• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Wage Peace - Disrupt War

Strategic, bold, direct and discursive action to disrupt militarism in Australia and our region.

  • About Us
    • Making Change
    • Wage Peace Wins Global Peace Award 2023
    • Wage Peace, Disrupt War and Repair the Planet!
    • Smashing the Social License of an Industry Geared to Terrorise.
  • Campaigns
    • Disarm Australia
      • Demilitarise Education
        • BAE recruiting Year 6 kids
        • Demilitarise Education – Campaign Background Briefing
        • The military has invaded our classrooms.
        • Interrupting the Pipeline: Defence in STEM
        • Spotlight on UNSW
        • USyd Tied to Arms Industry
        • Demilitarise UQ: A Petition to UQ from an Autonomous Student Group
      • Stop Harms Dealers
        • ABC & Weapons Silence A Speech
        • Blockade Lockheed
        • Australia exports 155mm shell exports to Germany & the IDF.
        • No AUKUS: No Submarines!
        • Boeing is OUT OF CONTROL
          • Boeing, the Pentagon and Australian-based Propaganda Units
          • Boeing is a Weapons Corporation at UQ – Beware Boeing’s Wars
          • Trial of the Boeing Disrupters
        • Conversations with the Arms Dealers: Thales and the first of December
        • EOS – Just one more Merchant of Death
          • Is this justice? EOS arms deals to Saudi Arabia and UAE
        • Nioa Munitions: An excess of public money to fund police and the gun lobby
        • Nioa should rule out exporting weapons to Indonesia
        • Rheinmetall – making a killing
        • Stop Lockheed Martin
      • Legacy Campaigns
        • US out!
          • Fight to ditch the Aus-US Alliance
          • Close Pine Gap Website
          • Signing Up For War: The US Military Agreement With Australia You Probably Know Nothing About
        • Toxic SAS
          • SAS absorbed toxic US military culture
        • Whistleblowers
          • Support McBride – It’s About Exposing War Crimes
    • Frontier Wars
      • Frontier Wars
      • Frontier Wars Ceremonies
      • Boe Spearim’s Fabulous Frontier Wars Podcast – Must Listen!
      • Commemorating the Frontier Wars in Gimuy 2021
      • Frontier Wars – Lest We Forget 2021
      • Frontier Wars’ Desert Pea Wreath
      • Lest We Forget the Frontier Wars 2020 – online gathering
    • Peace In Papua
      • Peace In Papua
      • Peace In Papua – Thales, recall your bombs
      • War on West Papua
      • Make West Papua Safe, Australian Federal Police action
      • West Papua is Rising Up: Act now with Papuans to #MakeWestPapuaSafe
    • Disarm Police
      • Nine hours, no bullets!
      • NIOA – Arming the Intervention
  • Disrupt Land Forces
    • dlf 24
      • Report: Dangerous Policing DLF24
      • Journalist’s take on DLF 2024
      • Tactical Disruption Works
    • dlf 22
      • War Criminals need not apply; a summary of DLF22
      • Disrupt Land Forces 2022
      • Land Forces – A Killer of an Expo
      • Facilitating Exports: The Global Supply Chain and Landforces Brisbane
    • dlf 21
      • We massively disrupted the Land Forces weapons expo
      • Love against the machine – Land Forces 2021
      • Disrupt Land Forces – weapons company tour
  • Resources
    • Weapons Dealers in Australia: A Map
    • Peace Pod: an aural adventure in anti-militarist activism.
      • Get Your Armies Off Our Bodies: Trailer
      • Peace Pod launched!
      • Resources for Students
      • Resources for Teachers
      • Child’s Play? Militarism in the classroom
      • E5 Jangan Bunuh Kami Lagi / Stop Killing Us: West Papua Part 1
      • E6 Jangan Bunuh Kami Lagi / Stop Killing Us: West Papua Part 2
      • E8 We Need These Minds: MIlitarism in Universities
      • Revolving Doors, Corruption Gateways
      • War Stories
      • War Stories: BONUS – Afghan Peace Volunteers
    • References
    • Articles
      • The military industrial complex rides on the glamorous mythology of war
      • Doxxing and Security Culture
      • War = Peak Toxic Masculinity
      • War and Peace- articles by Andy Paine
  • Stop Arming Israel
    • Stop Arming Israel
    • Blockade Bisalloy: A Report from the ‘Gong
      • Bisalloy Makes Steel to Kill
    • F-35 Supply Chain
      • Taking Action Against Ferra and the F35
      • Nupress in the F35 Supply Chain – Newcastle
      • What’s Marand got to do with it?
      • Ferra Engineering, Boeing & the Queensland Government
    • Arms Embargo Now!
      • Nth Qld tungsten burns in Palestine
      • Harms Dealers: Thales in partnership with Israel Aerospace and Elbit.

Peace Crimes – opening up Pine Gap

Peace Crimes Brisbane launch

Russell Goldflam

For five decades, the rallying cry of the protest movement against the space base, as it’s locally known, has been “Close Pine Gap”. Somewhat paradoxically, though, one of the key objectives of that movement has been to open Pine Gap, to shed light on what it actually does. And at its shining heart, that’s the achievement of Kieran Finnane’s book, “Peace Crimes: Pine Gap, National Security and Dissent”. It sheds light.

