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Wage Peace - Disrupt War

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

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    • Wage Peace Wins Global Peace Award 2023
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  • 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
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        • Rheinmetall – making a killing
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      • 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
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          • SAS absorbed toxic US military culture
        • Whistleblowers
          • Support McBride – It’s About Exposing War Crimes
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      • Lest We Forget the Frontier Wars 2020 – online gathering
    • Peace In Papua
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      • Peace In Papua – Thales, recall your bombs
      • War on West Papua
      • Make West Papua Safe, Australian Federal Police action
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      • 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
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      • Resources for Students
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      • 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.

Whistleblowers

How is David McBride’s prosecution in the public interest?

Free McBride War Crimes Matter banner

By KATHRYN KELLY

Whistleblower David McBride is facing five national security-related charges, carrying up to life imprisonment, for leaking information to the ABC.

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie last week put a motion in Parliament noting that military lawyer David had been warning Defence about command failings and about the conduct of the war in Afghanistan since 2014. When no effective action was taken, Major McBride provided information to the ABC which raised the alarm on the matters before us in the Brereton report, and subsequently he was arrested. Wilkie’s motion further called for all charges against Major McBride to be dropped. The information he had provided to the ABC formed the basis of the “Afghan Files” broadcast in July 2017.

The Hansard of last Monday, November 30, provides Wilkie’s explanatory speech on why these charges should not continue, referencing also whistleblowers Witness K and Richard Boyle as well as the cases of Julian Assange and lawyer Bernard Collaery. Both the government and Labor voted against debating the motion. This is a shameful situation.

 

Attorney-General Christian Porter gave the explanation that the separation of powers requires that the government not interfere in judicial matters and that it is the responsibility of the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP) to decide whether or not to proceed with prosecutions. However, he didn’t acknowledge that the Attorney-General’s consent was required for the prosecutions of Witness K and Bernard Collaery to take place under the National Security Information Act (NSIA), a situation that is not required for most criminal cases.

Only five MPs voted to debate the motion – Andrew Wilkie, Rebekha Sharkie, Adam Bandt, Helen Haines and Zali Steggall.

Porter also gave no explanation as to why the issue of the leaking of information on possible war crimes in Afghanistan had sat before George Brandis for years and no action was taken on the prosecution. Why then did Porter, or, he would have us believe, the CDPP, suddenly decide in September 2018 that Major McBride should be charged? Especially as the case does not appear to meet the CDPP criteria for prosecution.

While generally Porter’s justification would have validity, and non-interference by government in judicial affairs is a strong and fundamental principle of democracy, there are powers that can be used if a miscarriage of justice is seen to be done. Section 71 of the Judiciary Act (1903) gives the Attorney-General those powers.

It is testament to our strong judicial system that those powers have not had to be used, but it does not mean they should never be used. Major McBride’s case, as well as those of Witness K and Bernard Collaery (whose actions led to the Australian government’s bugging of the Timor-Leste government offices being exposed) and Richard Boyle (ATO whistleblower) are clear instances where the injustice of the prosecutions is strong and is clear justification for the powers to be used.

The prosecution of these whistleblowers does the government no credit as they are acting in the public interest, not for any gain for themselves. They are people of integrity and should be lauded for their actions.

It is no coincidence that this government is refusing to implement a strong Commonwealth independent commission against corruption. It is also no coincidence that it is cutting funds to the National Audit Office and the ABC, institutions fundamental to our democracy that have identified serious deficiencies in proper spending accountability and other areas of administration by the government. So it is perhaps no surprise that the government is punishing whistleblowers so severely.

In this situation of lack of accountability, it is crucial that whistleblowers are encouraged to bring wrongdoings to public notice. In some other countries – for example, the US and South Korea – there are rewards for whistleblowers who provide information leading to prosecutions. A royal commission into the adverse treatment of the whistleblowers referred to here, and of others, and into the effective legislative protections and possible rewards needed for them, should be urgently instituted.

