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Australia:
Our Neighbor Down UnderAustralia
and the Outside WorldUntil almost the beginning
of the present century Australians and New Zealanders could pursue their political
and social ambitions without any thought of external danger. The British navy
was their sure shield, and they need give little attention to defense. When Germany
entered the western Pacific and annexed the northeast part of New Guinea and some
adjacent islands in 1884, this sense of security was slightly jolted. Some of
the Australian states pleaded with Britain to do something, and the upshot was
that southeastern New Guinea was made a British protectorate and then a crown
colony. When the Commonwealth was created, this colony was handed over to Australia
as the “Dependency of Papua.” To
that dependency Australia applied a virtually new principle in colonial administration.
White settlers could come if they wished, but the welfare of the natives was to
be the first and all-important consideration. These primitive peoples, instead
of being wiped out, downtrodden, or degraded, were to be helped and guided out
of their Stone-Age conditions, intertribal wars, head-hunting, and sorcery toward
modern ideas of peace and justice. If they worked for white planters, their wages,
food, clothing, and housing must be safeguarded, and they were to labor only fifty
hours a week. If they worked on their own land, they were to be helped to become
efficient well-equipped farmers. Patiently
the administrator, Mr. Justice Murray, pursued this policy from 1907 to his death
in 1940, peacefully persuading, inspiring faith rather than fear, winning cooperation
instead of forcing surrender. His labors had their reward when the time of testing
came in 1942-43. As the Japs advanced toward Port Moresby, the capital of Papua,
and were pushed back over the Owen Stanley range, the Australians had the unstinted
support of the natives. There was no fifth column in Papua. The
last war and afterIn the early days of World War I Australia and New Zealand
quickly captured the German outposts in New Guinea, Samoa, and elsewhere. Then
they threw their weight into the war in Europe and the Near East. About 420,000
Australians volunteered, or one-eleventh of the whole population, and 330,000
went overseas. They suffered 320,000 casualties and 60,000 of them died. Australia
lost one in every 93 of her people; New Zealand lost one in every 66; we lost
one in every 2,000. For such a costly contribution,
Australia and New Zealand, like the other dominions, sought direct representation
at the peace table. They also fought to retain the ex-German possessions and to
obtain larger reparations than President Wilson had intended Germany should pay.
The territories were mandated to them under the League of Nations, and Australia
therefore controlled the northeastern part of New Guinea as well as Papua. With
the German menace removed and then with Japan apparently satisfied by the terms
of the Washington Conference of 1921–22, Australia turned her back on world
affairs. The Pacific seemed safe once more. The navy’s flagship was scuttled
in 1924 under the terms of the Washington disarmament agreement, and compulsory
military training was suspended in 1929. Expenditure on defense was down to about
$5 a head by that year and during the depression the amount fell still lower.
Like ourselves, Australians did not want to be worried by unpleasant events that
were taking place far away. It was hard enough work to nurse the country back
to prosperity without having to be diverted by external troubles. New
Zealand under its new Labor government urged strong League action against Italy’s
invasion of Abyssinia and against other aggressors. But Australia was unconcerned
and willing to accept appeasement if peace could be preserved thereby. Not till
1936 or 1937 was there any awakening to the need for vigorous rearmament, and
little had been accomplished when World War II began. When this
war came Australia
and New Zealand flung themselves of their own will into the war against Germany.
Their divisions were in the grim and sometimes hopeless fight in North Africa,
Greece, Crete, and Syria. The Australian navy worked in the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean.
Their airmen flew Spitfires in the Battle of Britain, bombers over Germany, and
patrol planes over the Atlantic.
After
the fall of France, the Australian government obtained power to require citizens
to place themselves, their services, and their property at the disposal of the
Commonwealth, and to supplement the enormous voluntary enlistment by reviving
compulsory military service for home defense. The whole speed of preparation became
faster and the scope wider. For while Anzacs fought beyond Suez, they could not
forget that Japan was not, as in 1914, an ally of Britain, but a member of the
Axis. They hoped to conciliate her, and in 1940 sent the chief justice of the
High Court of Australia as the first minister to Tokyo. If the worst came, Singapore
might protect them, and perhaps we should be provoked to action. The
worst came, and was far worse than anyone expected. By early 1942 the situation
for Australia was as grave as was that of Britain after Dunkirk. The Japs rimmed
round the north coast and got to within thirty-two air miles of Port Moresby.
Zeros played havoc with the defenses at Port Darwin. Over 18,000 Australians had
been killed or captured in Malaya, and much of the rest of the army was far away
in the Mediterranean zone. The little, scattered navy was suffering loss after
loss, and the sea lanes to the outer world were in danger of being cut. Work
or fightAll this called for help from without
and for a heroic effort within. Prime Minister Curtin’s slogan “Work,
fight, or perish!” ranks with Mr. Churchill’s “Blood, sweat,
and tears,” and it was as readily accepted as the only way to salvation.
