Israel vital to Australia, says defence minister
NAOMI LEVIN
THERE is a direct link between security in the Middle East and Australia’s security situation, according to Defence Minister Dr Brendan Nelson.
He described the situation in Israel as vital to Australia.
“No longer can we accept the fact that this has nothing to do with us, it has everything to do with us,” Dr Nelson told the State Zionist Council of Victoria’s Annual Assembly last week.
Dr Nelson, the member for Bradfield – an electorate in Sydney’s north with a 4500-strong Jewish population – and a strong supporter of Israel, told the assembly that despite being located so far from Israel, the tiny Jewish country is vital to Australia’s security interests.
He told the audience that Israel’s survival and growth was important and that it would be “a bulwark against the kind of madness that is being promoted by Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the ambitions of the Iranians”. He also said he hoped the upcoming peace talks between Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would be fruitful.
During his speech, Dr Nelson said that in the most recent Defence Department analysis, the Middle East had been deemed “critical to Australia’s security”. He gave a variety of reasons for this: there were significant natural resources in the region major countries, including Russia and China, have interests in the area and there is a threat of weapons proliferation.
To this end, he outlined a case against the current regime in Iran, citing its support for terrorist organisations, Hamas and Hezbollah Ahmadinejad’s call to wipe Israel off the map the country’s “nuclear aspirations” and its sponsorship of terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan.
While he stopped well clear of calling for any type of decisive action against Iran, he did emphasise that Australia makes “no apology for building up our defence, intelligence and policing capabilities”.
He also said that if Australia were to withdraw or reduce the number of soldiers in Iraq, it would send the wrong message to those we are at war with.
“Sometimes people think we should wait until that, which we most fear, actually happens before we do something about it,” Dr Nelson said.
Speaking to The AJN after his speech, Dr Nelson hesitated when asked to elaborate on the terrorist threat faced by the local Jewish community.
“I often say to Australians, we will be at our best if we do not allow these people to fundamentally reshape our lives,” he explained.
“Yes we have got to understand it [terrorism], we’ve got to be prepared to deal with it ... but we must not allow ourselves to crouch in fear.”
http://www.ajn.com.au/news/news.asp?pgID=4401