PAUL BARRATT. It’s too easy to take us to war

Where we are today is that the practice of the last twenty years has purportedly taken the power to send Australia to war away from the Governor-General and placed it at the disposal of junior ministers in the Defence portfolio. This cannot be allowed to stand. The war powers must be relocated to the Australian parliament.

Most Australians would be surprised to learn how easy it is for our Government to commit the Australian Defence Force (ADF) to armed international conflict (war). They would be even more surprised to learn, given Australia’s often proclaimed affection for the rule of law and for a rules-based international order, that our deployments in the 21st century have avoided the clear Constitutional path that involves the Governor-General (the commander in chief of the Australian armed forces), and most of them have been in violation of international law.

Regarding our domestic law, our Constitution placed the power to go to war on the British King until 1942 and on the Governor-General thereafter. (It was in 1942 that Australia ratified the Statute of Westminster which gave ‘dominions’ like Australia the right to choose independence – the Australian ratification was backdated to the start of the war, just in case!) The Governor-General was, of course, expected to act on the advice of the Australian Prime Minister. The Governor-General issued declarations of war on Axis latecomers like Hungary and signed peace treaties after the second world war.

What this means is that in order lawfully to deploy the ADF into armed conflict, the Government would be expected to first obtain the assent of the Governor-General. By convention, the Governor-General would be expected to give assent, but those same conventions allow the Governor-General to ask questions and seek assurances, especially about the legality of the action to which s/he is being asked to assent. While the Governor-General is not expected to refuse ministerial advice, the minister is under a duty to ensure that the Governor-General is not asked to act illegally. The conventions do not distinguish between legality under domestic or international law.

Instead of adhering to this clear constitutional path, successive Governments appear to have relied upon section 8 of the Defence Act 1903, a provision which in its current form was introduced in 1975 to make clear that the Minister for Defence had “general control and administration” of the Defence Force and that both the Secretary and the newly created position of Chief of the Defence Force were subject to the Minister’s direction. Section 8 was never intended to create a new power to make war.

Reliance upon section 8 strips the checks and balances from the process for deciding matters of war and peace, a process that already places too much power in the hands of executive government. At least when the constitutional niceties are observed, the Governor-General is entitled to be assured that the proposed deployment is lawful. For example, the 2003 invasion of Iraq was condemned by most international lawyers and none of the few who argued that it was legal was prepared to argue that it would have succeeded in the International Court of Justice. It is noteworthy that on 21 March 2003, the day after the invasion, former Solicitor-General Gavan Griffiths QC ridiculed the legal advice proffered by the Howard Government, advice which was written by two public servants without practising certificates rather than by the Solicitor-General on whom the government would normally rely. Did Prime Minister Howard refrain from approaching the Governor-General because he knew the lawfulness of the endeavour was dubious to say the least? Governor-General Hollingworth had, in fact, asked the then Attorney-General (Daryl Williams) about the legality of the mooted war, following which Prime Minister Howard withdrew an undertaking to take it before the Federal Executive Council “for noting.”

As matters stand, reliance on section 8 effectively puts the power to make war at the sole discretion of the Prime Minister. All that is required is for the Prime Minister to request the Defence Minister to sign a direction under section 8, and away we go. If the Defence Minister declines, the Prime Minister can arrange for him/her to be replaced within 24 hours. Bad enough, but the situation is even worse than that.

Under our parliamentary system, the Administrative Arrangements Order (which sets out which Ministers administer which Acts of Parliament) assigns all of the powers of the relevant legislation to all of the Ministers in a given portfolio. This means each of the Ministers in the Defence portfolio has the power to give the Chief of the Defence Force a direction under section 8 of the Defence Act. The Prime Minister would not even have to replace a Defence minister who refused to order an illegal war but could simply find one who would.

Where we are today is that the custom and practice of the last twenty years has purportedly taken the power to send Australia to war away from the Governor-General and placed it at the disposal of junior ministers in the Defence portfolio.

This cannot be allowed to stand.

The war powers must be relocated to the Australian Parliament so that, in circumstances short of a direct attack on Australia requiring an immediate response, the consent of Parliament must be obtained before Australian forces can be deployed into international armed conflict. The Parliament (or, if necessary, a cross-party committee) can ask the questions that must be asked and honestly answered. We owe this to our armed forces, our people, and, yes, our allies too. We do none of them any favours by cheer-leading illegal or foolish wars. We also owe it to the millions of civilians whose lives are cut short or devastated in wars fuelled by outside interference.

Finally, it must be remembered that Article 1 of the ANZUS treaty requires the US and Australia to refrain from the threat or use of force in any manner contrary to the UN Charter.

