Australia: Albanese Launches Probe into Missing Iraq War Records

Facts

  • Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has this week ordered an investigation into why certain documents related to Canberra's involvement in the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq remain secret.1
  • Hundreds of government documents from 2003 were made public on Monday by the National Archive of Australia after the 20-year secrecy period expired, however, many remain restricted.2
  • A reported 78 cabinet records related to the Iraq war were withheld from release, allegedly because they were originally produced for use by National Security Committee, which makes decisions concerning national security and foreign policy.1
  • The Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet had claimed that the documents were transferred to the archives for inspection after they were discovered on Dec. 19, and suggested 'apparent administrative oversights' dating back to 2020 as the reason they were withheld.3
  • Meanwhile, Albanese has appointed Dennis Richardson to conduct an investigation, adding that it will be up to the former diplomat to determine if the failure to transfer the documents was part of a 'cover-up.'3
  • Stressing that 'Australians have a right to know the basis upon which Australia went to war in Iraq,' Albanese added that there's no reason — 'with the exception of putting people in danger' — why these documentations shouldn't be released in a 'transparent way.'4

Sources: 1Associated Press, 2CTVNews, 3Guardian and 4Skynews.

Narratives

  • Pro-establishment narrative, as provided by 9. The coronavirus outbreak is likely responsible for the administrative oversights that led to the documents linked to Australia's participation in the Iraq war being withheld. The mistake wasn't intentional; let's not waste time and resources in finding a conspiracy when there isn't one.
  • Establishment-critical narrative, as provided by Morning Star. It's disheartening, to say the least, that 20 years after Australia was roped into the Iraq war, the facts of the conflict are still being concealed. These documents may well have been withheld as part of a larger government cover-up — Australians have a right to know why their country entered an illegal war in 2003.