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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.

Margie Pestorius

Give ’em the boot

Many Australians are completely unaware that a portion of their country is routinely occupied by the armed soldiers of a foreign nation.

Up to 2,500 US troops are stationed in Darwin under the U.S. Force Posture Initiative to which Australia has agreed for 25 years. It also facilitates the use of Darwin and Tindal’s aircraft runways and supply facilities for use by U.S. bombers such as the B1 which is capable of carrying nuclear bombs. It makes NT a base from which the U.S. can launch war activities against our neighbours, including North Korea and China. It makes Australia a target by U.S. enemies and implicates Australia in their military activities.

The announcement was made in 2011, that up to 2,500 US marines were to be stationed in Darwin. There was no parliamentary debate, no discussion in the media beforehand – it was simply presented to the Australian people as ‘fait accompli’. No plausible justification for such a radical development has ever been provided by the Australian government.
These US marines are kept in a state of constant readiness to ‘fight tonight’; they represent a forward military deployment posture of the U.S. on command from Washington. The Australian Government has no control over these US military forces and cannot veto any military action they might take. Australia’s sovereign independence has been lost.

The Australian public should be under no illusion that the U.S. Marines are here for our protection. For one thing, we need no assistance in our own defence – the ADF is quite capable of defending Australia. We are hosting US forces on our territory, that could be used to attack some other nation, if that suited the USA, regardless of Australian interests.
Any enemy of the USA (and it has plenty!) could, would, also regard Australia as an enemy. The US Marines stationed in Darwin actually increases the chances of Australia sustaining an attack.
• It makes us a target!
• It makes us less, not more, safe!
• It makes us enemies, when we need have none!
• It means that we are being exploited by the USA, for its own purposes!

In every other country where US forces are stationed there have been problems of crime between servicemen and the local community. Crimes of a sexual nature can be anticipated in Darwin.

Significant increased environmental costs are imposed by the marines presence. Globally, all military activity is highly polluting and destructive. Damaging chemicals (e.g. explosives) pollute land and water, as do spills of fuel etc.
It is costing the Australian tax payer a significant proportion of the stated $2-3 Billion necessary to establish this US military presence in Australia plus their annual maintenance costs. These tax payers dollars could be much better spent on socially needed areas such as reducing health and hospital costs, improving education and contributing to pensioner survival.

To regain independence and self-respect, and for a peaceful future , we say
GIVE ‘EM THE BOOT!

Volunteers needed to letterbox campaign leaflet
Email: giveemtheboot2@gmail.com or contact for Sydney, Nick Deane on 0420 526 929
for Newcastle, Bevan Ramsden on 0418 697 528

Frontier Wars Camp and Story telling

Frontier Wars Project: Camp and Storytelling
Aboriginal Tent Embassy, Canberra, 19 – 25 April 2018

All and anyone, black or white, are invited to hear or tell Frontier Wars stories this Anzac season

Frontier Wars story Camp 2018 Poster
Frontier Wars story Camp 2018 Poster

Our aim is to raise awareness of the Frontier Wars in the lead up to Anzac Day, to lament the suffering caused and the injustice done and to unite in resolution to end it.

Come to the Tent Embassy. Come for a session, come for a day or come and camp for a week.

Thursday 19 – Wednesday 25 April 2017
Aboriginal Tent Embassy
King Georges Terrace, Canberra

Each day there will be two formal, themed storytelling sessions 10 am and 4 pm plus plenty of opportunities to sit around campfires and just yarn.

A volunteer kitchen will cater. Food by donation.

This will be the fourth annual Frontier Wars Camp. It will be convened by Arrentre activist, Chris “Peltherre” Tomlins from Yamba near Alice Springs and produced by Graeme Dunstan of Peacebus.com.

Special guests will be Widabul shaman Lewis Walker of Tabulam NSW and Bruce Pascoe, a writer, from the Bunurong clan, of the Kulin nation.

Lewis will dance and sing a very different and very grim story about the founding, in 1885, of the Upper Clarence Light Horse by squatter C.H.E Chauvel, father of General Sir Harry Chauvel.

Bruce, author of Dark Emu: Black Seeds: Agriculture Or Accident? will tell of the Convincing Ground Massacre (1834 near Portland, Victoria) and other impacts of the settler frontier.

The Camp will conclude with participation in the Anzac Day “Lest We Forget the Frontier Wars” March to the Australian War Memorial.

This March will be led by Ghillar Michael Anderson (http://nationalunitygovernment.org/) and assemble at the corner of Constitution Ave and Anzac Parade, Reid, ACT from 10 am Wednesday 25 April.

Bring a flag or make a placard to carry which names the frontier war massacre in your home town or region.

Further information
Chris Tomlins 0490 023 419
Graeme Dunstan 0407 951 688

Close Pine Gap Website

The www.closepinegap.org.au website holds the archive for and links to previous actions: head there to find out more

_________________________

An American Spy Base Hidden in Australia’s Outback

By JACKIE DENT NOV. 23, 2017 (New York Times)

ALICE SPRINGS, Australia — Margaret Pestorius arrived at court last week in her wedding dress, a bright orange-and-cream creation painted with doves, peace signs and suns with faces.

“It’s the colors of Easter, so I always think of it as being a resurrection dress,” said Ms. Pestorius, a 53-year-old antiwar activist and devout Catholic, who on Friday was convicted of trespassing at a top-secret military base operated by the United States and hidden in the Australian outback.

