September 15, 2005
World: Australian Foreign Minister Speaks With RFE/RL
Alexander Downer in Prague on 14 September
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In an exclusive interview with RFE/RL, Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer strongly defended the U.S.-led war in Iraq and war on terror. In a wide-ranging conversation in Prague with RFE/RL correspondent Jeffrey Donovan, Downer also weighed in on a recent terrorist threat against Australia, and urged Afghans not to give in to “thugs” bent on disrupting parliamentary polls this Sunday. He also sounded off on the “colored revolutions” in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan, as well as concerns over creeping authoritarianism in Russia.
Prague, 15 September 2005 (RFE/RL) -- When it comes to the Iraq war, Downer said he has no doubts: defeat for the U.S.-led coalition would be nothing short of “catastrophic” for Iraq, the Middle East, and the world at large.
But despite such high stakes, Downer said Australia won’t be boosting its troop level beyond the 2,000 or so soldiers it already has in Iraq.
“Send more [troops]? We’re not planning to at the moment," Downer said. "We’ve been one of the countries that’s made a pretty solid contribution there. We have to weigh this up in the context of various other things we have to do or we might have to do. So we have to keep our contingencies dusted and in place. But we’ve made a pretty solid contribution in Iraq.”
In a wide-ranging interview with RFE/RL in Prague, Downer also rejected the idea that the Iraq war has boosted the number of terrorism recruits and attacks around the world.
However, Downer said Australia is taking seriously a recent threat made by a purported Islamic militant. In a video aired on ABC on 11 September, the alleged U.S.-born militant threatened attacks on Los Angeles and the Australian city of Melbourne.
“We’ve had a look at the tape and made an assessment of the tape," Downer said. "It’s a credible interview in so far as the person who speaks in the interview is a credible spokesman. But I think there are real questions about the extent to which he’s able to speak for anyone else, other than himself. But having said that, we are not remotely complacent about the issue of terrorism in Australia. Whilst we don’t think it will be inevitable there’ll be a terrorist attack in Australia, it’s possible it could happen.”