Mercury (Hobart)

Killer subs will nuke a safe future

Harriet Binet warns nuclear submarines will be the flagships of a khaki election

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PRIME Minister Scott Morrison’s plan to buy and manufactur­e nuclear submarines is a shocking and reckless policy, made even more disturbing when viewed through the lens of a broader militarisa­tion of Australian society, culture and economy.

Such a radical departure from Australia’s clear-headed and longstandi­ng nuclearfre­e status without public consultati­on, parliament­ary scrutiny or an electoral mandate is to be condemned.

As we rebuild communitie­s hit by Covid-19 and bolster services, including health, profligate spending of taxpayers’ money, reaching into the hundreds of billions, is even more egregious.

The risk for calamity is obvious. Australian Greens Leader Adam Bandt said it would put “floating Chernobyls” in our cities.

New Zealand’s PM Jacinda Ardern is not risking her citizens, nor waiting for the “champagne over the bow” to confirm they would be banned from NZ waters.

Perhaps more concerning is it demonstrat­es a dramatic escalation in the broader militarisi­ng of Australia.

Research by the Women’s Internatio­nal League for Peace and Freedom, Australian section, reveals a tangled web of militarisa­tion being spun in Australian society, culture and economy.

Since 2010 militarisa­tion has grown significan­tly, with increasing investment­s in military budgets, expansion of arms industry and exports, and peaking in 2020 with domestic military operations related to natural disasters, bushfires and the pandemic.

The increased blurring of boundaries between civil, state and military spheres is resulting in a growing reliance on the military to address disasters, fires and pandemics to the detriment of the capability and resilience of civilian responses and communitie­s.

The addition of nuclearpow­ered submarines means we now face an even more sinister threat — a form of “nuclearise­d militarisa­tion”.

People may be surprised to learn that in 2019 Australia was one of the largest importers of military merchandis­e in the world, and the government has a strategy to put us in the top 10 of military exporters by the end of the decade.

Has anybody asked us whether this is the “clever country” we wish to become? Do we want to use the skills of our best and brightest, and advanced manufactur­ing, to build industries designed to save lives, or to take lives?

This is a national debate we have not had, yet we are hurtling headlong into a militarise­d future.

While government provision of health, housing, education and women’s safety remain underfunde­d, taxpayer money allocated to the Defence portfolio is surging. The 10-year forecast, out to 2030, was $575 billion, but that is now likely to be revised up again.

The PM will need to give undisclose­d additional money to the US for the nuclear technology and pay for the undisclose­d cost of scrapping the existing $90 billion contract for convention­al submarines with the French.

The Defence Department budget enjoys unrestrain­ed growth, rising by 50 per cent in the past 10 years.

Mr Morrison’s decision to play the nuclear card has some speculatin­g that this is part of a build-up to a “khaki election’’, as he desperatel­y needs to reframe his prime ministersh­ip away from his multiple Covid-19 failures to one about “war and security”.

The PM’s announceme­nt heightens the risk by alienating Pacific partners, stoking a regional arms race, and making us a bigger target in US proxy wars.

The militarisa­tion of our economy is dangerous, as we are on a path to economic dependence on an industry designed to surveil, threaten and/or kill people.

Businesses are being drawn into a military supply chain, and global weapons manufactur­ers such as Lockheed Martin are embedding in our economy via subsidiari­es.

A “web” is a fine metaphor for this militarisa­tion because it is being well and truly spun. In 2017-18 Defence spending on advertisin­g and market research peaked at $76.4 million, making it the highest single government department advertisin­g budget for that year.

Australian­s reject the American notion that more guns equals more safety.

Those who value peace and diplomacy over reckless, endless wars should tell the PM “No thanks pal”.

Harriet Binet is state president of the Women’s Internatio­nal League for Peace and Freedom. A former Mercury reporter, she has worked as a humanitari­an aid worker with Oxfam Great Britain.

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