Kathryn Kelly is co-convener of the Coalition of Supporters of Bernard Collaery and Witness K.

First published in THE CANBERRA TIMES December 8 2020. Used with permission of the author.

An Evening with Clinton Fernandes

Clinton Fernandes with his books
Professor Clinton Fernandes, professor of international and political studies UNSW Canberra, former Australian Army Officer who served in the Australian Intelligence Corps…

September 16 2019, Canberra Food Coop, 5.30pm (soup) for 6:00pm start.

Competition with China is fast becoming an organising principle of U.S. economic, foreign and security policies. The new “digital iron curtain” that will separate the globe into U.S. and Chinese technological zones runs through Australia, which has banned Chinese telco giant Huawei from supplying equipment to Australia’s 5G network.

Meanwhile, the US military says it wants to spend more than a quarter of a billion dollars worth of naval facilities in the Top End.

Professor Clinton Fernandes will provide an analysis of these matters. He is the author of “Island off the Coast of Asia” and “What Uncle Sam Wants,” a former Defence Force intelligence officer, and an academic at UNSW Canberra.

Professor Fernandes has been a strong supporter of Witness K, and his lawyer Bernard Collaery, and also The whistleblower David McBride in the Afghanistan case.

The talk will not focus on these cases because they are before the courts, however the relevant issues that will be discussed will be of interest to anyone following Australia’s role in joining war games with the US and concerned for the implications for Australia’s peaceful co-existence with its South-east Asian neighbours and the rest of the world.

September 16th, Canberra Food Coop.

Pay what you can – we’ll pass around a donation bucket to cover venue costs

Be there at 5:30pm for crusty bread and vegan soup ($8, cash only)

Talk 6:00pm to 8:00pm

Wage Peace Logo   IPAN logo

Presented by Wage Peace, IPAN and friends

Please RSVP here so that we have an idea of numbers

www.wagepeaceau.org (join our mailing list)

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Wage Peace on Twitter

#Free McBride – Protect Whistleblowers – Jail war criminals

Graeme Dunstan painting the banner to support McBride
Graeme Dunstan with the banner #Free McBride – Protect Whistleblowers – Jail war criminals

Here the #FreeMcBride banner, painting completed, on my work table in the creative chaos of Havachat, Rockhampton.

Three days work, marking out, masking and painting. Design courtesy Somerset Bean and Cate Adams. Borders yet to be sewn on.

David McBride is presently facing prosecution in the ACT Supreme Court for leaking the Afghan Files.

The leaked files reveal war crimes committed by the Australian Special Forces in Afghanistan. They were the cause of the raid by the Australian Federal Police on the ABC earlier this month.

David McBride faces jail. Vigorous and visible defence for him will not only protect him, but it will also assert the public’s right to know what Australian Special Forces have been doing in Afghanistan these past 17 years in our name.

Some public clamour will also influence how much of the Brereton Report – the outcome of the soon-to-be released, Inspector General ADF’s report into operations of Australian Special Forces in Afghanistan, we the public, will be allowed to see.

I reckon that 17 years in Afghanistan under the US Command and without any effective accountability to the Australian people and their Parliament was more than an exercise in vicious futility.

It also produced a toxic culture within the Special Forces of murder, torture, lies and cover ups. If not exposed and eliminated, this culture will pervade the ADF command for years to come.

Which is why I am supporting him with banner painting.

And it is why I am happy to paint banners for other McBride support groups.

From Graeme Dunstan, Master Banner Maker and Peace Bus captain.

Support McBride – It’s About Exposing War Crimes

 McBride actions… Protect Whistleblowers – Defend Democracy

Whistleblowers expose War Crimes. Third gathering outside the Supreme Court 18th July 2019
Whistleblowers expose War Crimes. Third gathering outside the Supreme Court 18th July 2019
Person with tape over his mouth saying Truth Speaks, with banner "Drop the prosecutions of Witness K and Bernard Coleary - A travesty of justice and democracy!"
We wore tape over our mouths. Truth Speaks, with banner “Drop the prosecutions of Witness K and Bernard Coleary – A travesty of justice and democracy!”

whistleblower banner painting

We had fun painting the banner – Cate, Lorese and Lesley – with cake.


