The life of Australia's largest oil and gas project will be extended to 2070, with Environment Minister Murray Watt giving the long-awaited environmental approval for Woodside's North West Shelf project.
This is David McBride the Australian Army Lawyer turned whistleblower, not the US politician.
Turns out I somewhat conflated his whistleblowing on Australian war crimes, which landed him in jail, with the US influencing him being tried for whistleblowing.
War crimes that were committed, because we were in Afghanistan at the behest of the US (and Iraq, Vietnam and Korea before that).
So that’s my bad, because I did hear of the US loving to send Australians on missions for the express purpose that the SAS wouldn’t follow proper rules of engagement, though I can’t find the place where I heard this after trying to find it again.
As for AUKUS subs deal:
This is a straight up tribute to the USA. 300 BILLION dollars. For what? A couple of submarines. What in the hell do we need nuclear subs for? Answer, we don’t. Just use conventional subs. It’s a subsidy for the US military-industrial complex.
Pine Gap is a “shared” spy base the same way you hand your little sibling a controller that’s not plugged in so they can play the video game “together”. We are the junior partner there.
The fact is that the US has massive sway over Australia with the implicit agreement that we allow US military presence in exchange for “protection”, massive economic influence through investment (such is capitalism, and the US is top-dog there), making very little military equipment ourselves and just buying it off the US (and others, sure, but in large part, the US), and “allegedly” meddling in our affairs by engineering the Whitlam sacking, see: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alleged_CIA_involvement_in_the_Whitlam_dismissal
We bend over backwards to keep the Americans on side. Even after police straight up shot an Australian reporter with a rubber bullet, on purpose, for no reason, the PM still had to be restrained in his response instead of calling out the United States more directly.
We follow them into a bunch of wars, we are dependent on their tech services, we are massively influenced by their media.
Australia is under the thumb of the US, but so are many other countries.
In summary: as a middle power, I would love for us to stay somewhat more neutral to the superpowers. Let’s be close friends with like-minded middle powers (Canada, NZ, the EU), and polite to the likes of the US and China.
Being close allies with the US feels like a massive liability.
This is David McBride the Australian Army Lawyer turned whistleblower, not the US politician.
Turns out I somewhat conflated his whistleblowing on Australian war crimes, which landed him in jail, with the US influencing him being tried for whistleblowing.
War crimes that were committed, because we were in Afghanistan at the behest of the US (and Iraq, Vietnam and Korea before that).
So that’s my bad, because I did hear of the US loving to send Australians on missions for the express purpose that the SAS wouldn’t follow proper rules of engagement, though I can’t find the place where I heard this after trying to find it again.
As for AUKUS subs deal:
This is a straight up tribute to the USA. 300 BILLION dollars. For what? A couple of submarines. What in the hell do we need nuclear subs for? Answer, we don’t. Just use conventional subs. It’s a subsidy for the US military-industrial complex.
Pine Gap is a “shared” spy base the same way you hand your little sibling a controller that’s not plugged in so they can play the video game “together”. We are the junior partner there.
The fact is that the US has massive sway over Australia with the implicit agreement that we allow US military presence in exchange for “protection”, massive economic influence through investment (such is capitalism, and the US is top-dog there), making very little military equipment ourselves and just buying it off the US (and others, sure, but in large part, the US), and “allegedly” meddling in our affairs by engineering the Whitlam sacking, see: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alleged_CIA_involvement_in_the_Whitlam_dismissal
We bend over backwards to keep the Americans on side. Even after police straight up shot an Australian reporter with a rubber bullet, on purpose, for no reason, the PM still had to be restrained in his response instead of calling out the United States more directly.
We follow them into a bunch of wars, we are dependent on their tech services, we are massively influenced by their media.
Australia is under the thumb of the US, but so are many other countries.
In summary: as a middle power, I would love for us to stay somewhat more neutral to the superpowers. Let’s be close friends with like-minded middle powers (Canada, NZ, the EU), and polite to the likes of the US and China.
Being close allies with the US feels like a massive liability.