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Aussie envoy hits out at Howard
and Downer
By BRUCE HAIGH
WHILE it is true that diplomats are sent abroad to lie for their
countries, they are also sent abroad to build networks and gather
information that might help foster trade or defuse tension.
Richard Woolcott is an accomplished diplomat. He has served seven
Australian prime ministers, managing to balance strong personalities and
different policies with skill and aplomb. So what went wrong with the
eighth prime minister, John Howard?
Did Woolcott lose his ability to negotiate political minefields?
Woolcott has written a book, his second, on matters relating to
diplomacy and foreign policy. The first, an autobiography entitled The
Hot Seat: Reflections on Diplomacy from Stalin’s Death to the Bali
Bombings, was a serious study of the art of diplomacy and the
formulation and implementation of Australian foreign policy.
The second, Undiplomatic Activities, is a rather lighter look at the
same topic. At least it looks that way to begin with, but all the early
froth and bubble leads into a sting in the tail.
Woolcott’s criticisms are unusually tough, all the more so because it is
not a voice we normally associate with him.
Howard and foreign minister Alexander Downer appear to have so upset him
that he has done something hitherto unheard of in his career – burnt his
bridges.
Here are some observations from the book:
Prime Minister John Howard and Foreign Minister Downer have both had a
tendency to make bombastic statements for domestic political advantage
and to pursue policies with excessive zeal … In fact zealots and
political ideologues make bad ministers and diplomats, and poor
negotiators.
And: As this century unfolds, I find I am living in a changed Australia.
It is not the country I represented for four decades … our civil
liberties certainly have been eroded in the name of the so called War on
Terror. We seem to be sleepwalking into a surveillance society … Now
like King Canute, Bush and his courtiers Dick Cheney, former Prime
Minister Tony Blair, John Howard, Alexander Downer and more recently
Brendan Nelson wait for the rising tide of political reality to submerge
them.
What had goaded the urbane and diplomatic Woolcott into a most
uncharacteristic and undiplomatic critique of the Howard government?
After 40 years in the foreign service, Woolcott and his wife Birgit live
comfortably in the middle of the diplomatic area of Canberra. We started
our conversation at home and moved to a charming inner Canberra
restaurant for lunch.
NewMatilda.com: What was your point of departure with the Howard
government?
Woolcott: I worked with Downer before and after the March 1996 election.
Howard sacked the secretary of the department, Mike Costello. I was not
happy with that. Nonetheless, Howard asked me to be a special envoy to
Malaysia to try to get the relationship with Mahathir Mohamad
(Malaysia’s then prime minister) onto a more even keel. The intention
was to conduct quiet diplomacy with the aim of arranging a meeting
between Mahathir and Howard in Canberra. Mahathir agreed but even while
I was still in Kuala Lumpur, Downer announced the meeting on Radio
Australia, much to Mahathir’s annoyance.
Eventually they met in Brisbane, but due to Downer’s pre-emptive
announcement, the meeting was not what it might have been.
I was asked to help with the preparation of a White Paper on Foreign
Affairs in the period 1996-97. A panel was formed of which Malcolm
Fraser was a member – how things have changed. Anyhow the document was
to look 15 years ahead. It looked at the ANZUS Treaty. Fraser and I
tried to inject some balance by examining the likely influence and
attitudes of China.
But it was the issue of the republic that began the parting of the ways.
I argued that the paper must embrace the notion of Australia becoming a
republic sooner rather than later. There are sound foreign policy
reasons for Australia to become a republic, not least of which are
national prestige and pride. Downer would have none of it. I wrote to
Howard setting out the case, drawing attention to the humiliation of
sharing a head of State with another independent country. Howard backed
Downer’s position and by the time the document was released in 1997, I
was moving away from the government.
Although Howard made no announcement, it was apparent to me after
visiting the US in 2002 that Bush was planning to invade Iraq. On
returning home, I argued in a series of newspaper articles that it was
not in Australia’s interests to go into this war with the US,
particularly while Afghanistan remained unfinished business.
I was part of a group of 43 former senior public servants who signed a
letter to the media in August 2003 saying that we opposed the war in
Iraq. Howard and Downer were very angry and Downer wrote me a letter
which quite frankly was below the belt. That was the final parting of
the ways.
NewMatilda.com: Some see the public service as having being politicised.
What’s your take on this?
Woolcott: The Howard government is not comfortable with dissent. Putting
heads of departments on contracts has helped foster a culture of
compliance.
The minister is now responsible for assessing his permanent head, so it
is hard for them to give free and fair advice. A lot of pressure has
been and is being applied on many good and honest public servants.
Putting a senior public servant on a contract creates a power imbalance
in favour of the government.
NewMatilda.com: What are your views on the shape and structure of the
department of foreign affairs and trade into the future?
Woolcott: We need embassies staffed with good people. They need to have
language training. Now more than ever before it is very important that
we have a culturally sensitive foreign service.
A competent ambassador, utilising to the full the range of modern
communications now available has never had so many reporting
opportunities available.
Australia should beef up its diplomatic resources in China, Japan, US,
the UN and Indonesia, these are the posts of most importance to
Australia. But we should not overlook the Pacific, particularly Papua
New Guinea.
I believe at the moment that there is an excessive emphasis on
terrorism. This has had a negative effect on the department. I would
like to see a swing back to a greater emphasis on human rights.
NewMatilda.com: You have been on the outer with Howard and Downer, do
you see a change if a Labor government is elected?
Woolcott: Well, I am always available. In fact, I would be more than
happy to contribute to helping establish a more balanced foreign policy
in relation to East Asia and the United Nations.
I would expect changes under (Kevin) Rudd to be more substantial than
anything a Howard or Costello government might undertake.
NewMatilda.com: How do you see the damage of the Howard years and how
might it be repaired?
Woolcott: There has been quite widespread damage to our international
standing. Australian foreign policy is seen as an echo of US foreign
policy. The people I keep in contact with say Australia is not the
independent voice it once was. Issues such as climate change, Iraq and
the Howard/Bush doctrine of pre-emptive strikes are examples of where
Australia has failed to live up to expectations forged in earlier years.
Downer and Howard failed to realise that international relationships are
forged between countries not leaders. There has been considerable damage
to Australia’s standing as a country that championed human and legal
rights.
Downer talks about how well the international community regards
Australia, but there is more to the international community than Britain
and the US – there are all the members of the UN, an institution that he
has all but ignored. Downer has not attempted to stand for the Security
Council because he knows Australia would have no chance of being
elected.
It is a very sad situation – we have not been a member for 20 years.
Australia was last elected in 1984 and our standing at that time was
such that we were elected with a record majority.
Indonesia has played a big part in Woolcott’s career. He said neither
Howard nor Downer had ever discussed Timor Leste with him.
However he thought Howard’s letter to the short-lived Indonesian
president BJ Habibe, encouraging a referendum on independence, was a
mistake and he said so publicly at the time.
Woolcott thought the Indonesian military was a stabilising force in
terms of holding the archipelago together but a potentially
destabilising force on the new and fragile Indonesian democracy, which
was functioning better than expected.
Gen Peter Cosgrove, then commander of the international intervention
force in Timor Leste, had said to him that the period following Timor
Leste’s independence ballot might have become very difficult had not
senior officers from both Australia and Indonesia been to the Australian
Defence College and known each other.
This was a case, he said, for maintaining such linkages. – newmatilda
Note: Bruce Haigh is a political commentator and retired diplomat
who served in South Africa from 1976-79, who ran a training programme
for black South Africans in Australia from 1990-93 and who recently gave
his extensive black South African art collection back to the nation.
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