Paul Barratt AO is President of Australians for War Powers Reform. He is a former Secretary, Department of Defence and a former Deputy Secretary, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. This editorial first appeared in the Australians for War Powers Reform bulletin. (18.11.19)

Comments

9 responses to “PAUL BARRATT. It’s too easy to take us to war”

  1. Andrew Farran Avatar
    Andrew Farran

    To Mike Scrafton
    You are right to prioritise accountability. This, in any genuine sense, we have not had from government for a long time. Usually the reverse. Why is this so? Has the security/intelligence cabal already captured government? It appears so. All the more tragic when we examine how it is steered.

  2. Rosemary Lynch Avatar
    Rosemary Lynch

    Yes. The poverty of the current debate about Australia and war is alarming. The possibility of Defence propaganda persuading a Cabinet Minister, and the country to war without debate was demonstrated in Syria, which, while presumably not with a declaration of war, was a war crime. Ponder that Generals, Ministers, Bureaucrats, Pine Gap and the rest! How dare they? How dare we?

  3. Charles Lowe Avatar

    I couldn’t agree more.

    I had not been able to think clearly on this matter before reading this erudite and anchored article. Thank you Paul Barratt.

  4. Chris Mills Avatar

    Australia should only go to a legal war after a Joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament, with the debate published Nationally, and after a vote. Ideally, a 2/3rds majority.

    Those who ignore history will be condemned to repeat it. Think about Korea, Vietnam, Iraq 1, Afghanistan, Iraq 2, Syria. Was Australia’s security improved or diminished? What of the loss of life, soldier’s PTSD and wasted funds that could have been used for domestic development.

    And the dangerous naivety of a Prime Minister who claims that Australia and US are ‘joined at the hip’ and Australia would automatically go to war of the US is attacked:

    https://www.sbs.com.au/news/australia-us-joined-at-hip-turnbull

    The ANZUS Treaty does NOT obligate Australia to do more than ‘act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes’ (Article IV).

    Time to re-read this:

    https://publish.pearlsandirritations.com/john-menadue-we-are-in-denial-about-the-risks-in-our-relationship-with-the-united-states-part-1-of-2/

    And thanks to Brian Toohey for his timely book revealing Secrets.

  5. Mike Scrafton Avatar
    Mike Scrafton

    Paul
    As usual, an informed and precise analysis.
    However, the practicalities of using military force and the rate a which security crises develop mitigates against using the slow processes of Parliament.
    Among the other factors are the differential in knowledge between members and Cabinet, the differential in expertise between members and strategic and military advisers, and the time lag created by need to have Parliament meet,recalled if its in recess, and then the complexities inherent in the debate.
    Moreover, the government of the day will normally have the numbers and the parliamentary process won’t change the government’s decision.
    That said, I do think that governments should be required to go into parliament, recalling it if necessary, as soon as possible and set out in detail the way in which of Australia’s interests are engaged, how they are engaged, the likely damage to those interests from conflict, the government’s strategic objectives and how they relate to Australia’s interests and how the achievement of the strategic will mitigate the damage to Australia’s interests.
    This should be a legislative requirement and one that requires the statement to be as empirically based as possible.
    No two circumstances in which Australia might find itself at war will be the same. Increasingly the reaction times required to counter aggression are being compressed and the consequences for being slow to react are becoming more grave. While government’s in representative democracies must be given considerable latitude in this are they equally need to be held to high standards of accountability.
    Getting the balance right is difficult.

  6. David Macilwain Avatar
    David Macilwain

    I’m afraid that the concept of war has now been modified to such a degree that it could no longer be debated and decided upon by Parliament. The current threat of war with Iran – a war which our “allies”, the US, UK and Israel, show every sign of pursuing, is surely a case in point. We are already engaged in a massive provocation in the Persian Gulf, merely by joining the illegitimate “Maritime security operation”, while propaganda and destablising protest-riots in Iraq and Iran threaten to push Iran to the brink – taking some action to which we can “respond” militarily. The time of course to demand debate and action to stop this escalation was back in July, before the predictable announcement on the deployment. I’m afraid that without some action to better inform Australians about the true state of affairs in the M/E – such as exposure to alternative viewpoints in the alternative and non-Western media, any debate is likely only to come up with an endorsement of our kneejerk belligerence.

  7. Brian Toohey Avatar
    Brian Toohey

    Paul, A sobering analysis. also great to see reminder of how Australia routinely breaks article 1 of the ANZUS treaty.

  8. Mac Hallliday Avatar
    Mac Hallliday

    Your case is understated and the failure of each side of politics is an indictment of our flawed culture..

  9. ernst Willheim Avatar
    ernst Willheim

    I strongly agree.
    But what do we mean by going to war?
    We no longer make formal declarations of war.
    If an Australian base, a so-called ‘joint facility’ is used for targeted assassinations does this constitute Australia going to war (or are we not really involved because Pine Gap is not really a joint facility)
    What if we send ‘advisers’ or a small expeditionary (SAS) force?
    Clearly parliamentary authority should be required for major deployments such as the invasion of Iraq but to what extent should the principle of parliamentary approval be applied to lesser involvements?