PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
16/04/2004
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
21206
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
Interview with Neil Cavuto, Fox News

CAVUTO:

In an exclusive interview with Australian Prime Minister John Howard, I asked how the partners in the war on terror should move forward.

PRIME MINISTER:

All of us, whatever our views may originally have been about Iraq, have to stand together because if we react in a way that encourages more hostages to be taken and those taken to be murdered, well we can be certain that is exactly what will happen. If you feed this kind of behaviour by weakness, the behaviour will intensify. It won';t go away. You won';t buy immunity by giving in.

CAVUTO:

But there is a sentiment expressed at least in hostages'; eyes, or at least the captors'; eyes, that you can force western nations to buckle. They cite the government change in Spain after the Madrid bombings. What do you think would happen if something horrendous were to happen in Australia, with elections approaching in your country?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I believe that the majority of the Australian people want our job in Iraq finished. They want us to see it through. There was debate in my country about whether we should have been involved in the first place. As you know, the Government was strongly committed to the military operation. I believe that was the right thing to do. What public opinion would do in the wake of the sort of events you talk about, it would be a matter to see, but my strong feeling is that Australians are gutsy people who would want to see the thing through. We hope and pray it doesn';t happen. We think of the safety of our own men and women in the Australian Defence Force. We think of our civilians who are in the process of rebuilding Iraq for the Iraqi people. And I believe that the Australian people, like the American people and people around the world, know that weakness in the face of this kind of barbarism will only encourage more barbarism.

CAVUTO:

Still your prospective opponent sir, Mark Latham, has been saying to the effect that your country is risking joining the United States in another Vietnam. He has advocated a timetable to get your troops out. What do you say?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I don';t agree with that, and it';s well on the public record in Australia. I note incidentally that although Senator Kerry in the United States has criticised the Bush administration over Iraq, he nonetheless agrees with the President that America should stay the distance and that to pull out prematurely would be to send the wrong message to the enemies and to send the wrong message to the world. And that is certainly my view.

CAVUTO:

You have been widely applauded, certainly in this country, certainly among Republicans in this country, for being so loyal and steadfast. The concern is that in an election in your country, your own people don';t necessarily share your zeal for staying in Iraq and supporting your troops for as long as you';re committed to supporting them in Iraq. Is there a disconnect there?

PRIME MINISTER:

I think the majority of Australians, and the recent polls indicate this, believe that we should stay and finish the job, and that includes a lot of people who disagreed with our original decision. But like anybody else in a democracy, I take my position, I state my case and I';m in the hands of the people. I';ll work very hard between now and our election to persuade the Australian people of the correctness of the course the Government has taken. We think a lot is at stake. This is not the time in the history of the world for disunity amongst friends. Whatever political views we may have, the values that the American people, the Australian people, the British people, the people of many other democracies around the world have in common are more important than the differences that we might have. The things that unite us in common values are greater than the things that might divide us, and at a time like this in the face of terrorism, it';s very important that those shared values come to the fore.

CAVUTO:

Let me ask you Mr Prime Minister about what Senator Kerry has said in our country about our role in Iraq going forward, that the UN should have a greater role and that we should be working more with the UN than we are, and that the US, and I guess by extension Australia, is in the position both countries are in, precisely because we didn';t do enough or work enough with the UN. What do you make of that?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well going back in time, the people who stopped the UN being further involved were frankly countries such as France and Russia who wouldn';t support a further Security Council resolution. And I remain as convinced as I was a year ago that if we had continued to wait for a further Security Council resolution, that resolution would never have come. And just as the world had to go outside the UN process in Kosovo, and just as the world was rendered impotent because the UN was impotent in cases like Rwanda, so it would have been the case that if action had not been taken by the coalition, Saddam Hussein would still be in power in Baghdad, there would in my view have been infinitely greater numbers of people killed than has been the case over the past year, and the prospect of a free, democratic Iraq would not have emerged.

CAVUTO:

Your, again, likely opponent has committed this timetable to getting Australian troops out, so let';s say the unthinkable happens Prime Minister and he does get elected, what is your biggest concern?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I think an arbitrary withdrawal of Australian troops particularly and others, if the job has not been finished, that will send a very bad signal to those who are trying to destroy a peaceful future for Iraq. If it hasn';t already occurred, it will encourage others to do likewise. It will therefore further encourage those people who are trying to disrupt Iraq';s future to redouble their efforts because they know that their efforts are working. Every time we react in the way that the enemies of a free Iraq want us to react, they';ll double what they';re doing because they know it will get the right reaction.

CAVUTO:

When you hear and see these stories of particularly American troops who are getting picked off, is there something we';re doing wrong? I mean, if you had to advise the President of this country, what would you tell him?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I feel for the American people. I feel for the families who have lost soldiers. I';ve read the story, very wide coverage in Australia of the family with three daughters in Iraq, all of those stories are heart rending, and I feel very deeply, and I therefore feel for those in positions of responsibility such as the President. I';m not going to give him public advice. It';s easy for the critics of America to take pot shots when America has the lead role. I mean the United States has what 150 odd thousand troops or somewhere in that order in the theatre, which is vastly more than anybody else has got, and it is a very heavy burden it carries, and if I have any views that I want to express, and I do express views from time to time to the President, I';ll do it privately.

CAVUTO:

Finally sir, I heard one journalist, and I';m sorry I can';t remember his name so if you';ll indulge me, who had said that terrorists would love to see John Howard and George Bush go down to defeat this year. What do you think he meant by that?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I don';t know, but I have an obligation to serve the interests of the Australian people, and denying terrorists victories and denying terrorism is something that the Australian people, whatever their politics are, overwhelmingly want.

[ends]

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