- School of Social and Political Sciences - Research Publications
School of Social and Political Sciences - Research Publications
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ItemHiding from the light: The establishment of the Joint Australia-United States Relay Ground Station at Pine GapTanter, R (Nautilus, 2019-11-02)The author discusses recently released Australian cabinet papers dealing with a decision in September 1997 to allow the establishment of a Joint Australia-United States Relay Ground Station at Pine Gap to support two United States early warning satellite systems in place of its predecessor, the Joint Space Communications Facility at Nurrungar. The cabinet papers give a picture, albeit one muddied by censorship, of the Howard government’s consideration of ‘a U.S. request to continue Australian involvement in a U.S. space technological system to provide the U.S. with not only early warning of missile attack as a basis of nuclear deterrence, but also the capacity to target a retaliatory nuclear strike in the most effective way as part of a nuclear war-fighting capability. There is little evidence in these documents that senior ministers and their advisors considered these matters with any seriousness.’
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ItemA Global Nuclear Weapons Ban? Ready Or Not, Here It ComesTanter, R (Australian Institute of International Affairs, 2017)Despite the apparent best efforts of Australia, the US and others, the second round of United Nations talks to negotiate a global nuclear weapons ban treaty is underway. With more than 130 countries participating, the proposed ban treaty may come into effect within the year.
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ItemNo Preview Available'Yemen, Australian mercenaries and the shifting sands of Australia–Middle East alliances'Tanter, R (Arena, 2018)It seems unimaginable that Australia could be involved in the war in Yemen, arguably the world’s worst contemporary humanitarian catastrophe, with more than 10,000 dead, one million cases of cholera, and 11 million in acute need of assistance and protection. Or that Canberra could be building towards a military alliance with a Gulf-state dictatorship with deep involvement in that war—the United Arab Emirates. Or that both Coalition and Labor governments approved—and may well have encouraged—one of Australia’s most senior, decorated soldiers to put on the uniform of that dictatorship, earning millions of dollars in the process. Or that this former Australian Defence Force (ADF) general could go on to plan, build, train and command the UAE’s elite military force, and then oversee more than three years of its operations in a war characterised by highly plausible allegations of war crimes and gross violations of human rights. Not only this but accusations by the Yemeni government of UAE seizure of territory amounting to colonisation, leading to a place of horror, where, as a UN panel of experts reported to the Security Council, ‘Yemen, as a State, has all but ceased to exist’. All this points to a new phase of Australia’s alliance-dependent, high-technology liberal militarisation, rooted, on the one hand, in the export of highly skilled military specialists as senior or command mercenaries, and on the other in the formation of close ties between second order US allies as an American force multiplier
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ItemTouring the American empire of bases with the MarinesTanter, R (The Asia-Pacific Journal, 2018)In the decade after the end of the Cold War, triumphalist U.S. public intellectuals, liberal and conservative alike, were trying on the mantle of ‘empire’ for size. For many at the time, while ‘US imperialism’ denoted kneejerk leftism, ‘the American empire’ might just be an appropriate acknowledgement of achievement on a global scale, an accolade about reality rather than a matter of opprobrium.
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ItemNo Preview AvailableUS signals intelligence (SIGINT) activities in Japan 1945 – 2015: A Visual GuideTANTER, R ; Ball, D (Nautilus Institute, 2015)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableNorth by North West Cape: Eyes on ChinaTANTER, R (Nautilus Institute, 2010)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableRowing between two reefs: China, the United States and containment revenantTANTER, R (Nautilus Institute, 2012)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableShared problems, shared interests: reframing Australia-Indonesia security relationsTANTER, R ; Purdey, J (Monash University Press, 2012)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableStanding upright there: the New Zealand path to a nuclear-free worldTANTER, R (Nautilus Institute, 2012)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableAnother hinge for the Pacific Pivot: Australia’s nuclear navy?TANTER, R (Nautilus Institute, 2012)