McBride addresses protestors

David McBride addressed the crowd

“(It’s not to do with my case)… in Syria – I think it was Amnesty International worked out that the coalition declared we killed 100 civilians in a particular bombing action, and it turned out we had actually killed 1,100 … They achieved this by reclassifying the definition of civilians… by saying anyone above 16 and below 60 is not a civilian, they’re a combatant. And that’s sickening. And that’s us, that’s not the enemy, that’s us.

And without people like you [protesters], we will become the bad guys.”

unions act addresses protestors

Alex White from Unions ACT

“The attacks on whistleblowers are an attack on democracy and all of us. Solidarity with David McBride in the Supreme Court today.

Governments and power holders need to be held accountable.”

mcbride protest banner with tim hollow

Tim Hollow (on the left holding the banner) from the Green Institute spoke:

“The essence of democracy is being able to dissent, safely, constructively, loudly, if necessary. And when those in power start taking away our right to dissent, our democracy is in trouble.

  • When those in power are raiding media offices in a way clearly designed to provoke fear and suppress critical coverage;
  • When those in power are delegitimising advocacy by civil society groups, attacking charities and unions and campaigning organisations;
  • When those in power are criminalising protest, hugely increasing sanctions for non-violent civil disobedience;
  • When those in power are threatening whistleblowers with multiple Lifetimes in jail, we know our democracy is in real trouble.”

sue wareham address the protesters

Sue Wareham: Medical Association for Prevention of War (MAPW) and International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)

“According to the Nuremberg trials; to initiate war of aggression is the supreme international crime; and yet our PM is set to ask Trump not ‘how can we prevent a war in Iran’, but ‘How can we assist in a war in Iran?'”

“Terrible things happen in the course of war because warfare is more or less a platform for human rights abuses and we shouldn’t be surprised by that. But perhaps if the veil of secrecy over what happens in wartime – in our name – if that veil of secrecy is lifted – and if we know more about what is done in our name, then perhaps we’d think more carefully before we keep sending our troops, again and again and again – to battle.”


Speak Out! Drop the prosecutions! This is not Justice!

Ongoing Support for McBride – Exposing War Crimes cannot be a crime

Speak Out! Drop the prosecutions! This is not Justice!

#ProsecuteWarCrimes NOT #Whistleblowers

Thanks to those of you who joined us on the 27th June. It was a great gathering with lots of interesting speakers, and it got our protest in the news, with our banner – Protect Whistleblowers, Defend Democracy.

Special thanks to Kathryn Kelly and IPAN for inviting many organisations and arranging the speakers.

David McBride is before the Supreme Court again Thursday 11th of July. We will be there from 8:30am to support him. He exposed war crimes and the toxic culture that enables them.

Ongoing Support for McBride – Exposing War Crimes cannot be a crime (link to Facebook event)

July 2019: We will have tape over our mouths and hold banners representing the war crimes that the Government would rather have remained hidden.

We must protect whistleblowers – the people in power must be held accountable for their actions.

It is our democratic right to speak up when we see wrongdoing.

If you can’t be there in person please support us on Social Media.

Like, love and share photos and video from www.facebook.com/wagepeaceau

For updates see the Wage Peace Facebook event: Support McBride – Exposing War Crimes cannot be a crime Facebook event 

Afghan files image - civilian casualties

Whistleblower mcbride graphic

We must fight against Assange’s Extradition to US – Tony Kevin

I spoke today at a street rally at the UK High Commission , Commonwealth Avenue, Canberra , at 12 noon Friday 26 April, for Julian Assange . Here are my speaking notes as delivered:

Tony Kevin (former Australian ambassador , independent author, see www.tonykevin.com.au)

My thanks to Christine Assange, Julian’s mother in Australia, to Lorese Vera, and to their colleagues, for inspiring and calling this public meeting.