Every available person was mobilized, and by the end of 1942, 70 per cent of the
people between 14 and 65 years were in uniform or in war work. Nonessential occupations
were cut down: the stock exchanges were closed, except for the sale of bonds;
engagement rings were no longer to be made; women under forty-five years were
forbidden to work as chorus girls; men were forbidden to work in bars; the number
of race meetings was reduced four-fifths and the output of beer one-third. Clothing
was rationed, and shirts were shortened five inches. Men were transferred from
white-collar jobs to factories, and a mobile labor force of fifty thousand volunteers
and draftees who were unfit for military service was swung from place to place
constructing the roads, dry docks, munitions plants, airdromes, hospitals, etc.,
needed by Australian and American forces. Profits
were limited to 4 per cent on the capital invested instead of 4 per cent of the
turnover. Labor cooperated eagerly and fully, abandoning its traditional hard-won
rights. Management rivaled labor in its readiness to achieve results. Prices were
strictly controlled and in 1943 were pegged at about 23 per cent above prewar
levels. The freezing of wages automatically followed. When some strikes occurred,
the government decided that strikers, or employers who provoked a strike, were
to lose their deferred or protected status and be called up instantly by the draft
officials. “Work or fight!” became the policy of a Labor government. Lend-lease
in reverseIn addition to meeting its own
needs, Australia met many of those of the United States, India, New Zealand, and
distant Britain. About one-sixth of the war expenditure—and therefore one-twelfth
of the national income in 1943 went into this, reverse lend-lease or “reciprocal
aid.” It included every possible contribution, from nine-tenths of the food
for American troops to a hospital with room for 4,250 beds for our Army. In order
to supply this “reciprocal need,” civilians were put on short rations,
especially of meat and clothing, and were deprived entirely of canned goods, pork,
citrus fruits, and candies. Such a
record stands as high in duality and relative quantity as that of any of the uninvaded
United Nations. What does the Aussie hope to get in return? His own answer is,
“World conditions in which we may secure peace, national development, and
prosperity for our people in accordance with our ideals of a democratic way of
life.” That involves thinking as well as fighting, and the blueprints are
already being made, both domestic and international. The
domestic plans include efforts to increase the continent’s population by
stimulating immigration to the utmost. It is now frankly recognized that Australia
cannot hope to hold indefinitely a large continent with a small population and
a declining birth rate. When the worst has been said about the badlands, there
is room in the country for 20,000,000 people at Australian standards of living,
and Australians admit that the sooner this figure is approached the better. Other
plans include vast housing schemes, the fullest possible use of labor, capital,
and resources, the continuance of the war-stimulated industries where possible,
a large program of public works, and far-reaching developments in social security
from the cradle to the grave. In the
international sphere, the Anzacs, without ceasing to be aware of the extent to
which their fate is wrapped up with that of Britain and Europe, have become strongly
Pacific-conscious. To them the Far East is now the Near North. As one of their
historians said in 1941, “We in Australia and New Zealand are European in
our traditions and outlook. Still we do live in the Pacific. We have the double
task of understanding both our European background and our Pacific surroundings.
Our lives will be influenced not only by what happens in London or Berlin, but
more and more by what happens in Chungking or Tokyo, Honolulu or Washington.”
Since 1939 Australia has established legations in the United States, Japan, China,
Russia, and the Netherlands—all Pacific countries or empires. She also has
“high commissioners,” the equivalent of ambassadors, in Britain, Canada,
New Zealand, and India-fellow members of the British Commonwealth. Cooperation
in the futureThe future, as Australians
and New Zealanders see it, calls for three kinds of collaboration. The first is
between their two dominions in all matters of common concern, such as defense,
civil aviation, commerce, foreign policy, and industrial development. Until
the Japs struck, the two countries rarely worked together or even talked together. The
second is a larger measure of consultation between all the members of the British
Commonwealth, so that the views of each dominion can be expressed, and perhaps
a common policy for the whole group may emerge. In the past, Australian labor
has been very suspicious of any plan which might look like “binding the
Empire together”; but now its leaders stoutly proclaim that “the evolution
of the British Commonwealth has exemplified the manner in which autonomous nations
can cooperate on matters of mutual interest” and “has given the world
a notable demonstration of the working of an international democracy” (Prime
Minister Curtin). They want more consultation and collaboration. The
third is collaboration for the maintenance of “international peace and security”
pending “the re-establishment of law and order” and the setting up
of a “general international organization.” (The quoted words are from
the Moscow Declaration, signed by the four great powers in November 1943.) Inside
the temporary and permanent systems of world security, the Anzac governments propose
that a “regional zone of defense” be marked out in the South and Southwest
Pacific, based on Australia and New Zealand and stretching through the arc of
islands north and northeast of the two dominions. They offer to assume full responsibility
for policing or sharing in the policing of the area, and to cooperate with the
Dutch, Portuguese, and French, whose colonies they expect to see restored when
the Japanese have been evicted. Enemy territories In deciding about enemy territories
in the Pacific, the Anzacs insist that they must play a part and have a voice;
and they ask that “no change in the sovereignty or system of control of
any of the islands of the Pacific should be effected except as a result of an
agreement to which they are parties or in the terms of which they have both concurred.”
For
these islands, and indeed for all the territories held by white men in the Pacific,
Australia and New Zealand urge that the “doctrine of trusteeship”
be applied, and that “the main purpose of the trust is the welfare of the
native peoples and their social, economic and political development.” They
propose that “a regional organization with advisory powers” be set
up to collaborate in devising plans for health services, native education, assistance
in native production, and material developments generally. All this, like the
wider problems of security, should be worked out, they suggest, by conference
and the frank exchange of views between representatives of the Australian, New
Zealand, British, Dutch, French, Portuguese, and United States governments. Thus
two valiant small nations pin their hopes on international cooperation for security
and on trusteeship for the solution of the problems of the Pacific. In the war
they have shown their capacity for cooperation; and in their treatment of native
peoples such as the Maoris in New Zealand and the Papuans in New Guinea they have
demonstrated that trusteeship is not impracticable dreaming.
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