(First published in The Spectator Australia, May 14.)
In the same week that Australia announced it was
spending $50 billion on a fleet of new submarines, the New Zealand army
admitted it couldn’t muster enough soldiers to fire the traditional rifle
salute at an Anzac Day service in the country’s third-largest city,
Christchurch. Two weeks before that, it was revealed that two modern patrol ships
from the New Zealand navy’s modest fleet hadn’t been to sea for years because
of crew shortages.
It’s hard to imagine a more vivid demonstration of
the parlous state of New Zealand’s military forces, or of the growing defence
capability gap between New Zealand and Australia. But was anyone embarrassed by
these disclosures? Not that you’d notice.
In complacent New Zealand, defence ranks so low in
the order of political priorities that it’s virtually off the radar. Endangered
native parrots get more attention. Politicians take their cue from opinion
polls which show that while New Zealanders support their Defence Force, they
don’t want to spend any more money on it.
Two generations of Kiwis have grown up with the
notion that the military exists mainly to contribute to feel-good operations
such as international peacekeeping and relief efforts. Defence policy seems
predicated on the hope that in the event of a major conflict, New Zealand will escape
the attention of the combatants. Failing that, Australia and the United States
will ensure its protection.
The principal function of the navy and air force is
to patrol New Zealand’s massive exclusive economic zone, the fourth largest in
the world. The air force tries to accomplish this using 1960s-era Orion
aircraft - planes that predate the Holden Kingswood and which have been miraculously kept flying as a result of endless engine
and electronics upgrades. The RNZAF’s Hercules transport planes are of a
similar vintage.
No one pretends New Zealand is capable of mounting a
credible defence effort if the country came under attack. In 2001, Helen
Clark’s Labour government decided to mothball the air force’s only combat
aircraft, a squadron of ageing Skyhawks.
Clark famously justified that decision by
pronouncing that we lived in “an incredibly benign strategic environment”. Only
months later jihadists destroyed the Twin Towers, and suddenly the world looked
very different. But Labour doggedly stuck to its defence-lite credo, cancelling
a deal under which New Zealand would have cheaply acquired 28 F-16s to replace
the Skyhawks.
By common consent, the strategic environment now is
highly unstable –not just in the familiar flash points of the Middle East, but
in New Zealand’s own area of strategic interest. North Korea is ruled by a belligerent
madman and an ascendant China is flexing its military muscles with provocative
displays of military power in the oil-rich South China Sea, where any conflict
would threaten vital trade routes.
If that happened, defence commentators say, New
Zealand would be under pressure to help keep sea lanes open. But with just two
frigates (one of which has been in port since the end of 2014, undergoing an
upgrade), it would struggle to make even a token contribution to a
multinational task force.
Even when the navy sticks to its core role of
protecting the country’s fisheries, there are doubts about its effectiveness.
In January last year, in what seemed a striking demonstration of the navy’s
impotence, HMNZS Wellington proved powerless to stop three Equatorial
Guinea-flagged ships caught poaching valuable Antarctic toothfish.
All this must cause Australians to wonder whether
New Zealand is pulling its weight in the defence partnership. Admittedly the
two countries have different strategic priorities, partly due to Australia’s
size and closer proximity to Asia.
New Zealand stayed out of the Iraq War, for
example, while Australia assumed the role of America’s “deputy sheriff” in the
Pacific.
New Zealand remains excluded from the Anzus Treaty
as a result of its anti-nuclear stance, which was initiated by Labour and
continued by the centre-right National Party. But as commentators point out,
the relationship with Australia remains a cornerstone of New Zealand defence
policy – and the widening capability gap between the two countries has been
noted.
In a scathing speech at a symposium in Wellington
last year, Kiwi defence analyst Chris Salt – an amateur, but a well-informed
one – said New
Zealand’s defence plan hinged on buying enough time to run to Australia and
America for help. He described it as a policy “devoid of honour and
integrity”.
So what happened to the notion that defence of national sovereignty is a core role of government? The answer, in New Zealand at least, is that it has been the victim of a profound generational change.