We live in dangerous times. US imperial power is flailing around in its death throes , making trouble for people and nations all over the world. Blocking real action on climate change, trying to foment regime change in Venezuela and Iran, troublemaking in the South China Sea, illegally maintaining military presences in Syria. The US governing elite remains obsessively Russophobic. The nuclear arms race is slipping out of control under dangerous American illusions of global military supremacy. We are living through the most perilous moment since the Cuban missile crisis ; more perilous even, since in the craziness of Russiagate, the US government is not currently even speaking to Russia.

And here in Australia we have a crucially important election underway, whose outcome will be vital to our young people and other disadvantaged communities.

So why bother about this person called Julian Assange ? This one weird early middle-aged guy who seems to have a knack for getting up the noses of so many powerful people and governments? Aren’t there bigger things we need to think about than the fate of this one particularly troublesome person? Should we not just think of him as ‘collateral damage’ of the past 20 years, and move on to more important and current debates and causes?

The fact that some of us are here today for this demonstration, in a city not big on demonstrations, shows we do not accept that argument. We recognise that Julian is pivotal to so much that is happening around us.

In these dangerous times , we need to gather round him to protect him from his bitter enemies. Not just because it is the decent thing to do – and it is – but because our country needs him, his idealism and energy and political insights . People like Julian are rare and we need to give them our love and respect and loyalty and protection.

There is nothing I say here today that you won’t recognise and know already. Ideas and arguments flow freely round the internet, it is easy to find likeminded people on Facebook and Twitter, to read and commend and encourage one another’s work. We all know Julian’s importance – that is why we are here.

We could all be at home reading and writing on our IPads, but we are here, in the public square, in front of the UK HC , the embassy of America’s most important lackey state, in the capital city of America’s second most important lackey state, Australia.

We are gathered together just down the hill from our Parliament House where Australian national security policy is debated and determined . The fact that we have come together in this place today, in an act of real physical politics, sends an important message to our power elites. We want to make them uncomfortable, we want to be the burrs in their saddles. If we do that, we are achieving something here today.

Julian is now in great danger. He faces extradition from Britain to the heartland of the American Empire. They want to silence him, to bury him in US prison for the rest of his life as they wanted to bury Chelsea Manning for 35 years, a sentence only commuted by Obama in an act of decency as he left office, to nine years. As now Manning is indefinitely back in jail again – she is a truly heroic person.

The current US effort to extradite Julian, now exposed after years of denial, is an act of pure vengeance and spite, and intended to intimidate others who might be tempted to follow Julian’s and Chelsea’s noble examples.

It is what apartheid South Africa did to Nelson Mandela. They failed to suppress his thought and nobility, and these people will fail too. Around the world, people are rising up in protest at the cruel political persecutions now being inflicted on Julian and Chelsea.

The US and UK secret states are throwing everything they can at Julian now. The full resources of Anglo-American information warfare , of the most malevolent PSYOPS – psychological operations in warfare – have been deployed against this one man.

Caitlin Johnstone, whose website I urge you all to follow if you do not do so already, recently brilliantly listed and analysed 27 – twenty-seven – Big Lies that are being spread about Julian , in their efforts to discredit him and limit the reach of his voice. Caitlin convincingly rebutted each of those 27 lies. After today’s event, please go back and read her piece.

It all boils down to a simple either-or proposition : either Julian is crazy and dangerous and must be locked up for life , or those out to get him are committing evil acts . There can be no sitting on the fence on this one, no careful balancing of pros and cons on each side.

We are talking about an innocent man’s life and about the attempt by malign state forces to silence this great man’s voice.

