Australian nuclear submarines threaten South Pacific
“The decision by the Australian government to acquire
nuclear-powered
submarines is irresponsible and dangerous
for the whole South Pacific
region,” said Valerie
Morse, member of Peace Action Wellington.
“Adding
more weapons to the mix of ongoing hostilities between
Australia
and China is more likely to lead to war in this
region. Because of their
longer range, nuclear-powered
submarines are for offensive warfare, not
self-defence.
With this acquisition, they are admitting to seeking
a
fight with China.”
“The newly cemented
alliance between the US, UK and Australia,
and
Australia’s massive buying of weapons is deeply
troubling for the
region. The arms race in the South
Pacific is already at a fevered pace
even before this
announcement. We can expect that the Chinese will
respond
in kind by further ratcheting up their own arms
proliferation.”
“The issue with nuclear-powered
submarines isn’t just about their
offensive war-making
capability. The very production of them is an
ecological
catastrophe: devastating uranium mining and onboard
nuclear
reactors that produce radioactive waste are just
two of the issues. That
doesn’t address their eventual
decommissioning, and the toxic remains.”
“As
importantly, there are major safety and security issues with
any
nuclear material: any damage, failure or leak of
material would be a
catastrophe for human health and
would leak radioactive material all
throughout the South
Pacific.”
“The US, UK and Australia have just
extracted themselves from a
disastrous 20-year-long war
in Afghanistan with no real reflection on
what they did
there, and instead are launching themselves onto a path
to
another military confrontation. The US and UK appear
to be incapable of
adjusting their worldview to one in
which they aren't at the centre.
That world is gone;
their leadership, such that it ever existed, and
claims
to uphold freedom and democracy, died with their illegal
invasion
of Iraq and the massacre of millions of
civilians.”
“New Zealanders are rightly proud of
our nuclear-free stance. This
decision by Australia,
along with a number of other high profile issues
between
New Zealand and Australia, must prompt a serious
strategic
rethink of New Zealand's own defence and
foreign policy.”
“We are obviously deeply relieved
that the New Zealand government has
not signed up to this
new alliance. We have choices to make: we can
continue on
the path of US-led global wars and empire building, or
we
can choose to chart an ethical foreign policy based
upon the
interconnection of all peoples on the planet and
the necessity of
protecting our life-giving ecological
systems.”