Labor鈥檚 Palestine hypocrisy

June 14, 2024
Issue 
Mobilising for Palestine in Gadigal Country/Sydney on June 9. Photo: Peter Boyle

As discussions over a long overdue permanent ceasefire in Gaza drag on, Labor and the increasingly hysterical Coalition are manoeuvring to deflect from their own complicity and culpability in prolonging Israel鈥檚 war by accusing the pro-Palestine movement of causing social division and of being antisemitic.

Labor and Coalition MPs in the past few weeks have blamed Palestine supporters for alleged 鈥渧andalism鈥 of Labor MPs offices and student encampments on universities for a rise in antisemitism.

The Greens Party, which has been pushing for a permanent ceasefire and for Labor to take concrete action to sanction Israel, has come under particular attack.

Greens MPs have continued to probe Australia鈥檚 role in the arms trade supply chain with Israel and pushed Labor on its supposed support for a two-state solution.

But Labor MPs, one after the other, continue to has approved any military or weapons deals with Israel or Israeli companies.

This is despite the granting two military export permits to Israel in February.

While Australia does not supply Israel with complete weapons systems 鈥 Germany and the United States are its key suppliers 鈥 companies here do make crucial parts, without which a machine cannot become a weapon.

in early June placed on the that Australia does make parts for F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jets being used to bomb Gaza.

Australia also signed a $917 million contract with Israeli-owned Elbit Systems to install weapons systems into a Korean-designed infantry fighting vehicle, which will be constructed in Corio, Geelong 鈥 defence minister Richard Marles鈥 electorate.

It has also been revealed that Marles has only recently :聽instead of a junior Defence Department officer approving 鈥渓ow-value鈥 deals, it now has to come to his desk.

Australia鈥檚 complicity extends to allowing intelligence from the US-run 鈥渏oint鈥 spy base at Pine Gap to be passed on to Israel for its genocide in Gaza and perhaps also in the West Bank.

Semantics and false allegations of antisemitism cannot hide the facts: nearly 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed in the carnage and more than 85,000 people have been injured. is being used as a weapon of war 鈥 another crime.

Labor (and the Coalition) may want to keep any discussion of this terrible war and its crimes to a series of claims and counterclaims, but Labor鈥檚 support for Israel, despite the warnings from international legal bodies, is on the record. 聽聽

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese keeps pointing to Labor鈥檚 at the United Nations on December 13 as evidence Labor supports an end to the war.

But Labor plays a role in giving Israel the cover it needs to continue the now nearly nine-month war.

A government truly committed to a lasting and permanent ceasefire could cut all defence ties with Israel, completely stopping the two-way arms trade.

It could place targeted sanctions on Israel. It could prevent Jewish settlers who have attacked Palestinians from coming to Australia. It could increase the number of visas for Palestinians, especially from Gaza, seeking refuge.

It could issue a statement of support for the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC) rulings and it could recall Australia鈥檚 ambassador to Israel.

However, these steps would jeopardise Australia鈥檚 military alliance with the US, including the AUKUS deal.

Consequently, Labor has done nothing concrete to pressure Israel to stop its genocide in Gaza.

Australia was only one of only a handful of countries that rushed to block funds to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), following Israel鈥檚 unsubstantiated accusations that the agency鈥檚 staff were involved in the October 7 attacks.

why she reinstated the (pathetically small) $20 million to UNRWA in March, saying only that she was 鈥渄eeply concerned about the humanitarian situation鈥.

Weasel words won鈥檛 cut it.

The crimes of Benjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 government are clear for all but the die-hard supporters of apartheid Israel to see.

While the ICC and the ICJ rulings are unenforceable, they nevertheless give moral and political weight to the global movement for Palestine.

Even if Israel agrees to a ceasefire tomorrow, a highly unlikely scenario, the movement for justice for Palestine has to continue to apply pressure on Labor.

Every rally, vigil, meeting, occupation or workplace motion that supports the rights of Palestinians, and highlights their 76 years of struggle for self-determination in their indigenous homeland, increases the pressure on Israel, the US and Labor to stop the genocide.

[Sue Bull is a national co-convenor of .]

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