Assange started with the idea that raw state power can and must be fought and exposed with truth and public opinion: that we must demand our governments behave decently, especially when they go to war . This is the same ideal that inspired Dan Ellsberg to leak the Pentagon papers during the Vietnam War , Woodward and Bernstein to expose Nixon’s Watergate crimes, Ed Snowden to expose illegal US Govt intelligence-gathering on its own citizens, and Julian Assange to expose, especially, American war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Nothing better shows the crucial importance of what Assange and Manning did than the release by Wikileaks of the 18 minute film Collateral Murder, the full video and audio record of a mass murder of civilians carried out by a US military helicopter over Baghdad. Not only did they murder a large group of unarmed innocent civilians in the street, a few minutes later they blew up an ambulance team in a bus that came to collect the bodies and a few people still alive, a bus that even contained children. And they enjoyed themselves, they congratulated themselves on their marksmanship, they gloried in these cruel murders .

None of these war criminals were ever bought to justice , nor ever will be. The video was suppressed until Manning somehow got it out to Wikileaks. This was whistleblowing in the public interest of the highest order. If Wikileaks had done nothing else , this film proved its vital importance.

Wikileaks has opened the gates to a whole new way of challenging the imperial state and its false propaganda. There is a healthy public scepticism out there now . Lies are being and will be challenged and exposed. Julian and his team showed the way to the heroism of our own Witness K and Bernard Collaery in this city, over the Australian Government’s illegal spying during an important negotiation with the East Timor government, a case with which you will all be familiar.

Mainstream media are more and more being forced to account for themselves, to look critically at their own role in normalising and explaining away state misconduct . People like us, however angry we might make people like Chris Uhlmann and Michael Rowland – and I like and respect them both as good mainstream journalists – have an essential role to play in holding a blowtorch to the feet of power , and to those who surround and protect and normalise power.

Finally, what message can we send today to help Julian? We wish he were here, in this little piece of British territory across the road called the UK High Commission. We wish we could go in there and bring him out to freedom, as British police brutally dragged him out of another Embassy to a different kind of jail, a British prison in London.

But we can send a powerful message . We need to demand of the British government – and I hope people are listening to us in there – these things.( and I have sent them a copy of these words) .

First: Fair and decent conditions of imprisonment in Belworth Prison as Julian awaits legal proceedings and during these proceedings : proper accommodation , access to fresh air and sunlight and exercise, proper medical care, adequate visiting rights by his family, friends and legal team, and regular and reported consular visits from Australian High Commission consular staff.

All these things are basic human rights due to any Australian citizen imprisoned in a foreign country. Our government needs to demand these things, as it did for James Ricketson in Cambodia, for Peter Greste in Egypt, for our footballer in Thailand – but did not do for David Hicks and Mamdouh Habib In the US, and until recent days was not doing for Julian. We need to challenge the complacent assumption of our government, Labor opposition and the mainstream media, that bad stuff cannot be done to Australian citizens by the governments of our great and powerful friends Britain and the US . It can be, and it is.

Secondly , and crucially, we need to demand of our political elites – in this case, foreign minister Marise Payne and her Shadow Penny Wong, and behind them the major party leaders Scott Morrison and Bill Shorten – that they strenuously and forcefully demand of the British Govt that it not allow Julian to be extradited to US. We all know what will happen to him there. We see what is done to political prisoners of conscience Chelsea Manning, and Maria Butina. We cannot allow this to happen to Julian, to become a lifetime political prisoner of conscience in a US jail.

We need to demand of Marise Payne and Penny Wong that they publicly and jointly or separately commit to making the strongest representations to the British Govt to bring Julian safely home to Australia after his bail issue is legally concluded in the UK. His extradition to US must be firmly denied , because it is entirely vindictive and political exemplary punishment. We cannot trust American justice in this matter. We must protect Julian now, so that he can return to safety and resumed public interest work in his home country, Australia.

We are proud of our fellow Australian and we must now stand by him in his hour of greatest need. Thank you.

Tony Kevin, Canberra 26 April 2019.

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