1. Australian Participation in Missile Defense
The Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO) has been conducting joint experiments in Australia with the US Defense Department on the early detection of ballistic missile launches as part of US research into Theater Missile Defense (TMD) systems. Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Alexander Downer said that the Australian government would support the use of the joint Pine Gap electronic spy base in US tests of its proposed NMD system. US Defense Secretary William Cohen stated, "the Australian Government said that if the United States were to go forward, they would be supportive." Australian Defense Minister John Moore said that once the US made a decision whether to deploy, "the appropriate channel would be discussed with the Australian Government. When that does occur, we'll respond."
"Revealed: Australia's role in US missile tests"
"Canberra's Support in the Bag, Says Cohen"
An editorial in the Sydney Morning Herald argued that Australian Prime Minister John Howard and Defense Minister Moore have sensibly said little about the proposed US National Missile Defense (NMD) system or Australia's possible participation in the project. Unless, and until, the US decides an NMD system is technically feasible, affordable and desirable, the issue is hypothetical and there is no reason for Australia to prematurely answer a question that may not be asked. The Herald also reported that many political players in Australia are dealing cautiously with the issue. Former prime minister Malcolm Frase, who was formerly a strong supporter of the US-Australian alliance, wrote in The Australian (July 18), that "if the US seeks to use facilities at Pine Gap in establishing such a defence system, Australia should refuse absolutely."
"Anti-missile anxieties"
"Ex-pollies stir up NMD debate"
2. PRC Reaction to US-Australia Cooperation
The Sydney Morning Herald reported that a commentary in the PRC's People's Daily warned Australia against participating in the US National Missile Defense (NMD) program, saying Australia would only be a "cat's paw" for the US. It said, "Australia has suffered previous losses from jumping on the bandwagon of the United States and Britain during several world-scale wars."
"Australia a cat's paw for US, says China"
Robert E. Hunter, a former U.S. Ambassador to NATO and currently a senior advisor at the Rand Corporation, said that the debate over the US National Missile Defense (NMD) program has led Australia to take a look at the PRC's future and the US approach to it. Not threatened by any of the countries cited by the US as potential aggressors, many Australians wonder why the US is risking a crisis with the PRC by including in the NMD program a shared satellite facility in Australia. There is concern more generally about the special relationship the US and Australia used to share, as the US has been proposing to downgrade the quality of bilateral naval exercises from cutting-edge military cooperation with Australia to "dumbed down" multilateral exercises that include less-advanced countries such as Singapore and the Philippines. [Ed. note: This article was included in the US Department of Defense's Early Bird news service for July 25, 2000.]
"The New Politics Of The Pacific Sends Shudders Through Australia"