against Islamic State and balancing Iran’s growing power in the region.

Mr Pyne said that in an increasingly uncertain world, Australia should have greater self-sufficiency in building its defence capability. But this would also require creating an industry of a size and sophistication that can export.

Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne, in the turret of Patria AMV35 at Puckapunyal Range, Victoria.
Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne, in the turret of Patria AMV35 at Puckapunyal Range, Victoria.Credit:Corporal Max Bree

Australia is now only the 20th largest exporter but the sixth biggest importer of defence equipment.

“My ambition and the government’s ambition is to reverse the current situation … There’s absolutely no reason why we can’t be as capable as Italy, Germany, France, Great Britain,” Mr Pyne said.

He wants to use the $200 billion in additional money the government has committed to defence acquisitions over the next nine years to build up a local industry that will “eventually design, build and export ships, vehicles, missiles, whatever it might be that we have an expertise in”.

Those export relationships could in turn increase Australia’s strategic heft and make it a more influential player in a changing world.

“Countries like Italy, France, Germany and of course the United States and China and Russia have been active on the world stage in exporting their products and services and platforms, and building a mature relationship beyond simply the placing of bases in a particular country,” Mr Pyne said.

Australia has its air bases for the Middle East in the UAE. Mr Pyne said the UAE – which he has been courting as an export destination – “wants to have a closer engagement with Australia in a military sense”, and this would serve Australia’s strategic interests.

The UAE was “thawing” in its relationship with Israel amid concerns – shared by Saudi Arabia, Oman and Egypt – about Iran’s steady rise, including its support for Houthi rebels in Yemen’s bloody civil war, he said.

“So why wouldn’t we want to cement our relationship with a country like the UAE, which shares many of our values in terms of the geopolitical issues that we face through things like defence exports?” Mr Pyne said.

However the Saudi-led coalition, which includes the UAE, supporting the Yemeni government, has also been accused of killing civilians and violating international law. Defence officials recently told a Senate hearing that Defence had approved four sales by Australian companies to the Saudi military and had been satisfied about how the equipment would ultimately be used.

Regarding south-east Asia, Mr Pyne said Australia could easily sell to Singapore and had done some trade with Indonesia but it was not as clear-cut with other countries because of the “engagement of some of our other friends in the region beyond their own borders”, indicating there could be concerns about where arms might end up.

“We have to be very careful in dealing with all these countries to make sure we have Australia’s national interests first and foremost, not just our industrial interests but also our security interests,” he said.

Mr Pyne said Australia should be able to design its own fleet of future naval warships beyond the soon-to-begin $35 billion naval frigate program.

Asked whether this could also apply to submarines, regarded as the most complex military hardware, Mr Pyne said: “I would hope so but I must admit it’s so far down the track that I don’t think I’m in a position to commit to that.”

Mohandas Gandhi

“Gentleness, self-sacrifice and generosity are the exclusive possession of no one race or religion.”

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