
Most of the arms companies that made to the Inquiry into Government Support for Australian Defence Industry Exports said government assistance in the promotion and facilitation of overseas arms sales should be increased.
Thales Australia and engineering company Supacat Australia said the Australian Military Sales Office (AMSO) should be a more commercially focused and 鈥渁ggressive鈥 organisation, with 鈥渁nnual sales targets and incentives鈥. Several companies said the use of Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel, defence attaches and government ministers in promotional activities should be increased.
Shipbuilding company Austal complained that while other countries use senior military officers to promote military exports, 鈥渞egrettably defence exports are unlikely to be an objective for Australian senior military officers鈥. Supacat described serving 鈥渦niformed users鈥 as the 鈥渕ost powerful sales agents鈥 while Thales Australia said 鈥渢here needs to be a significant increase鈥 in the use of ADF personnel at arms fairs.
Indo Defence Exposition
The Department of Defence organises to arms fairs through Team Defence Australia (TDA). TDA delegations are 鈥渓ed by a senior Defence official or military specialist from Navy, Army, or Air Force鈥.
Arms fairs provide a showcase for arms manufacturers to spruik their lethal wares, often to representatives of states that are involved in armed conflict or internal repression.
TDA recently took 22 Australian companies to the 2016 Indo Defence Exposition in Jakarta, including Austal and weapon mount manufacturer W&E Platt. The pre-show brochure featured an endorsement by Indonesia鈥檚 Minister for Defence, Ryamizard Ryacudu, who played a key role in the brutal repression of self-determination movements in Aceh and West Papua.
Delegations from 40 countries, including Myanmar and Saudi Arabia, were invited to Indo Defence, with 844 arms companies competing for their business. The star attraction was an , a catamaran with a 105 mm gun designed to help the Indonesian military fight 鈥渞iverine warfare鈥. Russia鈥檚 military export agency Rosonboronexport used the event to market cruise missiles that have been 鈥渂attle tested鈥 in the war in Syria.
Conflict and insecurity always help to drum up business for the arms trade. Ahead of Indo Defence, that 鈥渢ensions in eastern Europe and Asia are reversing a post-Cold War slump in defence spending that until recently weighed on arms firms鈥. Reuters predicted aircraft manufacturers seeking to offset a downturn in the civil aviation market, such as Lockheed Martin, would flock to the arms fair, 鈥渏ust weeks after Indonesian jets staged exercises on the edge of a South China Sea area claimed by Beijing鈥.
Another drawcard was the dramatic increase in Indonesia鈥檚 military budget, in the past four years. Meanwhile, the Indonesian military and police continue to be implicated in . Half a million people are estimated to have been killed during Indonesia鈥檚 ongoing 53-year occupation of West Papua, while thousands of others have been subjected to .
Department of Defence export promotion
The use of military personnel to promote arms sales at such events is at odds with the ADF鈥檚 stated mission, which is to defend Australia and its national interests. Similarly, defence attaches are stationed in Australia鈥檚 diplomatic missions to promote its security interests abroad. These functions cannot be reconciled with a role promoting companies that depend on conflict and insecurity for their existence.
In addition to organising delegations to arms fairs and facilitating sales, the 鈥済ifting or other transfer of surplus and obsolete Defence articles to foreign government partners under international arrangement鈥 through AMSO.
In its submission, Austal highlighted Australia鈥檚 2014 gift of two Bay class patrol boats to Sri Lanka, which the Abbott government hoped would be used to prevent vessels containing asylum seekers from leaving Sri Lankan waters. The gift was condemned by the , which said the government was turning a blind eye to Sri Lanka鈥檚 human rights abuses and helping to prevent genuine asylum seekers from fleeing persecution.
However, Austal, the company that builds the Bay class patrol boats, said it was 鈥渧ery encouraged鈥 by the gift to Sri Lanka, and a later gift of two patrol boats to Malaysia, and recommended the government use such gifts to push for ongoing support contracts for Australian companies.
High-level sales support
Austal and several other companies also expressed a wish for more high-level political support for Australian arms sales overseas.
Austal complained that in Australia 鈥渋ndustry has been left to its own devices and is often a low priority afterthought鈥, while in Europe and the US 鈥減olitical capital is often brought to bear in support of business鈥.
BAE Systems Australia said 鈥渕ost other nations use ministers and eminent personalities鈥 to promote arms exports, citing fifth in line to the British throne, , as an example.
Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) has documented how the British royal family has been used to facilitate the sale of billions of pounds worth of arms to repressive states, including and . CAAT says high-level promotion of such sales lends legitimacy to authoritarian governments and signals support for repression.
There is a clear risk that increased Australian government support for arms exports will facilitate human rights abuses overseas. Evidence suggests that Australia is already exporting to states with poor human rights records.
Defence Export Control office
The Defence Export Control office (DEC) is for military and dual-use goods and is supposed to take into account the risk of goods being used to facilitate serious human rights abuses. DEC has not routinely published information regarding the licences it approves since 2004, but has occasionally provided information on request. Additional information about Australian arms exports can be gleaned from other sources.
Figures submitted to the Inquiry showed that the vast majority of applications for export licences are approved by DEC. In March 2016, DEC provided with figures that show military exports from Australia nearly doubled between 2013 and 2014 and increased by another 50% in 2015.
Australia exported $366 million worth of 鈥渄efence鈥 equipment , while the Malaysian government was engaged in a .
Austrade鈥檚 website touts opportunities for companies wishing to export military and security products to the country, including the Malaysian government鈥檚 plan to spend $4.4 billion on patrol cars and motorcycles 鈥渇or internal security and public safety鈥.
Responses by the Minister of Defence to Senate questions on notice in , and listed Australia鈥檚 military exports to Indonesia, Israel, Papua New Guinea, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.
In 2010, Greens Senator Scott Ludlam asked then-Minister of Defence John Faulkner why he had judged there was no risk that military items exported from Australia to Israel might be used in the commission of serious human rights abuses or might contribute to insecurity in the region.
Faulkner responded that no risk was identified because Israel is a 鈥渃lose ally of Australia鈥, suggesting that human rights violations are okay with the Australian government as long as they are carried out by an ally.
Ludlam also asked the minister whether drones (remotely-piloted aerial vehicles) Australia had exported to the US had been used in Afghanistan or Pakistan. The less than reassuring response was that 鈥渢he exporter has advised鈥 that they have not been used in either country.
Other exports to the US from Australia include , and .
More than and 5.5 million people have been displaced in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan as a direct or indirect consequence of the United States鈥 ongoing 鈥渨ar on terror鈥.
However, when it comes to military exports, the US is Australia鈥檚 biggest customer and of its arms and arms-related products from the US. Given Australia鈥檚 continuing involvement in US-led wars and bipartisan support for our military alliance with the superpower, concerns over how Australian exports are used by US forces are unlikely to limit sales.
Most of the submissions to the Inquiry referred to DEC in a positive light. However, Lockheed Martin Australia said that one impediment to increasing overseas arms sales is 鈥渢he bureaucratic and regulatory environment for defence exports [in Australia] is considered onerous鈥.
BAE Systems Australia appeared to suggest that governments should not be overly concerned about weapons exports being used in the commission of human rights abuses. Its submission noted that South Korea had grown its arms exports from US$250 million in 2006 to US2.6 billion in 2013 and commented: 鈥淪outh Korean foreign policy and its willingness to not interfere or comment on other state鈥檚 potential use of their defence equipment is also an advantage 鈥 this is often an impediment in more liberal democracies.鈥
[This is the second part of a three-part series on the Australian government鈥檚 support for the arms trade. The first part appears here.]
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