Until the 1970s, the country was led by politicians with painful memories of the Second World War. The defence portfolio was invariably assigned to a senior cabinet minister and the Returned Services Association was arguably the country’s most powerful lobby group. RSA members had personally experienced the consequences of being thrust into war ill-prepared and warned constantly about the danger of running down New Zealand’s defence capability. The baby-boomer generation mocked them as crusty old warmongers.
As the old soldiers died and memories of the war grew dimmer, defence slipped down the priority list. The election in 1984 of a Labour government led by pacifists and idealists who had cut their political teeth in the anti-Vietnam protests of the 1960s and 70s, and who remained gripped by a mindset that regarded any sort of offensive military capacity as bad, was a turning point.
But it’s hardly fair to pin all the blame on Labour. The National Party, which has governed for much of the post-Anzus era, shows no greater commitment to defence than its left-leaning opponents.
And while New Zealand defence personnel continue to serve with distinction on the ground (they’re helping train Iraqi troops right now), their political and bureaucratic masters in Wellington often give the impression of being incompetent and dysfunctional, with a long record of catastrophically ill-advised equipment purchases, bitter inter-service rivalry and disruptive shifts in policy with every change of government.
Given the sustained neglect of defence in New
Zealand, it’s a strange paradox that attendance at Anzac Day services has never
been greater. The inescapable conclusion is that New Zealanders in the 21st
century are more comfortable commemorating past wars than dwelling on the
possibility of future ones.
Footnote: Please excuse the annoying changes in the typeface. I have no idea what causes this and have given up trying to fixing it.
Footnote: Please excuse the annoying changes in the typeface. I have no idea what causes this and have given up trying to fixing it.
3 comments:
Karl is probably the only writer that is addressing this issue right now. I have felt for a long time that our defence is hopelessly undergunned. I didn't realise about the Navy – what a scandal! The air force appears to be hopeless as well. We don't actually have anything that can fight in the air. So presumably a 911 type situation where someone hijacks a plane and wants to fly it into Parliament or the sky Tower we have got nothing. We can't intercept the plane, we have no fighter jets.
Unfortunately it's going to take a war before the public in New Zealand and the government realise how bad things are. We have no defence. No Navy and no air force to speak of and a bit of an army. Right now Fiji could take us on.
The first duty of government is defence of the nation. They should stop the war on smoking and start preparing for actual war so that if an actual war starts we will have some defence forces to actually defend ourselves with.
One of my sons married a Sydney girl whose father immigrated to Australia from post war Germany in the early 1960’s. One of his sons recently married a Japanese girl who was working in Sydney for a Japanese corporate.
Following the wedding, the ‘German’ and the Japanese fathers were together on the Manly Ferry traveling to Circular key, when the ‘German’ turned to the Japanese and said – “You see those warships in the harbour? – They were built to keep you and me out!”
When it comes to defense in the 21st century we need to ask ourselves who are our ideological enemies? It is no longer Germany or Japan. In our politically correct world, we are unable to speak their name out of fear we might cause offense.
Besides, if they can achieve through migration and demographics what they could never hope to achieve with fertilizer bombs, terrorism and a traditional military attack, then why bother with the bloodshed?
In a world of diversity and difference that exists only to be celebrated, what’s the point of a defense capability? Surely the ‘other’ is just a friend we have not yet met?
"There are no permanent friends, only permanent interests" or words to that effect. Armed services are the price we pay for alliances. NZ could not afford the size and capability to defend itself, so for many years we have subscribed to collective defence via alliances. Until the Kirk and Clark governments decided to change that, with the agreement of National eventually. Currently we kid ourselves that we are playing a part but it is readily apparent to anyone with even a slight inkling that our army, navy and Air Force are woefully under funded and manned. We have spent the absolute minimum for years. Before WW2 and after it and got away with it. Actually less than the absolute minimum. Our soldiers paid the price at the start of the war and if it ever comes to that again they'll pay the price then too. Australia, on the other hand, is realistic, although its submarine purchase is more an exercise in job creation and seat retention than one of acquiring a defence capability. But at least Australians are prepared to pay the price and to play their proper part. We, sadly, are not.
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