PM Howard I/V On Lateline - Pre-emptive Strikes
29 November 2002
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER
THE
HON JOHN HOWARD MP
INTERVIEW WITH TONY JONES, LATELINE,
ABC
Subjects: Terrorism; Israel; Bali; United Nations charter; leadership.
LINK TO DISCUSSION OF
PRE-EMPTIVE STRIKES
E&OE
JONES:
Prime Minister, welcome to Lateline. Do you still believe the Mombasa terrorist attacks are linked to al Qaeda?
PRIME MINISTER:
Yes I do. The indications are of a similar pattern. I don’t have hard intelligence on that yet but the preliminary indications suggest that.
JONES:
President Bush has not made that link. Do you know why he’s steering away?
PRIME MINISTER:
No I don’t. I haven’t actually seen what President Bush has said. I’m going on some published reports and the similar pattern. But I may be wrong, but I’m just giving you my reaction as of now.
JONES:
This concentration on soft targets, as they call them, is already doing terrible damage to countries which are reliant on tourism. Do you believe, or do you now regard our domestic tourist industry as being under threat?
PRIME MINISTER:
Well everybody is under threat now. I don’t regard Australia as being under as big a threat as other countries but self-evidently in this new, more dangerous climate, everybody is under more threat. We have to keep trying all the time to preserve a sense of perspective between being prepared and being realistic on the one hand, yet not shrivelling up into a nervous shell and becoming too depressed. We’ve got to strike a balance, a happy medium between vigilance and normality.
JONES:
Now the targeting of Israelis has brought a swift response from Prime Minister Sharon. He’s vowed to avenge the victims. He says Israel’s long arm will reach the terrorists and the people who send them. Now after Bali do you have some sympathy for that sentiment?
PRIME MINISTER:
Well I’ve always had some sympathy for Israel’s position. Israel has had to live with people trying to wipe her out virtually since the country was created in 1948. But it’s understandable the Israelis will want to retaliate but it’s also important though, difficult as it is to talk about such a thing right at the moment, but everybody keep trying to get some lasting settlement between Israel and the Palestinians. Much and all as I sympathise with Israel, and everyone knows that, I do recognise that the Palestinians have got a right to a homeland and we need to redouble our efforts to find some solution, difficult though it is, to that terribly intractable problem.
JONES:
I’ll come back a little more to that because it gets at the heart of some of the things would appear to be driving the anti-western feeling, at least it's being exploited by al Qaeda. So I will come back to that issue. But I guess what I was getting at is that after September 11, President Bush basically said the gloves are off and he gave his own Central Intelligence Agency the power to go out and assassinate terrorist leaders. They recently did that in Yemen. Would you consider giving our own security forces that sort of power?
PRIME MINISTER:
Well we don’t have any proposals to do that, however let me say I thought many people would see what occurred in the Yemen as being understandable retribution.
JONES:
Have you sought advice on the possibility of Australian forces being used in the same way?
PRIME MINISTER:
We don’t have any proposals to do that. I don’t think I’ll get into the general area of what advice I seek in relation to security forces, but we don’t have any proposals currently before us in relation to that kind of activity.
JONES:
Here’s a far from hypothetical case though. Would you be prepared to send the SAS into the field to capture or kill the man who apparently ordered the Bali bombing – Hambali – if you had reliable intelligence as to where he was and you believe that he was beyond the law, beyond the reach of the law?
PRIME MINISTER:
That is a very hypothetical question. Tony, very seriously and not wanting to avoid answering that sort of question, we ought to recognise that the progress with the investigation in relation to the atrocity in Bali has been very good. The Indonesian Police and the Australian Federal Police both deserve very high praise and it would be wrong of me, because that investigation has gone so well, to hypothesise in any way about what we might do on the assumption that it weren’t going as well as it clearly is.
JONES:
As a matter of principle though, as a matter of law, would you have the power to order our security forces to do something like that?
PRIME MINISTER:
Well look the law as it now stands in relation to Australian intelligence forces I think is known and there are certain limitations in relation to that. We are living in a different world now than we perhaps were living when the current United Nations charter was written and that was the point that Robert Hill was making on this very program the other night, and I agree with Robert. I would always want to see Australia act in accordance with proper international practices but proper international practice has always recognised legitimate self-defence. And I have said before, and I’ll say it again, that if I were given clear evidence that this country were likely to suffer an attack, and I had a capacity as Prime Minister to do something to prevent that attack occurring, I would be negligent to the people of Australia if I didn’t take that action.