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Australia should stick to its principles

By Julie Bishop - posted Thursday, 30 August 2012


In addition, Australia has imposed an additional 10 autonomous sanctions against the regime that include:

•a ban on sales of a wide range of goods directly or indirectly associated with weapons development;

•a ban on the purchase of Iranian oil or oil products;

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•a ban on investment in the Iranian oil and fuel sectors; and

•. tougher travel bans on Iranian officials.

Having imposed strict travel bans against senior Iranian officials, it is farcical for Australia to then dispatch two senior officials to travel to Tehran.

The Government has failed to explain why the Australian Ambassador to Iran, Marc Innes-Brown, is deemed incapable of representing Australia at the NAM summit.

Had the government instructed Mr Innes-Brown to perform this duty it would not have raised eyebrows.

He is already stationed in the country and is an experienced diplomat, having served as Australia's Ambassador to Iraq and First Secretary at the Australian Embassy in Washington.

His presence at the NAM summit could hardly have been portrayed by the regime as a diplomatic coup.

Yet a special visit from Ambassador Quinlan and Special Envoy Hewitt raises serious doubts about Australia's priorities.

There are two key reasons why the Australian government should not have sent these high-ranking officials to Tehran this week.

Iran is unquestionably in pursuit of nuclear weapons capability.

There is a debate about whether Iran will take the final step and actually build a nuclear weapon but the consequences of such a decision would be disastrous for the region and the world.

If Iran built a nuclear weapon it would trigger a regional arms race with unpredictable and potentially catastrophic consequences.

Israel believes that Iran represents an existential threat in that Iran has threatened to destroy the entire Israeli nation.

These concerns have been magnified recently by a number of bellicose statements with regard to Israel.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said, "the existence of the Zionist regime is an insult to all humanity" and that Israel was a "cancerous tumour" that needed to be excised.

Iran's propaganda war is in full swing.

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There are reports from Tehran that delegates to the NAM summit are being offered shuttle bus rides to the very nuclear facilities that are the subject of the current UN sanctions.

Further the Iranian regime reportedly put on display at various summit venues the vehicles in which Iranian nuclear scientists have been assassinated.

While the regime claims it is not pursuing nuclear weapons technology, it refuses to allow unfettered access to inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

This has led to a standoff and steadily increasing sanctions.

It has also led to repeated threats of a military strike by Israel, perhaps with the support of the United States.

This volatile climate makes it vitally important that Iran is under no illusion about the commitment and solidarity of the nations aligned against it and the united opposition to its nuclear development program.

In the current climate, it is hard to see how the dispatch of two senior Australian officials can be anything other than counter-productive.

Australia's international standing and principles should not be compromised by the Government's pursuit of a temporary seat on the United Nations Security Council.

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About the Author

Julie Bishop is the Federal Member for Curtin, Deputy Leader of the Opposition and Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs.

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