The federal Coalition government must reverse its agreement to a United States request to send military forces to the Persian Gulf, say anti-war activists.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced on August 21 that Australia would join an international mission involving military forces from the US, Britain and Bahrain in the Strait of Hormuz.
Sydney Stop the War Coalition (STWC) responded to the announcement the following day warning: 鈥淭here is now a frightening prospect of a new war in the Middle East. The plan to militarise the Strait of Hormuz could easily spark a war, involving nuclear weapons.
鈥淭he Australian government and Labor opposition鈥檚 support for US hostilities against Iran is wrong and counterproductive.
鈥淎ustralia is supposed to have a policy of 鈥榗onstructive engagement鈥 with Iran: sending a warship, a surveillance aircraft and Defence Force personnel to the Persian Gulf to join the US in militarising the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf is a clear breach of that,鈥 STWC said.
鈥淭he US sparked the latest round of hostilities by abandoning the nuclear deal it had with Iran. , including stockpiled strategic and non-strategic ones. It should ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), which 184 states have signed but only 168 have ratified.
鈥淭he latest phase of the so-called Iran crisis started as a tit-for-tat between Britain and Iran over European Union sanctions on supplying oil to Syria 鈥 even though Iran is not an EU signatory.
鈥淚t has been escalated by the White House hawks, who have pushed for more sanctions on Iran and more military to the narrow and strategic Strait of Hormuz.
鈥淪ince pulling out of the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, the US has reimposed tougher economic sanctions against Iran, the goal being to hit Iran鈥檚 oil exports which produce a huge part of the country鈥檚 export income.
鈥淸US President Donald] Trump is now trying to destroy Iran鈥檚 economy and oil industry.鈥
鈥淭he US says it is aiming its fire at the Iranian leadership: in fact, ordinary Iranians are the first to feel the brunt of the economic and social pain.鈥
Independent and Peaceful Australia Network spokesperson Annette Brownlie agrees, adding: 鈥淭his is being presented as protection of the flow of oil through the Persian Gulf and in Australia鈥檚 national interest, but it is clear the US is chafing at the bit for an opportunity to attack Iran, having spent many years imposing harsh sanctions on the people and most recently pulling out of the [Iran nuclear deal], effectively destroying prospects for peace with Iran.
鈥淭he last illegal action taken by the US, Britain and Australia was to form the so-called 鈥楥oalition of the Willing鈥 to mount an attack and invasion of Iraq, opening a Pandora鈥檚 box of instability in the whole region.鈥
STWC notes that even if Morrison鈥檚 announcement to join this 鈥渟till small new 鈥楥oalition of the Willing鈥 is more symbolic than strategic, the symbolism gives political cover to the most highly militarised and warlike state in the world today 鈥 the United States.鈥
鈥淚t also shows that the major parties have learned nothing from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Australian public has, however, deep reservations about following the US into yet another war.
Brownlie continued: 鈥淎ustralia has no interest in a conflict in the Persian Gulf, and no enmity towards Iran.
鈥淪uch a conflict without a United Nations Security Council resolution would be illegal, and would expose Australian leaders and the Australian Defence Force to accusations of the war crime of aggression.
鈥淎ustralian leaders need to heed the lessons of the past. Its time we decoupled from US foreign policy and act independently in the interests of peace and stability.鈥
STWC concluded: 鈥淎ustralia should be helping de-escalate the crisis, and insisting on negotiations.
鈥淲hatever one鈥檚 views on the Iranian regime it is up to the Iranian people 鈥 not Donald Trump, Scott Morrison or [Labor leader] Anthony Albanese 鈥 to choose their government.鈥