This should be no surprise. After all, as a journalist, that’s Finnane’s job: to observe, to inquire, to dig down into dark places, and to illuminate them. And there’s no darker, deeper place around here than Pine Gap.

Finnane could have written a whole book just about that darkness, the dark business of what Pine Gap does and how it does it: about shadowy networks of hovering geostationary satellites; about covert committees meeting in closed rooms to decide where to focus antennae so as to suck up all manner of electronic data and eavesdrop on whoever, wherever they choose; about Pine Gaps’ key role in carrying out extrajudicial terminations – or to use plainer language, murders – by targeting drone strikes in places we’ve never heard of, assassinating people whose names we’ll never hear.

About how thanks to the embarrassingly supine compliance and complicity of successive Australian governments with the United States military apparatus, Pine Gap has entangled us all in a radically dangerous geopolitical game, dicing with arbitrary death and mass destruction. Finnane has indeed documented all these things here, and she does so with admirable clarity, concision and precision, but peering into the darkness through the cracks in the formidable edifice of secrecy that conceals Pine Gap isn’t what this book is really about. If it were, a better title might have been “War Crimes”, not “Peace Crimes”.

No, what grips Finnane and what she comes to grips with after penetrating that dark matter, is the most gripping part of this book, the bright bit, the bit where the light gets into the crack that is in everything, the Leonard Cohen line quoted in the closing address to an Alice Springs jury sitting in that overweening, gleaming space capsule of a courthouse, near the end of the Supreme Court trials of the Peace Pilgrims, the perpetrators of the “peace crimes” this book is named for.

Finnane carefully and methodically describes how on 28 September 2016, five of the Peace Pilgrims walked into the Pine Gap prohibited area. She also describes how on the same night, a drone strike authorised by President Obama killed fifteen people in the village of Shadal in the Achin district of Nangahar province, Afghanistan. According to the United Nations mission in Afghanistan, most and perhaps all of the victims were civilians. According to Washington, they were all terrorists. As they explained to the jury in their trial a little over a year later, the Peace Pilgrims entered Pine Gap to disrupt the operations of the base in order to stop civilians being murdered by drone strikes like the one on the village of Shadal that night. The Peace Pilgrims said that they did what they did for a simple, fundamental reason. It was necessary.

I dare say that most people, whether they support or oppose Pine Gap, assume that the Peace Pilgrims are fruitcakes and even nutjobs, casually dismissing them as “weirdos”. That indeed is what I thought when I first heard about them. Finnane conscientiously and compellingly dismantles that prejudiced and prejudicial caricature, and draws us in to the quiet, committed, rigorous, loving world of Margaret, Jim, Franz, Andy, Tim and Paul. Over a period spanning 12 years, I got to know them and their fellow Christian activists, the Pine Gap Four, who had undertaken a similar action in 2005, in my capacity as their intermittent solicitor, and in that capacity I discovered that actually, they are the very opposite of weird. There’s nothing at all uncanny about them. Indeed, as courtroom tacticians, they were very canny indeed. Finnane deftly describes, with thinly disguised delight, how they made the QCs who’d been flown in from interstate at taxpayer expense to prosecute them flounder and squirm.

The Pine Gap Four eventually had their convictions overturned thanks to some even cleverer QCs who flew in from interstate (at their own expense) to help out. In 2017, the Peace Pilgrims couldn’t and didn’t avoid conviction (because in the interim, the Commonwealth Parliament had amended the law to plug the gap the cleverer QCs had exposed). I say “couldn’t avoid conviction” because unlike juries in England, the United States and New Zealand, no Australian jury has ever been defiant and independent enough to ignore a judge’s directions and acquit after being instructed that no legally available defence has been raised by the accused in a civil disobedience case like this. The Australian citizenry is unusually compliant.

But the Peace Pilgrims, without a lawyer to represent them in their trial, did something that had never been done before, not even by the Pine Gap Four: they opened Pine Gap, by persuading the trial judge to allow the jury to hear evidence from experts about what Pine Gap actually does, including an extraordinary interview with the late Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser in which he explained why the base needs to be shut down. Finnane documents, day by day, how the Peace Pilgrims found a crack, and, millimetre by millimetre, prised it open, just enough to allow the light to trickle in.

That isn’t weird. It’s wonderful. It is also extremely rare. Governments go to a great deal of trouble to try to ensure that the legal system does not allow civilly disobedient citizens to prise open cracks in this way. Who knows where this sort of thing might lead?

This is a remarkable story that needs telling. And we are fortunate that such a remarkably clear-eyed, sharp-eyed, unflinchingly far-sighted member of our community has taken the trouble to tell it for us. Thank you, Kieran.

Russell Goldflam
Alice Springs

Footer

info@wagepeaceau.org

tel: 0403214422

SIGN UP DONATE
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • About Us
  • Campaigns
  • Disrupt Land Forces
  • Resources
  • Stop Arming Israel

Copyright © 2026 Wage Peace