Read More at the New York Times…

(This article appeared first in the New York Times, then in the Sydney Morning Herald and Brisbane times as Trespassers’ trial drags Pine Gap spy base into spotlight)

Go to www.closepinegap.org.au

Frontier Wars graphics

Lest we forget the frontier wars Canberra banners
Lest we Forget the Frontier Wars Canberra

 

Download the Lest We Forget Banner

Download the Lest We Forget the Frontier Wars banner artwork
Download the Lest We Forget the Frontier Wars banner artwork 800mm x 3800mm (.pdf)

The SAS Culture

MARCH 8, 2018 Greg Rolles

The SAS Culture 8 March 2018 When I was younger I dreamed of being in the army. I wanted to be the guy who saved the innocent child by shooting the crazy bad guy. I wanted to help people by doing the hard work no one else wanted; to serve my country, protect the innocent, be the good guy. Anzac, G.I. Joe – you name it. I wanted the adventure, the excitement and, as I saw it at the time, to spend my life doing the best I could to do the right thing.

I spent most of my childhood wanting to be a fighter pilot, but I was never committed enough at school to get the required marks, and getting my pilot’s license was something well beyond my working class family’s comprehension and/or means. So I started dreaming about intelligence: being a spy like James Bond, cool, sophisticated, confidently killing the bad guys one martini at a time.

Once I was in the army, doing officer training, the biggest conversation amongst cadets was what we wanted to do when we finished training. A lot of cadets wanted to join the Special Forces. I had mucked around, failed uni and worked at Woolworths for a few years between school and going to ADFA (university and the army), so I was a little more realistic about what being in the Special Forces meant. Trying to join the SAS would require hard work and determination. I had felt completely unmotivated. Yet, when a guy came and gave a talk at ADFA about the SAS and Special Forces; it triggered something in my mind. Maybe I should try and join?

The message was that these guys not only get the excitement, they do the greatest good and kill the hardest to reach bad guys. It was the culmination of all of the action movies I had ever watched. More than that, maybe I would be missing on truly living if I wasn’t doing secretive missions, sniping bad guys who were trying to hurt innocent Australians. The SAS were the best of the best, the epitome of the good guy, moral, upright defenders of all that is just in the world. What a way to spend my life.

Around the same time as the SAS presentation, I was doing some training near Canberra. I was enjoying myself immensely. We pushed ourselves physically, learnt a lot and were living life to its fullest. After walking up a particularly steep hill at the end of a navigation exercise, I caught my breath and we rested for a bit. I felt so happy to be there, so alive.

I looked down at my rifle and realised, not for the first time, the irony that I was enjoying life so much and here I was training to take someone else’s.

Usually I could tell myself that they were the bad guys and I was the good guy, but sitting there, staring at my rifle, that line held no truth for me anymore. It was the first time that I seriously doubted the morality of killing anyone for any reason. Something about it just seemed wrong.

It was on the same exercise I learnt to use a claymore mine. My feelings were confirmed as I realised that I didn’t ever want to use that weapon on anyone; not even if they were planning on killing me.

In the following ten years of university, teaching and living in Christian Community I learned that the Australian Military was never, in my life time, involved in defending Australia. We were an attacking army that invaded and killed people for their resources.

Throughout that decade, I still thought of the SAS as the good guys, although I don’t know why. Perhaps there was some residual hope in my head that those who I had perceived to be the ‘best of the best’ were decent people.

I had read a lot of stories and allegations of the SAS in Afghanistan and Iraq, but on 2 October 2014, I learnt a brutal truth.

I knew SAS 4 Squadron that trains on Swan Island was intimately connected to US Special Forces through the Joint Special Operations Command, even being ordered around by and taking part in US missions. I knew JSOC had committed water torture, illegal imprisonment and illegal battlefield executions. I knew they hooded and cuffed people for no reason. But in my heart of hearts, I believed Australian SAS soldiers couldn’t be involved in these horrendous crimes.

While I was peacefully protesting the killing of innocent people, an SAS soldier crashed tackled me to the ground and my last illusion was shattered.

I was bound, hooded and tortured by an SAS soldier.

I had read a lot about these things, but not until that point could I understand that generating feelings of fear, terror and hopelessness was at the apex of Australian military training. This is what we were doing to people in other countries, just because we could take what we wanted. There was no honour here, no glory, no justice and no righteousness. There was just power and pain.

On 12 August 2018, Maurice Blackburn will be representing myself and two others at a civil case to sue the Commonwealth for the way we were treated that morning. I am luckier than most of the victims of the Australian SAS. I have a chance to hold my captors to account.

Along with other members of the Swan Island Peace Convergence, I will speak the truth of the bloody fruits of the SAS before a court and the Australian public. Most of us believe the lie that we need a military, or that, even if our leaders are misleading, the troops are just doing the best job they can. Because of this lie I have faced ridicule, with people close to me saying I copped what I deserved and should even have been shot for the crime of trespass.

But the truth is as clear to me now as that day 13 years ago, staring at my rifle: Killing and hurting people is wrong.

Ignoring that basic truth has created a culture in the SAS of impunity, torture and violence against people who never did anything to us. I will speak that truth for many others who have wrongfully found themselves at the receiving end of an SAS weapon or boot.

I will speak for the humanity in all of us who know, deep down, that things can be different.

See the original on Greg’s blog

https://gregsrole.com/2018/03/08/the-sas-culture/

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